Owners of popular but politically challenged zoo looking for new homes for menagerie of exotic animals by month’s end.
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Clark County
Financial experts project Nevada will collect$541 million more in tax revenue over the next two years than it did during the last budget cycle, but that’s still $300 million to $600 million less than requested by state agencies in October.
Former Culinary Union political director Yvanna Cancela will be the first Latina to sit on the Nevada state Senate after Clark County commissioners unanimously voted to appoint her Tuesday.
Complaints against smells emanating from medical-marijuana operations dominates commission’s first substantive discussion of pot policy since passage of Question 2.
Applied Analysis will continue to play an integral role in bringing a stadium to the Las Vegas Valley after the Stadium Authority Board temporarily hired the local research firm during its inaugural meeting Monday.
Results of a second vote tally requested by independent candidate Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente may not be announced until next week.
Over the past 20 years, Mike Lane has earned a living at a variety of occupations and on Tuesday, he is expected to add Clark County chief information officer to his list of jobs.
A class action lawsuit filed against Republic Services on Friday claims the waste-disposal company is illegally overcharging Clark County property owners by placing multiple $60 liens on homes for overdue trash bills.
Two women and one man have applied to Clark County in hopes of filling Ruben Kihuen’s recently vacated state Senate seat.
State officials have posted the first agenda for what will be known as the Stadium Authority Board and much of the meeting will be dedicated to discussing procedures board members will take as it works to build a new home for the Oakland Raider
Former water officials Robert Coache and Michael E. Johnson were found guilty in connection with a $1.3 million bribery scheme to help a wealthy Bunkerville landowner sell water rights to the Southern Nevada Water Authority.
The Las Vegas Sands Corp. is providing financial help for training Clark County School District leaders as the system goes through an exhaustive reorganization that will roll out in 2017-18.
Nevada has faced a problematic teacher shortage — the most recent state Department of Education numbers indicate over 360 vacancies in Clark County and more than 500 statewide.
State education officials are focused on clearing up what they view as misconceptions about the new Achievement School District that will convert as many as six underperforming schools into charters next year.
Business proposals from reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes, candid photographs of alleged mob bosses, paperwork for plans to store nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. Those public records and more — the fabric of Clark County’s history — will be at the fingertips of anyone with a computer and internet access as an ongoing initiative by the county clerk’s office comes to fruition.