The city of Las Vegas denied a Review-Journal records request this week for disciplinary actions for four Fire Department employees named in a complaint about alleged sexual misconduct at a Las Vegas fire station in August.
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A hotline for Las Vegans to air grievances about short-term rentals fielded an average of seven calls a day in its first month, but most of the complaints came from outside the city’s jurisdiction.
The city of Las Vegas launched an online sewer billing service that allows for payments via text message.
Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman said Friday she was “shocked” at another round of allegations of sex in a city firehouse because the issue was “very clearly addressed” earlier this year.
For the past 11 years, the Southern Nevada Water Authority has been raising livestock and growing hay on a 23,500-acre ranch in eastern Nevada, though it really only cares about one thing: the water.
The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is wasting tax dollars. The question now is whether anyone with any power is going to do anything about it.
Popular downtown Las Vegas restaurant Casa Don Juan is gearing up to branch out.
Las Vegas is getting its first 24/7 pot shop.
Huntridge Circle Park hosts its first bike-in movie night Saturday. Blinking Man bicycle rides will host its first Bike In at the park, a Ward 3 city of Las Vegas-sponsored event will kick off at 6 p.m. Saturday.
The law allows governments to charge only the “actual cost” of reproducing a record, but a Review-Journal survey of more than 20 government entities in Clark County found fees for records requests vary widely.
Las Vegas officials have a new vision for developing a unique piece of land surrounded by sensitive land packed with environmental and cultural resources.
The Las Vegas City Council OK’d issuing $11.6 million in local improvement bonds to pay for public improvements in the Skye Canyon master plan development in northwest Las Vegas.
The Las Vegas City Council couldn’t get behind a moratorium on accepting plans for golf course and open space redevelopment, but officials want city staff to come up with a new policy that can act as a guide in the future.
If you’ve ever stood starving on Main Street in downtown Las Vegas, waiting for a table to open up at Casa Don Juan, you may have better luck in the future.
Complaints about racy attire and vulgar signs once flooded City Hall. City officials for years tried to alleviate congestion and enhance safety with regulations for Fremont’s casino-lined, oft-rowdy public pedestrian mall, but faced legal challenges arguing their efforts infringed upon performers’ First Amendment rights.