Here are three things to watch on Day 45 of the 2017 Legislative session.
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Liquid nicotine would be classified as “other tobacco products” and be subject to tax under a bill the Assembly Taxation Committee considered Tuesday.
Auto manufacturers may have to cover the costs of training technicians who work in Nevada dealerships that provide vehicle warranty services.
The Department of Education would take a deep look into how often Nevada students take standardized tests under an audit proposed in a bill introduced Tuesday.
Nevada’s Public Records Act needs vigorous defenders, because politicians, like Sen. Julia Ratti, D-Sparks, keep trying to gut it.
Assembly Bill 11 adds the transmission lines to the list of “critical” structures drones must stay away from. The measure now goes to the full Assembly for a vote.
Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval vetoed his first bill of the 2017 legislative session Tuesday, rejecting a citizen initiative to automatically sign up people to vote when they get a driver’s license.
The Governor’s Office of Economic Development and Nevada’s Department of Motor Vehicles revised Assembly Bill 69, which updates existing laws that allow for the testing and deployment of autonomous vehicles.
A bipartisan proposal to elect the president based on the popular vote from all 50 states and Washington, D.C., was debated Tuesday in an Assembly Committee.
Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske issued a warning Tuesday about a scam purporting to come from the secretary of state’s office.
The Nevada Senate approved a bill Tuesday prohibiting guns in public libraries unless written permission is given by the governing board.
Assembly Bill 119 would give priority to garnishments for spousal support that someone owes their ex-wife or ex-husband.
Here are three things to watch on Day 44 of the 2017 Legislative Session.
A resolution restating the Legislature’s opposition to any effort to license Yucca Mountain as a high-level nuclear waste dump was endorsed Monday by Gov. Brian Sandoval and Attorney General Adam Laxalt.
Plastic bags at retail stores would be phased out — but cost a dime a bag in the interim — under a bill introduced in the Nevada Assembly on Monday.