Nevada school board trustees would be required to undergo at least six hours of training in the first and third years of their terms under a bill introduced Monday.
- Home
- >> News
- >> Politics and Government
Nevada
Nevada lawmakers may ask Congress to propose an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that allows the regulation of corporate spending in politics.
Nevada school officials would need to notify parents before they interview students when conducting an investigation into a report of bullying, under a bill proposed Monday.
It may become easier for registered voters with disabilities to get Nevada absentee ballots on a long-term basis.
Doctors in medical scrubs helped fill a legislative hearing room Monday to support a measure addressing so-called “surprise” bills patients receive when they don’t use in-network physicians or facilities.
Prosecutors and defense attorneys clashed on Monday, but not in a courtroom.
The Nevada Senate on Monday passed a resolution urging Congress not to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
More than 50 participants in Latino Lobby Day hit the legislative halls here Monday, meeting with lawmakers and talking about their priorities in the 2017 session.
A bill prohibiting mental health professionals from conducting sexual orientation or gender identity “conversion” therapy on minors was amended and passed Monday by a Senate Committee.
A bill that would ban expiration dates on gift cards sold in Nevada would save residents their money and put the state on the same consumer-friendly playing field as eight other states, a legislative panel was told Monday.
Here are three things to watch on Day 57 of the 2017 legislative session.
There’s one Republican elected official who should be thrilled with the far-left proposals coming from legislative Democrats: Attorney General Adam Laxalt.
At the 100th anniversary of the U.S. entry into the “war to end all wars,” the improbable tale of the Army’s 91st “Wild West” Division — a ragtag legion of shopkeepers, cowboys, farmers, miners, Native Americans and immigrant railroad workers who helped change the course of history — demands one more telling.
Ward 2 challengers aim to make it a battle for Las Vegas City Councilman Bob Beers to claim another four-year term.
Several of the more than 60 stone structures on the 110-acre Stewart campus, many built by Hopi stone masons, are in disrepair and there are concerns about their seismic stability. The federal government opened the school in 1890 and operated it until it was shut down in 1980.