If it’s safe enough to play football, it’s safe enough to fully reopen the Clark County School District.
Opinion Columns
Nevada Supreme Court justices want the legislature to give judges a $30,000 raise. No thanks.
Josh Hawley needs to take a look in the mirror.
The current debate over the child tax credit highlights a philosophical rift among Republicans.
The Nevada Department of Education is inadvertently making a compelling case for gutting class-size reduction.
If former-Sen. Pat McCarran’s accomplishments don’t spare him from cancellation, one day, former-Sen. Harry Reid’s won’t either.
True believers such as Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene are on the decline in the modern Republican Party, while people such as Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., are the future.
Everyone knows that remote education is failing students, especially immigrant children and others whose parents can’t fill in the gaps that plague schooling by computer screen.
The academic devastation caused by a year of online learning can’t be repaired by summer school or tutoring. Students who failed to learn should repeat the grade they were just in.
President Joe Biden and his administration have already told numerous whoppers. You wouldn’t know it from the fawning media coverage.
It will take years to understand fully how much damage a year of school closures did to Clark County children’s mental health. The early indicators are heartbreaking.
From coronavirus deaths to unemployment rate to vaccination distribution, states led by Republican governors have outperformed states run by Democrats.
President Joe Biden likes to talk about unity and his intent to rise above partisan rancor to heal the divisions that led a pro-Trump mob to swarm the Capitol on Jan. 6.
King Steve Sisolak and state health officials have all the credibility of Chicken Little.
If you want to understand the disparity between Nevada’s public and private sector, just look at Gov. Steve Sisolak’s budget proposal.