The Biden administration is scrambling to screen and place about 37,000 refugees from the war-torn country in areas where sponsors or relatives live.
Gary Martin
Gary Martin is the Washington correspondent for the Review-Journal covering Congress. He previously served as political and government editor for the San Antonio Express-News. He has worked at newspapers in Texas and Arizona. Martin received a journalism degree from Colorado State University.
Proposed rules are designed to regulate safety for employees who work in extreme heat, but a U.S. Chamber official says that’s a moving target.
Nevada Democratic Rep. Susie Lee was one of nearly two dozen lawmakers who failed to meet statutory deadlines to report stock trades.
California and Texas will host the most refugees from Afghanistan, as the Biden administration works to settle about 65,000 people from the war-torn country.
America paused Saturday to remember the nearly 3,000 lives lost in the terrorist attacks on the nation two decades ago.
A December trial date has been set for one man with Las Vegas ties charged in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, while another awaits representation.
“As I ran across Pennsylvania Avenue with my notebook, I was stopped by the muzzle of a black semiautomatic rifle and a uniformed officer.”
Two decades after the 9/11 attacks, Nevadans who were in the nation’s capital that day reflect on their experiences.
The review will decide whether a Nevada federal judge’s ruling that a section of U.S. immigration law is unconstitutional and discriminatory against Hispanics will be appealed.
Pressure is mounting on the Biden administration to complete the evacuation in Afghanistan by an Aug. 31 deadline.
A Nevada federal court ruling that held a deportation law unconstitutional is likely headed for appellate scrutiny because of the broad implications it would have on immigration cases, legal experts said.
Disturbing scenes of Afghans clinging to a departing military plane prompted one Nevada lawmaker to criticize the Biden administration Tuesday while all urged a safe evacuation of U.S. military and civilians.
The state’s share of the money would help repair dilapidated roads and bridges, build proposed water projects, prevent wildfires and expand broadband to the entire state.
A $1.5 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill being hammered out in the Senate includes funding for Nevada needs such as preventing wildfires, expanding broadband access, water recycling and aviation improvements.
A decades-old tree-spiking investigation loomed over a Senate vote Tuesday in which Democrats narrowly prevailed.