A U.S. military contractor made headlines this week after posting a “help wanted” ad for a flight attendant job on Janet Air, which flies between McCarran airport and certain, ahem, undisclosed locations in Nevada and elsewhere.
Henry Brean
Henry Brean writes about water and the environment for the Review-Journal, where he has worked since 2003. A native of Tucson, Arizona, he earned his journalism degree from the University of Missouri before returning to the desert as a reporter and editor for the Pahrump Valley Times.
Getting into Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area is about to get more expensive.
State game wardens ask public’s help locating the poacher or poachers who killed an adult moose last month near Jarbidge, about 500 miles north of Las Vegas, and removed its head and most of its meat.
The Gold Butte National Monument will be off the table when federal land managers host an upcoming series of public meetings on their revised management plan for Southern Nevada.
A new water treatment plant is now operating at the Las Vegas Wash to help keep pollution from a former chemical production site in Henderson from reaching Lake Mead and the Colorado River.
The first forecast is in for the Colorado River, and the outlook for the coming year is bleak.
Last year was a busy one for the poor slob responsible for updating the record book for the National Weather Service in Las Vegas.
It took the BLM just 10 days to capture 117 burros near the Nye County town using food and water to lure them into corrals set up on private land. All but one, which was euthanized, are now in California being readied for adoption.
A crowd of 330,000 visitors filled the Las Vegas Strip and Fremont Street downtown to celebrate the dawn of 2018. The massive outdoor parties unfolded in the shadow of the Oct. 1 mass shooting that left 58 people dead.
Impromptu shrine at site where Irish band was photographed for hit 1987 album “The Joshua Tree” features a cymbal, broken guitars and a suitcase full of quirky memorabilia.
Even after 81 years, stubborn myths still cling to the colossal construction effort that built Hoover Dam. But the most incredible story about the project is absolutely true.