When booking her room for an expo in Las Vegas Valley this week, Vanessa Guilford said she was disappointed in her room selection.
Wade Tyler Millward
Wade Tyler Millward worked for the Las Vegas Review-Journal from December 2016 to December 2018. He covered retail and manufacturing businesses, industry trends and the local economy. He graduated from the University of Florida and previously worked for the Tampa Bay Business Journal in Tampa, Florida, and Gaston Gazette in Gastonia, North Carolina. He’s received reporting awards from the Nevada and North Carolina press associations.
Sprouts Farmers Market will open its new store near the intersection of North Decatur Boulevard and the 215 Beltway in August.
The latest audit on the Tesla factory also shows that the company has hit its milestones to receive state tax credits.
The Las Vegas Review-Journal has promoted one of its own to managing editor, the No. 2 position in the newsroom.
SoulCycle is among a mix of new retail business that are headed to Wynn and Encore, public records show.
Select shoppers at the Grand Canal Shoppes got an early look at the new virtual reality attraction “Star Wars: Secrets of the Empire.”
Less than a year into legal recreational sales, marijuana dispensaries continue to diversify and find their niche
A new Las Vegas company wants to combine grocery store options with a convenience store footprint.
Terrible Herbst will open what it calls the world’s largest Chevron in May. The commercial travel center will include 96 fuel pumps and the third White Castle restaurant in Southern Nevada.
The largest manufacturer of bump stocks, which allow semi-automatic weapons to fire rapidly like automatic firearms, announced Wednesday that it will stop taking orders and shut down its website next month.
The shutdown, expected to last a few days, was preplanned, a Tesla representative said in a statement.
An agreement between Caesars Entertainment and a Northern California tribe will bring a Harrah’s casino to tribal land southeast of Sacramento.
A Las Vegas marijuana grower intends to pay $28 million in cash for a local marijuana store.
The man in charge of Nevada’s drone test site gave a presentation at a trade show Thursday that was equal parts sales pitch and “scared straight” program.
A group of about 20 people protested outside a security trade show on the Las Vegas Strip on Thursday.