So much for the one-day special session. It only took a day in 2013 for the Nevada Legislature and Gov. Brian Sandoval to introduce, debate, pass and sign into law a bill regulating online poker.
Steve Sebelius
Oh, that Nevada Legislature. They are a slippery bunch. Moments after finishing up a special session to approve tax breaks for an electric car company, state Senate Republicans slipped a surprise concurrent resolution onto the agenda before adjourning.
If you’re going to do economic development, this is probably the way to do it.
To topple foreign regimes or to not topple foreign regimes. That is the question. Or at least that was one of the questions in the CNN Republican debate Tuesday night at The Venetian hotel-casino.
The Nevada Legislature today begins a special session to consider a package of tax breaks designed to induce electric car maker Faraday Future to build its assembly plant in North Las Vegas.
Last week was a busy one, which explains why I didn’t get a chance to see Treasurer Dan Schwartz’s letter to the editor in response to my column of Dec. 2, 2015. In that piece, I questioned the propriety of regulations Schwartz’s office wrote regarding the state’s new Education Savings Account program.
Of all the Republican debates held thus far, and of all that will be held, this is the one to watch.
Now it’s Southern Nevada’s turn. With the formal announcement of a deal between the state and Faraday Future to build an electric car manufacturing facility in the Apex industrial park in North Las Vegas, the region has a few reasons to cheer.
Friday was a good day for Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval.
There are many people who have spent a good deal of time working on changing the names of the community colleges in Southern Nevada.
Carlos Ortiz got the call every parent fears. His son, Kevin, had been wounded in America’s latest mass shooting, in San Bernardino, Calif.
The ironies related to the Education Savings Account program continue to abound.
You’d think that Gov. Brian Sandoval would be happier now than he was before the 2014 election. But he’s fought so much with Republican lawmakers and state officers that he may be longing for the calmer days of divided government.
Like most physicians, Dr. Ben Carson has a funny story about the behavior of insurance companies.
Longtime readers know I’m against the low-speed school zones that surround local campuses.