Gov. Steve Sisolak's (D-NV) finance office will be looking for a new budget director, as the current budget director, Susan Brown, has announced her retirement.
The Nevada Department of Health and Human Services was recently given a grant to buy tablets for 11 police organizations that will help its employees access mental health personnel via telehealth sessions.
Last week, the Clark County Board of County Commissioners approved the Nevada Legislature's obligation that short-term rentals conducting business illegally in unincorporated portions of the county be monitored per licensed business regulations.
The Clark County Commemoration Committee recently held a meeting to evaluate what memorial designs they want to honor victims—along with the event—of the 2017 shooting.
Clark County officials are urging residents to pick up any trash that accumulates near their surroundings so that they don’t end up in local storm drains ahead of flash flood season.
Earlier this month, Clark County backed support programs that are critical to the well-being of the LGBTQIA+ community.
As part of that effort and in support of Pride Month, county commissioners and representatives from the LGBTQ Community Center of Southern Nevada turned on rainbow-colored lights on the ‘Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas’ sign.
Nevada residents are accustomed to scorching days during the summer, so the Clark County Fire Department has released tips on how to stay safe as the weather gets hotter.
Motorists should be aware that Clark County School District’s (CCSD) Summer Acceleration Program will be utilizing school zones at local schools to help students who attend the program safely navigate streets.
Clark County has announced a program to transform a dormant motel on Fremont Street into a housing development to help homeless people get their lives back on track.
It’s been over two years, but Clark County finally announced that they are ending its COVID-19 emergency declaration that was established on March 15, 2020.
A recent report is claiming that a lab company hired by the state of Nevada to test for COVID-19 among high school athletes competing in winter sports failed to produce adequate results.
Clark County leaders are hoping that residents will consider fostering a child after a report that the county has seen a rise in infants entering the program.