Gov. Joe Lombardo has outlined his housing bill. The legislation would create the Nevada Attainable Housing Fund.
2025 Nevada Legislature
The latest news from the 2025 Nevada Legislature in Carson City.
The Republican governor defended his record on education in response to recent criticism from across the aisle in an interview with the Review-Journal.
Sen. James Ohrenschall presented legislation that would prohibit the state from helping prosecute out-of-state patients who seek gender-affirming care in Nevada.
Culinary Local 226 supports a bill in the Nevada Legislature that would require major Las Vegas and Reno hotels to clean their rooms daily.
As the stipends for teachers in special education and Title I schools comes to an end, a new bill in the legislature could revive extra compensation for hard-to-fill positions.
Legislators have put forward over 1,100 ideas for bills all while potential federal budget cuts loom over their heads.
Dr. Alfred Danielian is team cardiologist for the Raiders, the Golden Knights and Aces among others. He’s advocating for a “Smart Heart Law” for all high schools in Nevada.
Proposed legislation expanding the state’s film tax credit program to lure Hollywood studios to Southern Nevada has captured the interest of some in the state.
Nevada’s healthcare leaders sounded the alarm on pending Medicaid cuts during a legislative hearing.
Clark County School Board trustees would see their compensation increase from $9,000 to nearly $90,000 a year if a bill before the Nevada Legislature becomes law.
The media conglomerates will lobby the Nevada Legislature to expand the state’s film tax credit program to help fund a 31-acre movie studio in Summerlin.
Sponsors and school officials say the bill would codify existing procedures in school districts. Opponents say they are worried about the penalties.
A Nevada bill would create the state’s first account meant to use state funds to retire water rights.
Nevada could draw large-scale studio projects with two bills introduced this week that propose expanding film tax credits.
Nevada’s expanded federal and state health insurance program for low-income earners could see funding cuts, according to one consideration in the Congressional budget plan.