From prohibiting threats against candidates to disclosing ads made with AI, new laws make changes to Nevada’s elections.
2025 Nevada Legislature
The latest news from the 2025 Nevada Legislature in Carson City.
A new Nevada law gives families who may get split up because of a deportation order a chance to choose a guardian for their child.
From cocktails to-go and no bounce houses when it’s windy, here are new Nevada laws that could affect you.
Gov. Joe Lombardo signed more than 500 bills into law. Here’s what they aim to do.
Politicians and observers say the record-breaking number of vetoes suggests disagreement in the divided government in Carson City.
Gov. Joe Lombardo vetoed a bill that would have established a statutory right to IVF treatment, citing the state’s fiscal woes.
Assembly 381 came from an animal cruelty case that is pending in court. Known as Reba’s Law in honor of an English bulldog that died after being taped into a plastic bin, the bill stiffens animal cruelty penalties and sets guidance for how a bystander can intervene if they see an animal locked in a car during extreme weather.
Nevada’s governor signed a bill that adds steps needed to take over a dead person’s estate.
Two bills signed into law last week create a statewide groundwater rights retirement program. It has no funding.
Education was a focal point of Nevada’s 83rd legislative session, and the Clark County School District will soon begin to feel the effects of a sweeping, bipartisan education bill.
The Nevada Legislature wrapped with some progress made, but experts say it was over all underwhelming. Term limits and lack of leadership and communication are to blame.
Two sides are warring over the passage of a bill mandating nurse-to-patient ratios and increasing transparency in work protections.
The bill requires some local governments to update master plans to better reconcile with rising temperatures.
School Boards in Nevada will soon be able to transfer bullies to other schools in the district, a result of legislation signed into law by Gov. Joe Lombardo.
The newspaper found a group of private administrators, real estate agents, lawyers and house flippers cashed in on dead people’s homes across Southern Nevada for years.
