Tuesday, March 22 2011 2:32 PM EDT2011-03-22 18:32:00 GMT
Federal appeals court judges are considering whether the Obama administration had the authority to stop plans to bury the nation's nuclear waste in Nevada.More>>
Thursday, July 22 2010 8:02 PM EDT2010-07-23 01:02:53 GMT
Lawmakers who support a nuclear waste repository under Nevada's Yucca Mountain continue to fall short of finding additional money for the project.More>>
Tuesday, June 29 2010 5:52 PM EDT2010-06-29 22:52:42 GMT
A Nuclear Regulatory Commission legal panel says the federal Department of Energy can't withdraw its application to build a national nuclear waste dump in Nevada.More>>
Wednesday, March 3 2010 6:01 PM EST2010-03-03 23:01:59 GMT
Despite threats of legal challenges from at least two states, the Department of Energy is withdrawing it's license application to open the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste storage facility.More>>
Monday, February 1 2010 8:35 PM EST2010-02-02 01:35:13 GMT
After more than a 20-year battle, the Yucca Mountain Project is one step closer to being shutdown. As part of his proposed 2010 budget, President Barack Obama wants to zero out the project's funding.More>>
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says the Obama administration will seek to eliminate funding for a review needed to open a nuclear waste respository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.More>>
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission says eight petitioners and 299 challenges will be heard during upcoming hearings on the Energy Department's application to open and operate a national nuclear waste dump in Nevada.More>>
Reporter Edward Lawrence & Photojournalist Bill Roe
A panel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission judges is hearing oral arguments in Las Vegas on the license application to move forward with storing radioactive waste at Yucca Mountain.More>>
A panel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission judges is hearing oral arguments in Las Vegas on the license application to move forward with storing radioactive waste at Yucca Mountain.More>>
Some big news today on the Yucca Mountain front. Energy Secretary Steven Chu says the proposed site in Nevada is no longer an option for storing highly radioactive nuclear waste.More>>
Some big news today on the Yucca Mountain front. Energy Secretary Steven Chu says the proposed site in Nevada is no longer an option for storing highly radioactive nuclear waste.More>>
Some are calling the $3 billion proposed rail line to bring nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain a diaster in the making. Inside, find information on the public hearing.More>>
The Energy Department will tell Congress in the coming weeks it should begin looking for a second permanent site to bury nuclear waste, or approve a large expansion of the proposed waste repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.More>>
The Energy Department has calculated a new total cost to open and operate the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump in Nevada, to more than $90 billion. It's the first official estimate since 2001, when the figure stood at $58 billion.More>>
Eyewitness News has learned that the license application to open the nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain is complete. The massive document will be submitted early next week. Reporter Edward Lawrence has details. Inside find a link to a petition opposing the waste dump.More>>
The federal Energy Department has picked two contractors to design and build canisters for the transport and permanent storage of spent nuclear fuel at a planned national repository in Nevada.More>>
Nevada's congressional delegation wants more to time to prepare challenges to the application for the nation's nuclear waste dump being built at Yucca Mountain -- about 90 miles from Las Vegas.More>>
The head of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump project says that despite budget cuts, the Energy Department will meet a self-imposed June deadline for submitting a required license application to build the repository.More>>
The head of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump says the $494.7 million President Bush requested for the project in 2009 is necessary for plans to stay on track.More>>
President Bush is seeking $495 million for the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump in 2009.It's a figure that Congress is unlikely to give him with Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, who opposes the dump, running the Senate as majority leader.More>>
Nevada's congressional delegation is asking the Labor Department to help find new jobs for the workers being laid off from the Yucca Mountain nuclear dump project due to budget cuts. More>>
The head of the Yucca Mountain nuclear dump project says 2008 budget cuts will cause several hundred layoffs and put plans to finish a required license application by June 30 in "serious jeopardy."More>>
The public comment period for Yucca Mountain will end Thursday at midnight. The Department of Energy is submitting a license application and public comment is part of that process.More>>
The Energy Department is cutting operations and laying off contract workers at the Nevada desert site where it plans to build a national nuclear waste repository.More>>
A Nuclear Regulatory Commission panel has rejected Nevada's challenge to an Energy Department database required for the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump to go forward.More>>
Nevada officials say the federal government is not playing fair when it comes to nuclear waste storage. The Department of Energy wants to ship the nation's high-level waste to Yucca Mountain. However, the state says it's not safe. Reporter Edward Lawrence has the details.More>>
A public hearing in Las Vegas on the Yucca Mountain project drew more than 200 people Monday evening. The hearing is one is a series on the proposal to store the nation's nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Inside, find details on how to submit your opinion online, e-mail, or fax. More>>
A heated debate and now new hope in the fight against Yucca Mountain -- this time from the United States Senate. The environmental committee held a contentious hearing aimed squarely at shutting down the proposed nuclear dump. Jonathan Humbert, the only local TV reporter was at that hearing in Washington and has the details.More>>
A new effort is underway by Clark County to enable Southern Nevadans to have their say on the Yucca Mountain Project. Reporter Edward Lawrence takes a look at how the county plans to get people to voice their opinions.Click here to print the "Speak Up on Yucca Mountain" flyer. More>>
In a shiny new building in Las Vegas, employees at the Nuclear Regulatory Agency are deciding if a nuclear waste dump in Nevada gets a license to open waits for the application. Reporter Edward Lawrence looks in depth at why the federal agency says its new building is not wasted tax dollars. More>>
The head of the Nevada Commission on Nuclear Projects says the Department of Energy wants to ram through the license for the nuclear waste repository before the current president leaves office. Eyewitness News has uncovered new information about transportation and safety, which could impact the entire Las Vegas Valley. More>>
The proposed nuclear-waste storage facility at Yucca Mountain in Nevada will need up to three times its current funding or the program's 2017 opening date will have to be delayed.More>>
Drilling operations at the Yucca Mountain project, north of Las Vegas, have unearthed a big surprise that could create concern about the project. Reporter Tedd Florendo takes an indepth look at this story. Inside, find a link for recent Nevada quake activity.More>>
Contractors on the Yucca Mountain Project are preparing to lay off 60 to 80 workers in anticipation of budget cuts from Congress. Notices were expected to be distributed in the next few days to employees of Bechtel SAIC.More>>
Nevada state attorneys are asking a judge order the federal government to stop using the state's water for drilling at the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste site. The attorney general's office filed two motions Monday.More>>
This week brought another round in the war of water use at the Yucca Mountain Project, but this time, it might end with sanctions or fines against the Department of Energy. Inside, find a link to full coverage of Yucca Mountain.More>>
The Department of Energy will no longer be allowed to use Nevada's water for bore hole drilling at the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository. More>>
Some of Nevada's most powerful leaders gathered in Las Vegas Thursday for a closed door strategy session. Their goal -- stopping the Yucca Mountain Project. Reporter Edward Lawrence has the details.More>>
Those against the plan to store the nation's nuclear waste in Southern Nevada are strategizing ways to thwart the federal project as the Yucca Mountain Project takes center stage again.More>>
The Yucca Mountain project is far from dead. One of the trickiest parts about building a nuclear waste repository in Yucca Mountain is getting the waste to the facility. The idea of using the Caliente corridor is being tossed around again. Reporter Melissa Duran has the story.More>>
A top Yucca Mountain official says the Energy Department is refocusing plans for a cross-Nevada railroad to a national nuclear waste repository. More>>
The Walker River Paiute Tribe has dealt a blow to a federal proposal to ship nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain along a western Nevada rail corridor. More>>
The Energy Department's Yucca Mountain project chief says the proposed the Mina Corridor route for shipping nuclear waste to the dump appears to be faster and cheaper to build than the Caliente Corridor. More>>
The Department of Energy unveiled legislation today to spur construction of a national nuclear waste dump in Nevada and increase its capacity. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid immediately vowed to block the bill. More>>
Opponents of the proposed Yucca Mountain Project believe the project is dead. The state is still fighting it, but as Legislative Reporter Jonathan Humbert found out, Nevada may be running out of options. More>>
Nevada officials have released a report saying taxpayers would save billions of dollars if the government never opens the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump. More>>
It's a twenty-year battle that may finally be coming to an end -- new word Tuesday that the state's efforts to stop conscruction of Yucca Mountain have worked. More>>
The leading nuclear industry association says it will stop trying to push bills on Yucca Mountain through Congress, with Reid as the majority leader. Read on for more Eyewitness News stories on the Yucca Mountain debate.More>>
The Energy Department is making a new push to fix how design mistakes are identified and corrected at a proposed national nuclear waste dump in Nevada, a top project official said.
Paul Golan, principalMore>>
The Nevada Test Site is once again being considered to house nuclear materials from across the country. This time it is weapons-grade plutonium. Send your comments to the National Nuclear Security Administration. Read on for details.More>>
What will Southern Nevada be like in 10,000? Will the English language exist? These are questions the Department of Energy is considering as it works on a long-term warning plan for Yucca Mountain. The I-Team's Mark Sayre talked with the founder of the non-profit Desert Space Foundation.More>>
The federal Energy Department is adding another public meeting about revised plans for a radioactive waste dump in Nevada. Read on for links to comment and see maps showing a proposed rail route.More>>
A nuclear industry-lobbying group's proposal would also provide millions of dollars to Nevada if it drops opposition to the nuclear waste dump project.More>>
The planned Yucca Mountain repository could hold up to nine times more nuclear waste if it were expanded and redesigned according to an industry report previewed Wednesday. More>>
Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman toured the proposed Yucca Mountain Repository Thursday with some of the top scientists at the site. For Eyewitness News to get access, we had to have a background check and get cleared through security on the Nevada Test Site. More>>
Nevada's congressional delegation is digging in and promising to kill the latest Yucca Mountain bill the DOE, with the support of President Bush, sent to Congress on Wednesday. Read on for responses from Senators Harry Reid and John Ensign.More>>
A key senator said Thursday that he'll likely introduce his own bill if the Bush administration doesn't soon unveil much-anticipated legislation to smooth development of a national nuclear waste dump in Nevada. More>>
Nevada filed a lawsuit accusing the federal Energy Department of withholding documents that state officials say will show the planned Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository can't be built safely. More>>
It will be at least five years before construction can begin at the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste disposal facility, Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said this week. More>>
No specifics of the DOE's plan have been made public only that waste from other countries could be brought there for reprocessing. Read on for two perspectives.More>>
Sandia National Laboratories has been chosen as the lead federal lab to coordinate science work on the $58 billion Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in Nevada, the U.S. Department of Energy said Wednesday. More>>
The federal offices handling the Yucca Mountain project are reorganizing so officials say they can streamline efforts to open a national nuclear waste dump in Nevada. More>>
Nevada senators Ensign and Reid have teamed up to propose legislation to keep nuclear waste from being brought to Southern Nevada. If the bill is approved, it would remove the need for the nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. More>>
The DOE's inspector general reports more emails have been uncovered, which may throw uncertainty on the validity of the science being used to justify the proposed nuclear waste dump.More>>
Lawmakers agreed Monday to cut 2006 spending for Yucca Mountain well below past-year levels and President Bush's budget request, reflecting the faltering prospects for locating the nation's nuclear waste dump in the Nevada desert. More>>
The project's supporters and detractors are weighing in on the news of the DOE's new plans to radically change how spent nuclear fuel will be handled before it reaches Yucca Mountain.More>>
Scientists and environmentalists are criticizing proposed radiation limits at the Yucca Mountain dump. They believe the rules aren't strict enough to protect the public. More>>
The Energy Department is telling the U-S Geological Survey to expect deep cuts in 2006 funding for work on the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste. More>>
The DOE says it's turned over more than 700 pages of additional documents subpoenaed by Nevada Congressman Jon Porter and a congressional panel investigating the Yucca Mountain project. More>>
Nevada filed a new lawsuit Thursday against the Yucca Mountain project. The state alleges in a petition filed in federal court in Washington that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has already decided to grant the DOE a license to open the national nuclear waste dump. More>>
Nevada's attorney general is asking counterparts in 10 states to join the fight against a proposed national nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. More>>
The Environmental Protection Agency has anounced its plans to hold public information sessions about the future of Yucca Mountain. In October, the EPA will hold hearings in Nevada. Read on for more information.More>>
The $3.8 billion in estimated public safety expenses for the Yucca Mountain project should be paid by the federal government, but Clark County planners believe taxpayers will be the ones to shell out the money. More>>
The EPA, trying to overcome a court ruling that threatens a proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada, proposed new radiation exposure limits. Read on for a link to the EPA's news release.More>>
About one of every 10 dollars in federal funds sent to Nevada to oversee plans for a national nuclear waste repository was misspent, according to an Energy Department inspector general office report released Thursday. More>>
Utilities with nuclear power reactors have been waiting for years for a place to send their radioactive waste. Now, the state of Nevada's telling a court that plans to open the proposed repository by 2012 or later are -- quote -- "sheer fantasy."More>>
A scientist subpoenaed to testify before a Congressional panel about document falsification on the Yucca Mountain project is insisting he never altered paperwork.More>>
The House started debate Tuesday on a $29.7 billion funding bill for the DOE. The energy and water projects bill would provide $661 million to continue development of the nuclear waste storage site at Yucca Mountain. More>>
A new set of e-mails written by Yucca Mountain employees shows the Energy Department knew the project "flunked" because the volcanic rock formation couldn't live up to its scientific billing, an attorney for Nevada said. More>>
A federal judge has urged the U.S. government and the state of Nevada to compromise on the use of water for drilling bore holes at the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump.More>>
Pakistan's leader continued to press for India to enter talks over the disputed Kashmir province and avoid war, while India dismissed fears that either country would use nuclear weapons in a conflict. Both sides are at an Asian security summit. Get a clearer understanding of the nuclear threat the world faces in this interactive feature. More>>
As the debate rages over using the Yucca Mountain as a burial ground for thousands of tons of radioactive material, a better site for unwanted nuclear waste holds its mute vigil in the skies above the Nevada desert: the Moon. More>>
A plan to ship nuclear waste from Nevada to New Mexico through Southern California was canceled Wednesday because of opposition from state officials, the Department of Energy said. More>>
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham is in Southern Nevada to tour the site of a proposed nuclear waste dump. The visit is prompting yet another call for an end to the plan. More>>
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham is coming to Southern Nevada this week to visit Yucca Mountain. He was originally going to visit the Test Site with Nevada Sen. Harry Reid and Homeland Security Chief Tom Ridge. But when the Yucca Mountain visit became part of the trip, Reid changed his plans.More>>
Local union members have mixed reactions to the decision to bring nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain. Leaders of the local AFL-CIO say they are against the dump, but if it is coming, Nevadans should be compensated. More>>
Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman has repeatedly made some rather disparaging comments about proponents of the Yucca Mountain Project -- in particular, Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham.More>>
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham has recommended Yucca Mountain as the nation's nuclear waste site. State officials vow to fight the Yucca Mountain decision, which still must be finalized by President Bush. What do you think?More>>
President Bush approved Yucca Mountain in Nevada as the site for long-term disposal of thousands of tons of highly radioactive nuclear waste, angering supporters in the state. Nevada officials plan to file a formal objection turning the matter over to Congress.More>>
Nevada officials are reacting angrily to the announcement that Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham has recommended to the White House that Yucca Mountain be made the nation's nuclear dump. More>>
A newly released report says the Valley's economy will be greatly affected if Yucca Mountain becomes the nation's nuclear waste dump. The report says that even without an accident, storing the waste in Nevada could cost our economy billions.More>>
Gov. Kenny Guinn is taking his anti-nuclear waste fight to the nation's capital. Guinn is scheduled to meet with President Bush on Thursday about the future of Yucca Mountain. What will he say to the president?More>>
The fight to keep nuclear waste out of Nevada is far from over. Gov. Kenny Guinn joined state, county and city leaders Wednesday to talk about the next plan of action. The main component of that plan is money.More>>
Another major step was taken Tuesday in the fight to keep nuclear waste out of Nevada. Gov. Kenny Guinn is now getting financial support from local businesses, which could make a difference in the battle.More>>
The state of Nevada is voicing its disapproval of the Yucca Mountain Project by delivering a historic veto in Washington, D.C. Gov. Kenny Guinn announced his plans at a speech at UNLV on Monday before flying to the capital. More>>
Nevada lawmakers released a videotape Monday that they say shows how transporting nuclear waste is extremely dangerous. The tape shows a missile piercing a cannister used to store radioactive material. More>>
Nevada is pulling the plug on Yucca Mountain's water. The state has denied a renewal permit for groundwater, and now it's being sued by the Department of Energy over the decision. More>>
Most Nevadans will admit they don't want nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, but many think it's practically a done deal. They say it's time for Nevada to ask for compensation.More>>
The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 41-to-6 Thursday to endorse the Yucca Mountain Project, despite concerns about transporting the waste. More>>
Gov. Kenny Guinn remains in Washington, D.C., after vetoing the presidential decision on the Yucca Mountain Project. Nevada isn't just fighting in Washington; it's also launching a major marketing campaign to get public support to stop the dump. More>>
Gov. Kenny Guinn is about to make history. Guinn is going to Washington, D.C., on Monday to veto President Bush's decision to send the nation's nuclear waste to Nevada. More>>
Congress began debating the Yucca Mountain Project on Thursday in Washington. Gov. Kenny Guinn vetoed the president's decision to go ahead with the nuclear dump. Now Congress will decide whether to override Guinn's veto. More>>
Security lapses involving radioactive materials have led to scores of enforcement actions against universities, construction companies, hospitals and even the U.S. Army in recent years, according to Nuclear Regulatory Commission records. More>>
Television commercials showing the dangers of transporting nuclear waste have begun airing in Utah, which is one of the states along the proposed transportation route. But how effective are the ads? More>>
The House on Wednesday endorsed President Bush's decision to send the country's nuclear waste to Nevada. The House voted 306 to 117 to override the state's objections to a radioactive dump 90 miles from Las Vegas. Lawmakers rejected arguments that thousands of waste shipments across 43 states would pose safety and security risks.More>>
Congressional aides from Washington are touring Yucca Mountain. The tour comes as the House prepares to vote on the Yucca Mountain issue later this week. More>>
Congresswoman Shelley Berkley has some strong words about placing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. Click here to read her response to the House vote on the proposed dump site.More>>
Ignoring protests from Nevada, the House on Wednesday overwhelmingly embraced President Bush's decision to bury tens of thousands of tons of nuclear waste in volcanic rock 90 miles from Las Vegas. More>>
A Senate committee advanced a resolution Wednesday supporting President Bush's proposal for the Yucca Mountain nuclear repository. The full Senate has to act on the resolution by July 25 if the project is to continue. More>>
A committee of mayors voted to oppose transporting high-level nuclear waste to a national repository unless federal officials can guarantee the safety of all cities along proposed routes. More>>
The U.S. Senate could vote this summer to make Nevada's Yucca Mountain the site for the nation's nuclear waste. A group in Washington says trucking the waste here will affect more than Nevadans. And they're using a new Website to map it out. More>>
The fate of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste storage site could be decided this week. If the Senate votes "yes," Gov. Kenny Guinn's veto of the project will be overturned, and the project will go forward. But if the Senate votes "no," Guinn's veto will stand, and the Yucca Mountain Project will be dead.More>>
An ad campaign in favor of sending nuclear waste to Southern Nevada is now under way. Radio ads pushing the Yucca Mountain project are already airing in a number of states -- and they have opponents of the project seeing red. More>>
The Yucca Mountain battle has now shifted from a legislative arena to a judicial arena. And there are opponents of Yucca Mountain who believe that lawsuits could stop the project from being built.More>>
Pending a final environmental review, the Energy Department is expected to move as much as several tons of plutonium and weapons-grade uranium from a federal research laboratory in New Mexico to Nevada because of security concerns, according to documents. More>>
Government scientists have conducted the latest in a series of experiments to assess the reliability of the nation's nuclear stockpile. The Department of Energy says the subcritical testMore>>
A public meeting was held Tuesday morning about the decision to store the nation's nuclear waste in Southern Nevada. A legislative committee discussed the Yucca Mountain issue and updated the public on Nevada's legal battles against the dump. Is the project still going forward as planned?More>>
Nevada's congressional delegation is hoping a legal loophole will help them kill plans for a proposed nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. More>>
A federal judge says the Energy Department can have water for toilets and showers at the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump site. But it can't draw enough water to begin building a nuclear waste repository. More>>
Clark County residents should prepare for nuclear waste traveling on our highways, and that it could be a target for terrorism. That was the message at the Annual Hazardous Waste Conference Wednesday, where experts discussed the dangers of Yucca Mountain.More>>
Time is running out for Nevada's two senators to convince other members of the U.S. Senate that nuclear waste should not be transported to Yucca Mountain. The Senate is expected to vote on the project this weekMore>>
After 20 years and billions of dollars spent on studying the storage of high-level nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, the project has been approved by Congress.More>>
After years of debate, a nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain moved one step closer to reality Tuesday. The Senate voted to override Gov. Kenny Guinn's veto. That clears the way for the Department of Energy to apply for licensing from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. More>>
Here at home, there are strong reactions from local residents. Some are calling the Senate vote on Yucca Mountain a "death sentence" for Southern Nevada. But others say the nuclear repository will be an investment in our future. More>>
The Senate voted Tuesday to store thousands of tons of radioactive waste inside Yucca Mountain in the Nevada desert, rejecting the state's fervent protests and ending years of political debate over nuclear waste disposal. More>>
Overriding Nevada's veto by a vote of 60-39, the U.S. Senate on Monday cleared the way for final licensing and construction of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste storage facility, located some 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas. More>>
After a favorable Senate vote, the political verdict on Yucca Mountain is in, but the proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada still faces major hurdles, including lawsuits and a long licensing process. More>>
Over Nevada's fervent protests, President Bush signed a bill Tuesday making Yucca Mountain the nation's central repository for nuclear waste. The project had been studied for more than 20 years, and Mr. Bush signed the measure with no fanfare. Reporters were not allowed to witness the bill-signing. More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 4:45 PM EDT2013-05-24 20:45:16 GMT
LAS VEGAS -- The Rawson-Neal Psychiatric Hospital will maintain its federal funding despite not meeting some of the government's requirements. The hospital came under scrutiny for its discharging procedures.More>>
The Rawson-Neal Psychiatric Hospital will maintain its federal funding despite not meeting some of the government's requirements.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 3:58 PM EDT2013-05-24 19:58:32 GMT
LAS VEGAS -- The Clark County Grand Jury has indicted Michael Smith on murder and assault charges in the shooting death of a man in January. Michael Smith is accused of killing Carlos Bell on Jan. 14,More>>
The Clark County Grand Jury has indicted Michael Smith on murder and assault charges in the shooting death of a man in January.More>>
Thursday, May 23 2013 7:36 PM EDT2013-05-23 23:36:46 GMT
LAS VEGAS -- Air Force pilot Scott Powell returned home three weeks early from a yearlong deployment to Afghanistan, surprising his children at school. Two hours after landing in Las Vegas, Maj. PowellMore>>
Air Force pilot Scott Powell returned home three weeks early from a yearlong deployment to Afghanistan, surprising his children at school.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 3:15 PM EDT2013-05-24 19:15:13 GMT
LAS VEGAS - The wolf pack is back in theaters this week with the release of "The Hangover 3". The film series returns to Las Vegas, and Caesars Palace is making the most of its role. "The Hangover" fansMore>>
The wolf pack is back in theaters this week with the release of "The Hangover 3". The film series returns to Las Vegas, and Caesars Palace is making the most of its role.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 2:36 PM EDT2013-05-24 18:36:32 GMT
LAS VEGAS - Nevada Highway Patrol says two people were injured from a crash on southbound I-15 at Blue Diamond Road. A work truck rear-ended a car. Both drivers were transported to University MedicalMore>>
TheNevada Highway Patrol has reopened a busy stretch of I-15 south of Las Vegas following a two-vehicle crash Friday morning.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 1:30 PM EDT2013-05-24 17:30:23 GMT
LAS VEGAS -- Salvation Army Family Services is in need of baby products for distribution. The office gives out between 60 to 150 food boxes to families in need every weekday. Salvation Army officialsMore>>
Salvation Army Family Services is in need of baby products for distribution. The office gives out between 60 to 150 food boxes to families in need every weekday.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 12:53 PM EDT2013-05-24 16:53:28 GMT
LAS VEGAS -- The dream of attending college came true for more than 400 Clark County students Thursday as they were awarded nearly $1 million in scholarships. Scholarships were given to 440 students thanksMore>>
The dream of attending college came true for hundreds of Clark County students Thursday as they were awarded nearly $1 million in scholarships.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 12:27 PM EDT2013-05-24 16:27:04 GMT
LAS VEGAS - Frankie Moreno is used to a stage. To the students at Las Vegas Academy of Arts, he's more than a performer. He's a teacher. Moreno and his two brothers are teaching a course in songwriting.More>>
The students at Las Vegas Academy of Arts are learning the basics of songwriting from a Las Vegas Strip star: Frankie Moreno. It's What's Cool at School.More>>
Friday, May 24 2013 11:21 AM EDT2013-05-24 15:21:40 GMT
HENDERSON, Nev. - Doc Holliday's Saloon is a bar in Henderson where regulars order drinks and play some games. "We are more of a ‘Cheers' bar," Doc Holliday's manager Craig Dahlheimer said. "EverybodyMore>>
8 on Your Side uncovered a huge scam before it victimized a local bar and cost the business owner thousands of dollars.More>>