Across Nevada|News|
Assemblyman: Companies Still Illegally Towing Poor People's Cars, Despite 2021 Law
“Multiple complaints” from constituents say towing companies are still removing lawfully parked cars over registration issues.

Nevada Current, a nonprofit, online source of political news and commentary, documents the policies, institutions and systems that affect Nevadans’ daily lives. The Current is part of States Newsroom, a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers.
“Multiple complaints” from constituents say towing companies are still removing lawfully parked cars over registration issues.

Nevada Medicaid reminds people to never share their bank or credit card information with anyone.
Rates rise even as natural gas prices plummet.
If Nevada doesn’t give Oakland A’s billionaire owner John Fisher $500 million, would he still relocate the team here anyway?
The court issued a stay that ensures access to mifepristone nationwide.
Suicide is a multi-faceted and nuanced public health crisis with no single cause.
Recent reports on the trafficking of minors in the United States force us to confront our complicity in a grotesque injustice.
Calls to a national hotline dedicated to helping people navigate legal questions around abortion have been at an all-time high.
The bill carries along with it numerous Republican initiatives that are unlikely to get bipartisan support.
No, not because we're already up to our eyeballs in gambling so duh why not some more. (And as you know that industry's whiny disdain fo ...
Democratic lawmakers are proposing various bills this session to protect the process.
Iowa’s National Motorcycle Museum is being sued over its display and sale of Evel Knievel memorabilia.
More Americans and Nevadans are getting access to health care through the public marketplace.
Nevada is the only state in the western United States that does not regulate the profession.
In 1920, Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist Party presidential candidate, polled nearly a million votes without ever hitting the campaign trail.
Tuesday’s tally was similar to that in the March 9 vote to pass the resolution rolling back the Biden rule.
Senate Bill 371 would expressly give counties and cities the authority to “enact any ordinance or measure relating to affordable housing.”
Carl Lackey claims included defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy.
Senate Bill 395 would create and maintain a public registry and limit corporate investment to 1,000 housing units per year.
Kevin McCarthy repeatedly criticized President Joe Biden and blamed him for a standoff over the debt limit.