The Nevada Independent

Your state. Your news. Your voice.

The Nevada Independent

nevada Justice Association

Speaker Steve Yeager (D-Las Vegas) after being unanimously elected for his second term as speaker of the Assembly during the first day of the 83rd legislative session in Carson City.

Follow the Money: Trial lawyer group was the top donor to Nevada lawmakers in 2024

The Nevada Justice Association, through its political arm, donated more than $320,000 directly to state lawmakers during the 2024 cycle, in addition to nearly $500,000 to PACs associated with prominent Democratic legislators.

Sign up for our newsletters

The Daily Indy
Join more than 20,000 Nevadans who start their day with The Daily Indy, our free flagship daily newsletter that gives you what you need to know in Nevada today.
Indy Elections
This newsletter takes you behind the headlines of Nevada politics, delivering scoops and smart analysis on the races that could reshape our lives.
Indy Environment
Reporter Amy Alonzo peels back the curtain on her environmental beat and curates some of the best land, water and energy journalism in the West in this monthly newsletter.
Indy Gaming
Howard Stutz’s weekly dive into what’s innovative and interesting in Nevada’s gaming, sports and hospitality industries and how it’s shaping the rest of the world.
Indy Education
Reporter Rocio Hernandez takes readers inside Nevada’s K-12 school system, delivering the latest education policy news and exclusive interviews with movers and shakers in this twice-monthly newsletter.
The Legislature on Sunday, Aug. 2, 2020 during the third day of the 32nd Special Session in Carson City.

Contentious COVID business liability, worker protection bill advances in Senate in early morning vote

The bill, which is likely to be the last piece of legislation introduced during the special session, cleared the Senate Committee of the Whole early Tuesday morning, 18-3, with Republican Sens. Ira Hansen, Joe Hardy and Pete Goicoechea in opposition. The legislation, SB4, has dominated the behind-the-scenes conversations during the session and is the culmination of a deal between some of the state's most powerful political interests, including casinos, business groups and the Culinary Union.

Hospitals, health care facilities cry foul at exclusion from proposed COVID liability bill

That exemption — which includes hospitals, nursing homes, intermediate care facilities, hospice care, skilled nursing facilities and emergency medical care centers — has drawn a sharp rebuke from the Nevada Hospital Association and other health care providers, who say it would prohibit them from transferring patients between facilities or prohibit visitors from coming to visit patients.

Interest groups push COVID liability, criminal justice, worker protections for second special session

Although lobbyists and members of the public have been barred from the physical legislative building, a host of interest groups are making their demands known and pushing for their priorities to be included in the proclamation that will establish the parameters of what lawmakers can consider in their second special session. Gov. Steve Sisolak is expected to call the next session once lawmakers finish finalizing cuts to the state budget during the first special session, which started Wednesday.

A backhoe on a cleared lot

Developers, trial lawyers face off over bill revising construction defect law changes made in 2015

The actual subject of the hearing was AB421, a bill heard by the Assembly Judiciary Committee that would reverse many of the substantive changes Republican lawmakers made in 2015 on lawsuits related to construction defect claims, a move derided by Democrats but lauded by Republicans including Gov. Brian Sandoval and developers as necessary to stem the growing tide of alleged "frivolous" lawsuits on residential construction defects.