Nevada
EDITORIAL: Why California tech millionaires keep moving to Nevada
James Carville once famously said, “It’s the economy, stupid.” Something similar sums up why many successful California business leaders have abandoned the state for Nevada. It’s the business climate, stupid.
As the Review-Journal’s Patrick Blennerhassett recently reported, successful business executives keep moving to Nevada from California. That group includes billionaire Andrew Cherng. He’s one of the co-founders of Panda Express. David Chao is a top executive with the venture capital firm DCM. He also came here from California.
California is one of the largest economies in the world. It’s home to some of the world’s biggest technology companies such as Apple, Google, Nvidia and Meta, which owns Facebook. Its weather and beaches are the envy of Nevadans who’ve just endured five months of scorching temperatures. It has a top university system and many professional sports teams.
But those attractions aren’t driving people away from California. It’s the government.
“The employment laws are a lot easier here, the affordability of a house, transportation,” Kent Yoshimura, co-founder of NeuroGum, said about why he moved to Summerlin.
Here’s how Teddy Liaw, who started NexRep, sums up Nevada’s appeal to successful Californians: “pro-business.” In contrast, California stifles businesses with regulations and taxes that make it difficult to grow a company.
“There’s a reason they’re leaving California in the first place: the politics and the regulatory environment,” he said. “They are seeing the allure here in terms of access and quality of life and the opportunities we have here. At the end of the day California has lost population.”
The lesson is obvious. Poor policies can drive people out of a state that boasts unparalleled advantages in other areas. For all its strengths, Nevada doesn’t have all of the Golden State’s geographical and other amenities. That makes it even more important for Silver State elected officials to avoid repeating the mistakes of California.
That starts with keeping taxes and regulations low. No matter the good intentions of bureaucratic central planners, they consistently fail miserably when compared with a vibrant free market in terms of improving living standards and generating prosperity. Entrepreneurs who create successful enterprises and job opportunities should be celebrated and encouraged, not faced with confiscatory tax rates and a regulatory state that recognizes few boundaries.
Nevada has the geographical advantage of being close to California. But if it adopts the policies that drove job creators out of that state, those individuals and companies will go to Arizona, Utah, Texas or Florida. Nevada politicians — and voters — need to remain vigilant in fostering the conditions for prosperity.
Nevada
Clark County’s Rebecca Place aims to expand homeownership opportunities in Southern Nevada
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — For Clark County Commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick, the groundbreaking for Rebecca Place marked a moment she said nearly brought her to tears — a sign, she believes, that more Southern Nevadans could soon have a realistic path to owning a home.
“I always think that if you want to own a home, you should have an opportunity, and I run into so many people, ‘You know what, I don’t think I can get there.’ Now, I run into people who say, ‘I think I can get there,’” Kirkpatrick said.
Rebecca Place is a 30-home development planned near Rebecca Road and West Tropical Parkway. The homes are estimated to cost around $300,000, far below the recent median price for single-family homes of $470,000, according to Las Vegas Realtors.
The project is aimed at what officials describe as the “missing middle” — families who make too much to qualify for low-income housing but still struggle to afford higher-priced homes.
Homebuyers at Rebecca Place will be limited to households earning between $68,000 and $85,000 per year.
“We love to call it attainable housing because we think their salary should have them attain homeownership,” Kirkpatrick said.
The development is expected to be the first in Nevada built through a community land trust, or CLT. Under the model, the land is owned by the community while the home is owned by the individual, who also pays a ground lease. When the home is resold, it cannot be sold for market price — a restriction the county says is designed to keep the home affordable for the next buyer.
During a visit to the site in the early stages of development, Shannon Mitchell, a nurse who was at a park across the street, said housing costs have become out of reach for younger adults.
“It’s not affordable for my children, 22 to25 years old. They’re paying more rent than what I pay for more my mortgage,” Mitchell said.
Mitchell said she supports the concept and the opportunities it could create. “That’s a good idea for the county, a good idea for opportunities for the families in between,” she said. The project could be in place by late summer.
Some residents have raised concerns about how the development could affect home values. The county said the homes cannot be sold for market value, so they should be assessed accordingly.
Kirkpatrick said the project is meant to offer long-term stability for families who may be able to move in by the end of the year.
“Kids today can’t see the forest through the trees on maybe ever owning a home. This has a piece in it. You can pass it down to your family,” she said.
Nevada
Nevada sues Kalshi to block company’s prediction market operation in state
Nevada gaming regulators filed a lawsuit on Tuesday seeking to block the prediction market operator Kalshi from offering events contracts that would allow its residents to bet on sports including football and basketball games.
The Nevada gaming control board filed the lawsuit as part of an escalating battle over the ability of state gaming regulators nationally to police companies like Kalshi that allow users to place financial bets through their prediction markets.
It sued on the same day that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in a brief in related litigation threw its support behind companies like Kalshi by arguing it had exclusive jurisdiction over prediction markets. Kalshi had sought for months to prevent Nevada regulators from filing a case against it. But a federal appeals court on Tuesday declined to put on hold a judge’s November order dissolving an injunction that had previously prevented Nevada authorities from pursuing an enforcement action. Should Nevada prevail, it would become the second state to secure a court order blocking Kalshi from offering sports events contracts, after a Massachusetts judge on 5 February issued an injunction at the behest of the state’s attorney general.
That injunction was set to take effect in 30 days, but a state appeals court justice on Tuesday put it on hold while Kalshi appeals.
Nevada in Tuesday’s lawsuit contends that offering sports event contracts, or certain other event contracts, constitutes wagering activity under Nevada state law and that, as a result, Kalshi must be licensed.
It said Kalshi had not complied with state gaming regulations, including those prohibiting anyone under 21 from placing wagers and requiring entities accepting wagers on sports events to deploy safeguards against wagers by insiders like players and match-fixing.
The state has already convinced judges to issue orders barring two other prediction market operators, Coinbase and Polymarket, from offering events contracts. Nevada is seeking to have a state court judge issue a similar temporary restraining order against Kalshi, but the company soon after Tuesday’s case was filed sought to have it transferred to federal court, saying the case raised a matter of law over whether it was subject to the CFTC’s exclusive jurisdiction.
The New York-based company contends the federal regulator has sole jurisdiction over its events contracts as they are a form of swaps, a type of derivative contract.
Nevada
Nevada State Railroad Museum introduces new rail bike tours
Las Vegas (KSNV) — The Nevada State Railroad Museum in Boulder City has launched a new outdoor attraction.
The new rail bike tours allow visitors to pedal-powered bikes along historic railroad tracks from Boulder City to Railroad Pass and back.
The tours encompass approximately eight miles round-trip and last about 90 minutes, with guides providing insights into the area’s transportation history.
“This experience allows visitors to physically travel along the same rail corridor used for constructing Boulder City and Hoover Dam,” said museum director Christopher MacMahon, Ph.D.
Designed for adventure seekers and families, the tours run on Mondays, Thursdays, and Fridays at 1 p.m., 3 p.m., and 6 p.m., and on weekends at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m.
Pricing is $90 per rail bike, accommodating up to four riders.
MORE ON NEWS 3 | Las Vegas resident hits $600k jackpot at off-strip casino
For more information, click here.
-
Illinois1 week ago2026 IHSA Illinois Wrestling State Finals Schedule And Brackets – FloWrestling
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz on Passionate Lines From Popular Literature
-
Oklahoma1 day agoWildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
-
Health1 week agoJames Van Der Beek shared colorectal cancer warning sign months before his death
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago“Redux Redux”: A Mind-Blowing Multiverse Movie That Will Make You Believe in Cinema Again [Review]
-
Technology1 week agoHP ZBook Ultra G1a review: a business-class workstation that’s got game
-
Science1 week agoA SoCal beetle that poses as an ant may have answered a key question about evolution
-
Politics7 days agoCulver City, a crime haven? Bondi’s jab falls flat with locals