Nevada
Hard Rock executive seeks licensing in Nevada as resort transition continues
The Nevada Gaming Control Board on Wednesday recommended approval of the licensing of a key executive for Hard Rock Las Vegas, the first license of several anticipated as the shuttered Mirage transitions to a new Strip resort.
Vincent Zahn, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Seminole Hard Rock International LLC and its subsidiaries, was recommended for licensing after a half-hour suitability hearing in Carson City.
Final approval of licensing is expected by the Nevada Gaming Commission on Nov. 21.
Zahn, a former Nevada resident who moved to Florida to join Hard Rock, told board members he aspired to be a Wall Street investment banker when he lived in northern New Jersey and attended New York’s Fordham University.
He worked with Merrill Lynch covering gaming industry companies and eventually went to work for Pinnacle Entertainment and Wynn Resorts before being recruited by Hard Rock, which bought The Mirage from MGM Resorts International for $1.07 billion in December 2022.
Hard Rock, owned by the Seminole Indian Tribe of Florida, closed The Mirage on July 17, after 34 years in business and announced it would expand the property with a guitar-shaped hotel tower replacing the iconic Mirage volcano.
Zahn said he oversees 120 Hard Rock employees and makes frequent trips to Las Vegas as the transition occurs toward a planned opening in 2027.
“Leading up to the reopening of Hard Rock Las Vegas, we’ll have to go through a pretty comprehensive financing process, so I’ll be visiting the site, the location, taking our potential financial partners through the financing plans and visiting for that, but as part of ongoing operations two to four times a year,” Zahn told board members.
Board members praised Zahn’s background and unanimously recommended licensing to the Gaming Commission.
Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on X.
Nevada
A wishlist for Southern Nevada’s future: Southern Nevada Forum plans tomorrow’s laws today
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — If you’ve ever wanted to make a suggestion for a new law, now just might be your chance.
The Southern Nevada Forum held its initial meeting on Monday, with the goal of coming up with a dozen new ideas to fix problems faced by residents of the Las Vegas Valley.
Steve Sebelius outlines some of the top issues and potential solutions:
Southern Nevada Forum plans tomorrow’s laws today
The 13-year-old organization — created by the Vegas Chamber, the City of Las Vegas, Brookings Mountain West and former Assembly Speaker Marilyn Kirkpatrick in 2013 — brings together lawmakers and community leaders to brainstorm ideas.
The group has racked up some successes over the years, too. A website dashboard that shows student performance data, funds for medical school residencies, the authority to create inland ports and an extension of fuel tax revenue indexing were all ideas that came out of the forum, current Assembly Speaker Steve Yeager said Monday.
It works like this:
Four committees — covering education, transportation, economic development and health care — meet regularly for a few months, boiling down ideas to three concrete suggestions each.
Those suggestions are later turned into legislation in Carson City.
The panels are led by a bipartisan group of lawmakers who have the ability to introduce legislation, said Yeager, who himself won’t be returning to Carson City, having decided not to seek a sixth and final term in office.
The meetings are open to anyone, although the schedule of times, dates and locations wasn’t available Monday. You can express your interest in being on a committee by filling out a form at this link.
For the 2026 session of the forum, the committees and their leaders are:
- Economic Development and Governance: Democrats state Sen. Julie Pazina and Assemblyman Duy Nguyen, and Republicans state Sen. John Steinbeck and Assemblyman Brian Hibbetts
- Education: Democrats state Sen. Marilyn Dondero Loop and Assemblywoman Erica Mosca, and Republican Assemblywoman Melissa Hardy
- Health care: Democrats state Sen. Roberta Lange and Assemblywoman Tracy Brown May, and Republican Assemblyman Greg Hafen
- Transportation and Infrastructure: Democrats state Sen. Rochelle Nguyen and Assemblyman Max Carter, and Republican Assemblywoman Lisa Cole
On Monday, people at the transportation committee meeting tossed out ideas such as funding for transit projects, including light rail, fees for electric vehicles that use the roads but don’t pay the state’s gasoline tax, cracking down on unregistered cars and people who don’t carry car insurance, and greater protections for pedestrians.
On the economic development committee, suggestions included extending the life of tax abatements to give new businesses time to grow, making more land available for commercial use, not just housing, putting non-profit funding into the regular budget, rather than just awarding grants at the end of the process and making it easier to get permits and licenses regardless of where in the valley you open your business.
Before the groups met, however, they heard from UNLV political science professor David Damore, the executive director of Brookings Mountain West, who warned them that Nevada faces some serious headwinds.
Damore said revenue doesn’t keep up with the state’s brisk growth, leaving Nevada behind the curve.
“We already have a revenue structure unable to keep pace with growth; we need to address some revenue issues here,” he said. “And remember, the people coming here now, they’re not coming to build our economy, they’re coming to avoid paying taxes in their home state, while putting demands on our services and on our healthcare.”
Damore traced some of the problem to a limitation on government growth devised at the end of the 1970s, which artificially constrains budget increases and leaves money on the table.
“We put this in place in 1979, using 1974 as a baseline — the idea being that the general fund would grow to keep pace at 1974 levels, adjusting for inflation and population growth,” he said. “Well, guess what? We don’t have a tax structure that can even generate that much revenue. For this biennium, we’re about $900 million below that.”
Damore said tax exemptions cost state coffers plenty of income, and the entire revenue system needs a serious look.
“$9 billion in tax exemptions that we have in this state. So, a state that goes through the couch cushions to fund mental health, well, maybe we want to revisit some of this stuff here,” Damore said. “Obviously, no one wants to raise taxes; I get that. But we need to have a serious discussion about revenue.”
If you have a question, concern or story idea about politics and government in Nevada, reach out to Steve Sebelius and “Ask Steve.“
Nevada
Nevada has game vs Middle Tennessee rescheduled
RENO, Nev. (KOLO) – The Nevada football team has had its 2026 matchup against Middle Tennessee rescheduled.
The road matchup against the Blue Raiders has been moved up a week, and will now be played on Sept. 19.
The game was originally scheduled for Sept. 26.
The Wolf Pack played MTSU last year, losing to the Blue Raiders in Reno 14-13.
Nevada will open the 2026 season on Sept. 5 against Western Kentucky.
Copyright 2026 KOLO. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Nevada County Task Force 4101
-
Montana4 days ago2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
-
Science1 week agoWhat a Speech Reveals About Trump’s Plans for Nuclear Weapons
-
Oklahoma6 days agoWildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
-
Technology3 days agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Technology1 week agoThe DJI Romo robovac had security so poor, this man remotely accessed thousands of them
-
Science1 week agoNotoriously hazardous South L.A. oil wells finally plugged after decades of community pressure
-
Education1 week agoVideo: Secret New York City Passage Linked to Underground Railroad
-
World1 week agoAU calls for end to ‘extermination’ of Palestinians, decries African wars