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Governor names new Nevada Gaming Control Board member

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Governor names new Nevada Gaming Control Board member


A deputy city attorney in Reno has been appointed to the Nevada Gaming Control Board, Gov. Joe Lombardo said Wednesday.

Chandeni Sendall, who in 2015 joined the civil division of the city of Reno attorney’s office, will replace Brittnie Watkins, who announced earlier this month that she would not seek reappointment to the full-time three-member board that evaluates and makes recommendations on gaming license applications for consideration by the Nevada Gaming Commission.

The governor’s office did not disclose Sendall’s salary, but Watkins’ 2025 financial disclosure form listed an annual salary of $196,790.

The Control Board meets monthly, mostly in Las Vegas, but occasionally in Carson City.

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“With her unique background in law and compliance, Chandeni will bring fresh insight and critical perspective to the board,” Lombardo said in an emailed statement. “I look forward to her leadership and contributions to gaming oversight in our state.”

Sendall will begin her four-year term this week. Watkins announced at the Jan. 15 Control Board meeting that she would not seek reappointment after serving four years on the board, two months as interim chairwoman.

“I’m grateful to Gov. Lombardo for this opportunity to serve the state of Nevada,” Sendall said in an emailed statement. “Along with my legal background, I look forward to applying my educational background in economics and my work experience in the gaming industry as I begin this new role at the Nevada Gaming Control Board.”

Sendall’s history

Since 2015, Sendall has served as a deputy city attorney for the city of Reno, practicing in the civil division. Before her work in the Reno office, Sendall worked in civil and commercial litigation, served as an in-house legal intern for Reno-based Caesars Entertainment Inc., and clerked for retired Justice James Hardesty at the Nevada Supreme Court. While attending the William S. Boyd School of Law at UNLV, Sendall served as the editor-in-chief of the UNLV Gaming Law Journal. Before her legal career, she served for several years as an internal auditor for Caesars Entertainment.

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According to Sendall’s LinkedIn page, she was born in California, but moved to Nevada, at a young age. She attended the University of Nevada, Reno for undergraduate and graduate studies in economics.

She was also a member of the Nevada Wolf Pack women’s golf team. While in graduate school, she served as a student ambassador, a graduate assistant in the Economics Department, and a volunteer mentor for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northern Nevada.

After completing her graduate studies, she began her finance career at Caesars. While working as an internal auditor, she enrolled in the part-time evening program at the Boyd School in Las Vegas. In law school, she interned for the corporate legal department at Caesars, worked as a summer associate at Travelers Insurance, and led the UNLV Gaming Law Journal.

“My position with Caesars’ in-house legal department provided me an opportunity to learn a great deal about the legal issues that surround a major casino corporation,” she said on LinkedIn. “While working at Travelers Insurance I had the opportunity to draft numerous legal pleadings, discovery requests,and attend mediations and depositions.”

Return to Reno

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After graduating from law school in 2012, she moved back to Northern Nevada and began a clerkship with Hardesty. During her clerkship, she was exposed to diverse areas of law and was tasked with researching and drafting bench memoranda to assist the justices in deciding cases of first impression and matters of significant public policy importance before the court.

She then spent a year in the litigation department of Lionel Sawyer & Collins where she represented clients in civil and commercial litigation matters. In 2015, she moved to McDonald Carano Wilson LLP and continued a civil litigation practice before moving that same year to the Reno city attorney’s office.

Sendall will join two other legal experts on the Control Board, Chairman Kirk Hendrick, who earlier this week announced his plans to resign from the board at the end of the 2025 legislative session, and retired Las Vegas Municipal Court Judge George Assad.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on X.

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The Southern Nevada Ufology Group: Alien intrigue and fun

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The Southern Nevada Ufology Group: Alien intrigue and fun


Supposed sightings of alien aircraft and extraterrestrial life are synonymous with the state of Nevada. A new group in Southern Nevada hopes to offer a glimpse into the unsolved mysteries of the universe with its first event this weekend.

“I spend a lot of hours out there videotaping and to see that so many people want to come out and join me, it’s like a party,” said local ufologist Joseph De La Torre, better known as the Pahrump Alien Guy.

The Southern Nevada Ufology Group will host its first meeting on Saturday, Jan. 31, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. During the event, attendees will learn how to take photos of UFOs from the Pahrump Alien Guy himself. The meeting will take place at the Pahrump Nugget Hotel and Casino in the building’s gravel lot near the bowling parking area. Attendees will park in the bowling parking lot.

“I ended up learning to look into the skies here over Pahrump and I read an article where it said that Pahrump is in the Area 51 excursion zone,” the Pahrump Alien Guy told the Pahrump Valley Times.

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Participants are encouraged to arrive with a tripod for their phone in order to properly take photos. Food, beverages and camping chairs are also welcome, but the Southern Nevada Ufology Group asks guests to please clean up after themselves once the event is over. If you’re interested in joining Saturday’s meeting, you must RSVP by contacting southernnevadaufologygroup@gmail.com to confirm your attendance and to receive more information. Children are not allowed at the event.

“I think that it’s going to be very successful,” the Pahrump Alien Guy enthused.

The Pahrump Alien Guy hosted the inaugural Pahrump Alien Conference in October 2025, a gathering that saw a large turnout of locals, visitors from Las Vegas, and other tourists passing through Nye County.

“We didn’t think it was going to be that successful,” the Pahrump Alien Guy shared.

During that event, UFO photos from the Pahrump Alien Guy’s database were showcased, local vendors sold alien-themed goods and featured guests spoke about their work in ufology.

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Two of the event’s featured speakers were Mike Bara, a New York Times best-selling author and frequent guest on the History Channel’s long-standing series “Ancient Aliens,” and Marysol Rezanov of the Nevada chapter of Citizens for Disclosure, a UFO information disclosure advocacy organization.

The Pahrump Alien Guy, his girlfriend Brid’Jette Whaley, Bara and Rezanov then founded the Southern Nevada Ufology Group. The group plans to host future meetings in other locations around Southern Nevada.

The Pahrump Alien Guy further explained that it was Bara and Rezanov’s idea to create a new skywatching group in Southern Nevada. Bara and Rezanov will be at Saturday’s meeting.

“We call it ‘Southern Nevada’ Ufology Group because it’s not just Pahrump,” the Pahrump Alien Guy said. “It’s all over southern Nevada.”

The Pahrump Alien Guy has a YouTube channel where he shows videos and photos he’s taken of UFOs. Watch the Pahrump Alien Guy’s videos on YouTube at youtube.com/@pahrumpalienguy.

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Contact reporter Elijah Dulay at edulay@pvtimes.com

Southern Nevada Ufology Group’s first meeting

■ Saturday, Jan. 31, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

■ Pahrump Nugget Hotel and Casino located at 681 South Highway 160

■ Attendees will learn how to take photos of UFOs. Guests are are encouraged to bring a tripod for their phone.

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■ To attend you must RSVP by contacting southernnevadaufologygroup@gmail.com

■ No children allowed

■ Park in the bowling parking lot, meeting will be held in neighboring gravel lot



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Nevada’s population growth slowed last year, Census says

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Nevada’s population growth slowed last year, Census says


Nevada’s population growth slowed dramatically last year, according to new statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau.

New figures from the government agency showed Nevada grew 0.9 percent, which put it in the top 10 states for percentage growth (9th) from July 2024 to July 2025. However, this is down from July 2023 to July 2024 when the state grew by 1.7 percent.

In July 2024, Nevada had 3,253,543 residents, and in July of last year it had 3,282,188. From July 2023 to July 2024, Nevada was the sixth fastest-growing state in the country, which meant it dropped three spots for the time period of July 2024 to July 2025.

Nevada expanded from 3,214,363 residents in July 2023 to 3,267,467 in July 2024, which turned out to be the fastest year-over-year growth rate, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, since before the pandemic in 2019. However, all of these growth rates are below the time frame of 2015 to 2018 when the state saw unprecedented population growth.

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Overall, U.S. population growth slowed “significantly” from July 2024 to July of last year with an increase of only 1.8 million people, according to the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau. This was the lowest population growth for the country since the early days of the pandemic when the population grew only 0.2 percent in 2021 year-over-year.

This population slowdown across the country follows a “sizeable” uptick in the growth rate in 2024 when the U.S. added 3.2 million people and grew 1 percent, the fastest annual population growth rate since all the way back in 2006.

“The slowdown in U.S. population growth is largely due to a historic decline in net international migration, which dropped from 2.7 million to 1.3 million in the period from July 2024 through June 2025,” said Christine Hartley, the assistant division chief for Estimates and Projections at the U.S. Census Bureau. “With births and deaths remaining relatively stable compared to the prior year, the sharp decline in net international migration is the main reason for the slower growth rate we see today.”

The population growth drop was felt across the country as all four census regions (West, Midwest, Northeast and the South) and every state except Montana and West Virginia saw growth slow or a decline in acceleration.

Five U.S. states experienced population decline from July 2024 to July 2025: California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Vermont and West Virginia.

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Contact Patrick Blennerhassett at pblennerhassett@reviewjournal.com.



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Nevada City to weigh water/wastewater treatment fee hikes

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Nevada City to weigh water/wastewater treatment fee hikes


Water and wastewater users in Nevada City could see fee hikes coming down the pipe as the City of Nevada City is currently going through steps needed to do so. 

According to the city staff report, water users would see a 25% increase in costs each year for the next 5 years, while wastewater use would result in a 12% increase each year for the next five years. 

For example, a water user currently paying $48 bi-monthly in fees, would be paying $198.41 bi-monthly by 2030. 

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A current wastewater user paying $159.31 bi-monthly, would be paying $250.67 bi-monthly by 2030.

“It is necessary to periodically review rates to ensure that the City can obtain sufficient funds to develop, construct, operate, maintain, and manage its water and wastewater system on a continuing basis, in full compliance with federal, state, and local requirements,” a staff report prepared by Interim City Manager Joan Phillipe said.

Council and staff will convene on the matter at their next regularly scheduled council meeting this Wednesday January 28 at 6:30 p.m. at Nevada City Hall, 317 Broad Street. 

“It is recommended that City Council select a rate option for both water and wastewater and direct staff to initiate the Proposition 218 noticing process. This will involve public engagement and noticing to receive and consider feedback regarding the proposed rates and with public meetings and a hearing as mandated by Proposition 218 for formal adoption of rate adjustments,” the staff report said. 

City to look at Enterprise Fleet services 

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Also at Wednesday’s meeting, the city of Nevada City will consider approval of an agreement with Enterprise Fleet Management to the tune of up to $400,000 per year.

“To increase fleet efficiency, reliability, and reduce expensive repair and fuel costs, staff has researched leasing options that would be a benefit to the organization,” the city staff report reads. “The City of Nevada City currently purchases all fleet vehicles on a cash basis, meaning the entire cost of each vehicle is paid at the time of purchase. This can be heavily impactful to the city as a whole and difficult to adequately budget for. Utilizing Enterprise Fleet Management would yield moderate savings while simultaneously improving fleet viability, safety, and appearance.”



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