Nevada
Meet the Nevada 4th grader who will light the Capitol Christmas tree in Washington D.C.
A fourth grader from Virginia City is representing Nevada on one of the biggest holiday stages in the country. Nine-year-old Grady Armstrong, a student at Hugh Gallagher Elementary School, was selected to light Silver Belle, the 2025 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree harvested from Nevada for the very first time.
Grady won the honor after taking first place in a statewide essay contest with more than 250 entries. His essay focused on Nevada’s public lands and national forests, and why they deserve to be protected and appreciated. He said he wanted the rest of the country to understand how special Nevada’s public land and national forests are, and he included examples about enjoying and caring for those spaces. The essay took him about three days to write, a stretch he jokingly described as involving blood, sweat and tears after spending long hours working on it. He said he wrote most of it himself.
This week marks Grady’s first trip to Washington, D.C. and his first time on an airplane. He said he was surprised to enjoy the takeoff and the turns in the air, describing the lightheaded feeling as one of his favorite parts of the flight.
Grady boards Southwest flight on his way to Washington D.C. (Armstrong family)
Once in the nation’s capital, he visited the Kennedy Center to watch the Nutcracker, the Smithsonian, the Washington Monument and caught a glimpse of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. He said mostly everything about Washington, D.C. has been a favorite so far, including the hotel, housekeeping staff, and the history he is seeing up close.
Grady and his two younger sisters at the Hall of Democracy (Armstrong family)
Nearly his entire family has traveled across the country to be there for his big moment, including his parents, two sisters, grandparents and other relatives arriving throughout the week. Grady said it means a lot to have so many loved ones celebrating with him.
He also shared how meaningful it feels to represent the small community of Virginia City and all of Nevada in front of the nation. When asked what he loves most about his home state, he said everything. He talked about exploring wildlife near his home in the Highlands with his family and described watching a colorful sparrow bathe in a rain puddle on their property. He said it reminded him of seeing birds in Washington, D.C., similar in some ways but in a very different setting.
The Armstrong family before watching the Nutcrack at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. (Armstrong family)
Grady’s connection to Silver Belle began long before he arrived in Washington. He was there the day the tree was harvested in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest and later rode alongside it in the Nevada Day Parade. He said his favorite part of the journey so far has been seeing the tree harvested, watching it get decorated and then seeing it in person outside the Capitol. He also sent a special ornament with the tree, a wooden mountain bluebird, which is Nevada’s state bird.
Grady gives challenge coin to Washington D.C. firefighters, thanks them for their work (Armstrong family)
With the ceremony approaching, Grady said he feels mostly excited and only a little nervous. He thanked everyone back home for supporting him, especially classmates and community members who encouraged him to enter the contest. He shared a message about hard work, saying this experience shows that you can accomplish big things if you reach for the stars, repeating advice from his mom. He has already started collecting souvenirs to remember the trip, including challenge coins and autographs he plans to display in his room.
Grady will read his winning essay alongside Speaker Mike Johnson and light Silver Belle on Tuesday night in Washington, D.C., marking a historic first as Nevada’s tree takes its place on the Capitol lawn.
You can read his full essay below:
Dear Lieutenant Governor Stavros Anthony,
Hi! My name is Grady Armstrong and I’m in the 4th grade at Hugh Gallagher Elementary School in Virginia City, Nevada. My Grandpa worked at Mount Rose area for nearly 50 years, and my Dad Brent Armstrong is a firefighter at Lake Tahoe. My mom, Rhianna Armstrong, is a teacher right here in Virginia City. They have shown me the love of the forest, nature, and the outdoors.
I want the country to know how special Nevada’s national forests and public lands are. These lands are full of wonder from big animals like elk, mule deer, bighorn sheep, and even moose, to small animals like fish, lizards, and birds. Hiking with my family, I have seen water bubble out of the earth in places that look super dry. These springs give life to so many plants and animals. Sometimes you can find arrowheads near the springs, a reminder of the life they gave tribes that lived off the land. We also love seeing ancient petroglyphs carved into rocks by people who lived here long ago.
My favorite wilderness areas are Mount Rose and Arc Dome. We’ve also visited the Sheldon Antelope Refuge and the Massacre Rim Dark Sky Sanctuary, where the night sky is so dark you can see millions of stars!
One of my favorite things to do is when our family takes what my mom and dad call “Nevada highways,” which are nothing more than dirt roads in the middle of nowhere. We’ve found ghost towns, abandoned mines, and the most amazing untouched landscapes.
You don’t need to go far to enjoy Nevada. Right from my school playground you can look east for hundreds of miles over the mountain ranges that make up the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest. Last month, we went to the top of Mt. Davidson and watched the sunset over the Sierras and, at the same time, howled at the full moon as it rose over the Nevada landscape.
Nevada is not just a desert. It’s full of life, history, and beauty. I think everyone in the country should know how important it is to enjoy and protect these amazing places.
Grady Armstrong
P.S. We went to the camel races too! I hope you enjoyed your visit.
Nevada
GOP primary for open US House seat and Democratic governors race highlight Nevada ballot
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevadans are choosing their party nominees Tuesday for two closely watched congressional seats and the governor’s race, among others, as the state grapples with an affordable housing shortage, exploding energy demand from data centers and federal cuts to key state programs.
The state has a closed primary, meaning only registered Democrats and Republicans will vote in party contests after an effort to open them up failed in 2024.
Several primaries feature matchups between candidates backed by party leaders and political outsiders promising change. Come November, the governor’s race is considered one of the most competitive in the country, and holding on to the 3rd Congressional District is considered crucial for Democrats’ hope of retaking the U.S. House.
Here’s a look at the most prominent races:
Democrats seek a rival for Lombardo
Gov. Joe Lombardo, a Republican, is considered one of the most vulnerable governors in the country this fall.
The Democrats vying to challenge him include state Attorney General Aaron Ford, who has the backing of the Democratic congressional delegation and former Vice President Kamala Harris, and Alexis Hill, a county commissioner in northern Nevada who campaigned as a candidate willing to shake things up.
They focused their campaigns on affordability, as the state continues to see a shortage of affordable housing, some of the highest gas prices in the country and cuts to federal healthcare and food assistance programs.
Ford largely ignored Hill, instead directing his attacks at Lombardo and arguing that both the governor and Trump are responsible for Nevadans’ economic woes. He is trying to become Nevada’s first Black governor.
2nd Congressional District
In the Republican contest to replace longtime Rep. Mark Amodei, who is retiring, President Donald Trump has endorsed David Flippo, a loyalist of the president who has never held elected office. Amodei and Lombardo have backed James Settelmeyer, a former state senator with a long political track record.
The district covers northern Nevada and includes Reno and Carson City, the capital, along with an immense rural expanse.
Trump-endorsed candidates have seen successful in primaries elsewhere, underscoring his unrivaled power over the Republican Party as he enters the last years of his presidency. He easily won the district in the 2024 presidential election.
The GOP nominee has a good chance of winning in November, as registered Republicans outnumber Democrats by 70,000 in the 2nd District. A Republican has held the seat since the district was created in the 1980s.
Still, Democrats hope to entice the large number of nonpartisan voters in the district this fall. Their candidates include Teresa Benitez-Thompson, a former majority floor leader of the Nevada Assembly, and Greg Kidd, an investor who ran in the last cycle as a nonpartisan.
3rd Congressional District
Nevada’s other three members of Congress, all Democrats, are expected to win their primaries easily.
In the 3rd District, Republicans are battling to determine who will face Democratic Rep. Susie Lee in what is considered the most competitive congressional district in Nevada because of its narrow Democratic registration advantage, its high number of nonpartisan voters and a history of razor-thin election margins. In 2024 both Lee and Trump won narrowly.
Candidates include Trump-backed Marty O’Donnell, a composer who worked on the “Halo” video game series and ran unsuccessfully for the seat in 2024; Jeff Gunter, a dermatologist and former ambassador to Iceland; neurosurgeon Aury Nagy; and businessperson Tera Anderson.
The candidates ran on border security, energy independence and decreasing the federal debt.
Attorney general
With Ford term-limited and running for governor, the opening has prompted competitive primaries for the state’s top law enforcement post.
The Democratic side features state Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro and Treasurer Zach Conine. Both campaigned on promises to take on the Trump administration, following in the footsteps of Ford, who filed numerous lawsuits against the federal government.
For the Republicans, Trump-backed attorney Adriana Guzmán Fralick faces Douglas County commissioner Danny Tarkanian. Tarkanian, son of legendary University of Nevada, Las Vegas basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian, previously ran unsuccessfully in multiple congressional races.
Both candidates campaigned on “election integrity,” casting doubt on voting security. Nevada is one of the swing states in which Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was stolen, despite officials finding no evidence of widespread fraud.
Tarkanian promised to investigate voter fraud allegations, while Guzmán Fralick vowed to seek passage of the SAVE Nevada Act, which would be similar to changes Trump has sought at the federal level.
Her legislation would require all votes to be counted on Election Day, end universal mail ballots and eliminate automatic voter registration. It would almost certainly hit a dead end in the Democratic-controlled Legislature.
GOP secretary of state candidates question Nevada’s elections
Several Republicans are running for secretary of state, the office that oversees elections, including some who falsely claimed the 2020 election was stolen from Trump. The winner of the primary will take on Democratic Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar.
The GOP candidates include Jim Marchant, a former state lawmaker and perennial candidate who has said the 2020 election “was probably stolen”; Sharron Angle, a former state lawmaker who was part of an effort to block the certification of Nevada’s 2020 election results; and Shirley Folkins-Roberts, an attorney who received Lombardo’s endorsement and has denied there is widespread fraud in Nevada’s elections.
All the candidates support implementing voter ID, which will be on the ballot for the second time in November after the question passed by a wide margin in 2024.
Angle promises to enforce voter ID if voters pass it and supports Trump’s executive order seeking to require documentary proof of citizenship to vote. The courts have so far halted that order, issued last year, from taking effect.
Marchant wants to eliminate electronic voting machines and end the state’s universal mail ballot system. He also wants to require paper ballots, which would be counted by hand, according to his campaign website.
Folkins-Roberts said she will work to keep voter rolls accurate and up-to-date, require voter ID and ensure that election results are delivered on time. She also wants to reverse the automatic voter registration system. In an interview with News 4 Reno, Folkins-Roberts said she believes Nevada’s elections are “good,” but wants to improve voters’ confidence by making changes.
Nevada
Red Flag Warning issued for heightened fire danger in Southern Nevada
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — We’ll start the week with a heightened fire danger with dangerous heat later this week.
TODAY
Expect mostly sunny skies with winds picking up again on Monday. High temperatures will reach 98 degrees in Las Vegas with south winds 10-20 mph and wind gusts up to 30 mph.
A RED FLAG WARNING is in place from 10am to 9pm Monday for gusty winds and dry weather, so if a fire started, it would spread quickly.
Winds are estimated to be 20-25 mph with gusts around 40 mph at times with relative humidity of 5%-15%.
Air quality is ranked ‘good’ to ‘moderate’ for dust and tree pollen. The most common pollens are juniper, cedar, willow, sycamore and palm.
TONIGHT
We’ll see variable clouds this evening with skies going from mostly cloudy to mostly clear overnight.
Wind gusts will pick up again before midnight with gusts 30-40 mph possible downslope of the Spring Mountains in the west valley.
Elsewhere, gusts will be 20-30 mph. Breezes will eventually back down to 5-15 mph overnight. Valley lows will drop to around 74 degrees.
WHAT’S NEXT
We have reached 109 consecutive days without measurable rain in Las Vegas.
No rain is in sight, but for perspective, June is the driest month of the year in Las Vegas. Fingers crossed on a hopefully more active monsoon season!
High pressure builds next with highs 5-10 degrees above normal. Temperatures will reach around 108 degrees in Las Vegas by Friday. The last time we hit a high temperature of 108 degrees was back on August 20th of last year.
Not much relief is in sight by the weekend with highs around 107 degrees and temps at or above 105-106 degrees NEXT Monday through Wednesday.
Nevada
DNA Doe Project unlocks cold case in Nevada
Growing DNA databases continue to unlock decades-old cold cases. How the DNA Doe Project helped to identify remains 37 years later.
© KSNV, NBC News Channel
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