Nevada
Nevada signs Wisconsin transfer Imbie Jones
RENO, Nev. (Nevada Athletics) – Nevada Women’s Basketball has signed forward Imbie Jones (Seattle, Wash. / Wisconsin), head coach Amanda Levens announced Thursday.
Jones, a Seattle native, was ranked a three-star recruit by ESPN and among Prospects Nation’s Elite 150 coming out of Garfield High School in 2023. At Garfield, Jones was a two-time state champion (2022, 2023) and three-time All-Metro selection (2020, 2022, 2023), highlighted by a first-team nod as a senior.
Jones spent her 2023-24 season at Wisconsin, appearing in 15 games for the Badgers. Wisconsin went 15-17 on the season, reaching the WNIT quarterfinals.
“Imbie is a great addition for us. We recruited her out of high school and are excited about the length and versatility she will bring to our team. We are excited to welcome Imbie into our Pack,” Levens said.
Jones is the third addition to the Wolf Pack’s 2024-25 roster, joining fellow transfer forward Amelia Raidaveta (Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia / Weber State) and November prep signee Kendra Hicks (Portland, Ore. / Jesuit HS).
Nevada women’s basketball will begin their offseason preparation and host various summer activities for the Northern Nevada community. The team’s annual golf outing fundraiser will take place Friday, June 21 at Wolf Run Golf Club. Nevada will also host three summer camps: Team Camp (June 22-23), Overnight Camp (July 23-25) and Elite Camp (August 2). More information can be found on NevadaWolfPack.com.
Copyright 2024 KOLO. All rights reserved.
Nevada
State treasurers, including Nevada’s, warn Trump immigration tactics hurt the economy
Nevada
More than 1K family homes coming to site of shuttered Cashman Center
More than 1,000 new family homes are coming to the sites of the shuttered Cashman Center and a neighboring Nevada State office building near downtown Las Vegas.
The project, proposed by Greystone Nevada LLC — a Lennar Corp. subsidiary — won city approval Wednesday when the City Council voted to formalize development agreements with the company.
“We know that we need housing desperately, especially affordable and attainable housing within our community,” said Councilwoman Shondra Summers-Armstrong last month before the council approved a bevy of items, including tentative maps.
The councilwoman represents Ward 5, where the proposed project will sit near Washington Avenue and North Las Vegas Boulevard.
“I was demanding as I am,” Summers-Armstrong said about the planning process, “because I really want our community; those folks who need this type of housing, to not get just any old thing.”
Lennar is proposing 781 homes for the Cashman site, and 290 at the Grant Sawyer property.
‘It’s truly exciting’
The project began to gain steam last year when Lennar won a city of Las Vegas auction to buy the 50-acre Cashman Center at 850 N. Las Vegas Blvd. for $36.25 million. Shortly after, Lennar offered Nevada $10.6 million to buy 22 acres including the shuttered Grant Sawyer State Office Building at 555 E. Washington Ave.
The Cashman sale occurred as Las Vegas was working to offset loses incurred in yearslong litigation with the would-be developer of the defunct Badlands golf course. Lennar took over the 250-acre course and plans to build 1,480 upscale homes there .
Nevada had struggled to find a buyer for the government complex after state offices were relocated to the south Valley, officials said. Twice, it received no bids on a $19.45 million valuation.
Councilwoman Olivia Diaz compared finding a purpose for the Cashman site to chasing whales.
“It’s truly exciting to see the revitalization of these two sites,” she added.
A construction timeline wasn’t provided. Councilman Brian Knudsen proposed partnering with the developer when it demolishes the old baseball complex.
Officials didn’t widely discuss what possible qualifications prospective buyers would need to meet. Summers-Armstrong spoke about city outreach to let people know about home ownership options, such as grant opportunities.
Three-story townhomes
Attorney Stephanie Gronauer, who spoke on behalf of Lennar, presented tentative maps and showcased concept renderings of the yet-to-be-named neighborhoods during the Jan. 21 City Council meeting.
Most of the attached and detached homes will stand at three stories and occupy their own plot, she said. Amenities include pools and a trail on Cashman’s current parking space.
Lennar is trying to offload 2.6 acres for a possible future commercial development between the Neon Museum and the Las Vegas Science & Natural Science Museum, Gronauer added.
She said the developer hopes that the project will be a catalyst for the downtown area.
“I hope this is phenomenally successful and a model for what we can be doing in this city to help with housing that everybody can access, because I think that no matter where you live, it’s a big deal,” Councilwoman Kara Kelley said. “It’s terrific that this land and this property in this space has worked this way.”
Mayor Shelley Berkley joined the chorus of praise, noting how home ownership had changed her family’s life when they moved to Las Vegas.
“It changed our family’s self-image: we owned something, we belonged here, we were property owners and we’re part of this community,” she said.
Contact Ricardo Torres-Cortez at rtorres@reviewjournal.com.
Nevada
Why Nevada wants to vote 1st in 2028 Presidential primary: New Ballot Battleground: Nevada
RENO, Nev. (News 4 & Fox 11) — Nevada has already climbed the Presidential primary calendar, establishing itself in the slate of early states that vote prior to Super Tuesday. But now Democratic party leaders want to move up to first in the nation, with the Nevada Dems officially submitting their bid to the DNC last month.
Why is Nevada deserving of the coveted top spot? In the first episode of season 3 of the Ballot Battleground: Nevada podcast, host Ben Margiott speaks to DNC Vice Chair Artie Blanco about Nevada’s bid to become the first Democratic presidential contest in 2028.
We unpack how the DNC sets the calendar, why Nevada’s diversity and battleground status matter, and what lessons were learned from the 2024 primary shake-up. Plus, what a “Nevada first” calendar could mean for voters, campaigns, and national policy priorities.
New episodes drop every other Wednesday (schedule subject to change depending on guests’ availability and the news cycle). Watch on YouTube, use the player below or click this link to listen and subscribe on your favorite podcast platform. Thanks for listening!
Listen to the Ballot Battleground: Nevada podcast here:
-
Indiana4 days ago13-year-old rider dies following incident at northwest Indiana BMX park
-
Massachusetts5 days agoTV star fisherman, crew all presumed dead after boat sinks off Massachusetts coast
-
Tennessee5 days agoUPDATE: Ohio woman charged in shooting death of West TN deputy
-
Movie Reviews1 week agoVikram Prabhu’s Sirai Telugu Dubbed OTT Movie Review and Rating
-
Indiana3 days ago13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
-
Politics7 days agoVirginia Democrats seek dozens of new tax hikes, including on dog walking and dry cleaning
-
Austin, TX6 days ago
TEA is on board with almost all of Austin ISD’s turnaround plans
-
Texas5 days agoLive results: Texas state Senate runoff