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KNPR's State of Nevada
Airs on 88.9 FM, Monday through Friday at 9 a.m. with a 7 p.m. rebroadcast
About the show
KNPR's State of Nevada is the essential public affairs broadcast to understand what's happening here. Newsmakers and experts give context to local issues; interviews explore the unique character — and characters — of our region. KNPR's State of Nevada is a daily conversation about this place we call home.
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Leave us a voicemail: 702-259-7801
Call in during a live show: 702-258-3552
Drop us an email: son@knpr.org
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Nevada’s four national monuments cover 1.5 million acres. They are Tule Springs Fossil Beds, Avi Kwa Ame, Gold Butte and Basin and Range.
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In Congress right now, Republicans have made it known that they’re considering plans to cut billions of dollars from the Medicaid program.
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Most of Las Vegas and much of the country remembers what happened on Oct. 1, 2017. With 60 victims and some 800 injured, that shooting on the Las Vegas Strip was the worst modern-day shooting in the country’s history.
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The history of atomic weapon testing is a big part of Southern Nevada’s lore. It especially made an impression on one Las Vegan who grew up during the Atomic Age.
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More than 1 million people currently serve in the various branches of the U.S. military, including 12,000 in Nevada. Veterans in the country number 16 million, with 200,000 in Nevada, and none of them are exactly alike.
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Bird flu remains a growing problem across the U.S., and many of us have questions about how serious it is and how worried we should be.
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Through a collaboration with Vegas PBS, Nevada Public Radio brings you selected interviews from their Nevada Week In Person televised series on KNPR's State of Nevada.
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There is a lot going on in Nevada right now. The legislature is meeting, as it does every two years for four months.
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It’s been two months since Carolyn Goodman left her job as mayor of Las Vegas. That’s given her enough time to reflect and assess the changes that 12 years have brought about in the city and for her.