
Paul Boger
Multimedia Producer/ReporterPaul serves as KNPR's producer and reporter in Northern Nevada. Based in Reno, Paul specializes in politics, covering the state legislature as well as national issues' effect in Nevada.
Before joining Nevada Public Radio, Paul was the politics editor at KUNR until 2021. He also worked as a general assignment reporter at Mississippi Public Broadcasting and graduated from Troy University in Alabama.
Paul grew up in the military but spent most of his formative years in Southern California and Arizona. He has lived in Nevada since 2017 and enjoys hiking, camping and exploring the Great Basin and eastern Sierra.
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School’s out for spring break. Teachers are home. Kids are living it up. But there’s something on the mind of a lot of people, whether they have kids or not. Will our schools improve?
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Why don’t we have more state incentives to help create smaller, less expensive solar sites for neighborhoods or businesses?
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The Peppermill Resort’s Spa Toscana is a warm hug for the winter weary
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Nevada has one of the lowest population densities in the country with less than 30 people per square mile. At the same time, your own eyes see that beyond the confines of two metro areas in Las Vegas and Reno, we have miles and miles of untouched desert.
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Nicolas Anthony will be the next director of Nevada’s Legislative Counsel Bureau. The LCB, as it’s commonly called, is the nonpartisan group that gives state lawmakers legal advice and analysis.
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In a 5-2 vote, the Clark County School District has accepted Superintendent Jesus Jara's conditional resignation.
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The state’s top elections official, Nevada Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar, apologized Thursday after a “technical error” led to discrepancies in Nevadans’ voting history on the secretary of state’s website.
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In Nevada and many states, changes in immigration policy can impact labor needs in tourism and construction; it can impact housing markets and social services and public services.
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We knew the results of the primary and caucus last week before they came out. What does it all mean?
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Democrats threw almost all votes to President Joe Biden. No one voted for Donald Trump, because he didn’t participate. And “none of the above” beat Republican candidate Nikki Haley.