
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.
-
Las Vegas voters cited the health of American democracy and the economy as issues that drove them to the polls.
-
The Clark County School District Board of Trustees is scheduled to meet on Wednesday to decide whether to accept Superintendent Dr. Jesus Jara’s conditions and his resignation.
-
Superintendent Jesus Jara is resigning. That’s if the Clark County School District Board of Trustees accepts the conditions of his resignation at a meeting next Wednesday.
-
The dueling contests surrounding the Nevada Republican's nominating process has led to voter confusion. And with it, an outcome many in the state saw as inevitable: Trump is the de facto winner.
-
Southern Nevada grows continuously. But water in the Colorado River, the main source for us, does not.
-
For years, Nevada has coveted an early spot in the presidential nomination process.
-
Republicans looking to unseat U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen, a Democrat from Nevada, met in Reno this week. It was the state’s first debate of the 2024 election cycle.
-
Some voters in Nevada are expressing confusion as to why former President Donald Trump is not on the state’s Republican Primary ballot.
-
Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen has unveiled a bill that would open thousands of acres of federal land around the Reno-Sparks area for development.
-
State lawmakers are calling into question a proposal that would limit the powers of four new, non-voting members of the Clark County school board.