
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.
-
There are more than 30,000 students who go to UNLV. There are another 2,000 professors and instructors. How do you maintain the balance between keeping tuition low and raising salaries for staff?
-
Hundreds of community members from around the Las Vegas Valley gathered at Temple Beth Sholom last night as part of a vigil to those who have died in Israel.
-
Lawmakers did just approve more than $2 billion in new funding for schools. And Governor Joe Lombardo just unveiled an accountability initiative. Will that do anything?
-
Congress narrowly avoided a government shutdown only to oust Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy. Former President Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial is underway in New York.
-
It’s been more than a week since the MGM’s computer systems were apparently hacked. How does this kind of thing happen in the first place? It is possible to stop them in Las Vegas and elsewhere?
-
Congress is back in session after spending all of August in recess, and already lawmakers are facing tough issues.
-
More than a month into the school year, Clark County teachers are still without a contract. When will negotiations with the Clark County Education Association end?
-
Environmentalism isn’t a passing thought anymore in Nevada.
-
For lots of Nevadans, it seems like choosing—or eliminating—the person they want to run as president could be easier this time around.
-
Homes for foster children is becoming a big concern in Clark County.