Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The District collects and reclaims an average of 83 million US gallons (310,000 m 3) per day of wastewater. Current plans call for expansion of the district's facility to allow for up to 110 million US gallons (420,000 m 3 ) per day of wastewater to be treated, which will be needed as the Las Vegas Valley continues to grow.
Las Vegas–Clark County Library District (LVCCLD) is an independent government agency. Operations are overseen by a ten-member Board of Trustees, five appointed by the Clark County Commission and five appointed by the Las Vegas City Council.
CSN provides job training in more than 70 academic programs with more than 180 degrees certificates available. [7] The college also offers fifteen bachelor's degrees. [ 8 ] The majority of students, 73.5 percent or 25,301, attend part-time and 26.5 percent or 9,108 students attend full-time.
The first reported non-Native American visitor to the Las Vegas Valley was the Mexican scout Rafael Rivera in 1829.[9] [10] [11] Las Vegas was named by Mexicans in the Antonio Armijo party, [4] including Rivera, who used the water in the area while heading north and west along the Old Spanish Trail from Texas.
Las Vegas: Four and Two year: 1971: 28,901 Founded as Clark County Community College, later renamed the Community College of Southern Nevada. Desert Research Institute: Reno and Las Vegas: Graduate: 1959: 440 Degrees awarded through the University of Nevada, Reno. Great Basin College: Elko: Four year 1967: 3,197
From the California border to Arizona across southern Nevada, through Las Vegas; also specifically near the junction of Interstate 15 and State Route 169 36°15′11″N 115°09′43″W / 36.253056°N 115.161944°W / 36.253056; -115.161944 ( Old Spanish Trail – Mormon Road Historic
[5] [6] The community would be located south of the Las Vegas Strip at the southern end of the Las Vegas Valley. The property was bordered by Cactus Avenue to the north, Jones Boulevard to the west, Interstate 15 and St. Rose Parkway to the east, and Larson Lane to the south.
The Las Vegas Valley Water District (LVVWD) is a not-for-profit government water supply agency that has been providing water to the Las Vegas Valley since 1954. The district helped build the area's water delivery system and now provides water to more than one million people in Southern Nevada. Today the District provides water to the City of ...