Nevada governor’s office reviewing U.S. Treasury’s guidance for spending state’s $2.7 billion in aid Nevada governor’s office reviewing U.S. Treasury’s guidance for spending state’s $2.7 billion in aid
May 12, 2021
Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak attends a news conference about the state’s response to coronavirus Thursday, April 29, 2021, in Las Vegas.
AP Photo/John Locher
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Robert Davis) Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak said on Monday that his office is reviewing its plan to spend the largest federal aid package in the state’s history.
The state is due to receive $2.7 billion from the American Rescue Plan that was passed by Congress in March. The U.S. Treasury Department on Monday released
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April 19, 2021 7:01 AM By Zachary Sherwood
President Joe Biden aims to prove to the world this week that the U.S. has rejoined the international fight against climate change by vowing cuts in greenhouse gas emissions that are both ambitious and achievable.
Whether those cuts will be either ambitious enough to reassure skeptical allies or achievable given myriad domestic obstacles is far from a sure thing.
The Biden administration is expected to unveil the countryâs new pledge under the Paris climate agreement, known as a nationally determined contribution, before the international climate summit set to begin this Thursday. Heâll have to overcome the major trust deficit run up by former President Donald Trump, who withdrew from the Paris agreement and dismantled domestic policies key to driving the countryâs promised emissions cuts. The past four years revealed how tenuous pledges of U.S government action can be.
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