Congressional Republican Leader Dr. Robin Titus announces election for the State Senate; calls for Republican unity | Carson City Nevada News-Carson Now

2021-12-07 08:57:29 By : Mr. Jason Wang

Photo courtesy of Dr. Robin Titus, Nevada

Today, Dr. Robin Titus announced his entry into the State Senate in the 17th district. Dr. Titus is the leader of the Republican Party in Parliament and has served for Nevada for four terms in Parliament. She is considered an experienced, tough, but thoughtful, and pragmatic conservative policy maker. She prioritizes personal freedom, constitutional rights, and personal choice.

With the resignation of Dr. Joe Hardy's term limit, Dr. Titus will remain the only doctor in the House of Lords. Under the leadership of Dr. Titus, the core team won seats, got rid of the ultra-minority, and successfully prevented 21 tax increases and charges. Dr. Titus served as the co-chair of President Trump's Nevada campaign.

"My entire career has been a rural doctor and small business owner in Nevada. I am still a Lyon County health officer, but after leaving active practice, I feel the need to continue to help me through the thoughtful and conservative policy formulation of the state legislature. Community and state service," said Dr. Robin Titus. "My goal is to make rural Nevada the best place to live, work, and support a family in the United States."

Meet Dr. Titus Dr. Robin Titus is the leader of the Republican Party of Parliament. Her great-grandfather came to Nevada in 1866 to try mining. In the 1880s, her family settled in Smith Valley. Dr. Titus completed his undergraduate degree at UNR and received his Ph.D. from the University of Nevada School of Medicine.

She returned to Lyon County to serve as a family doctor for 37 years, including providing pre- and post-natal care for countless babies. In addition to serving patients, she also served as the Chief of Staff of the Lyon County Hospital and the State Council of Medical Examiners. She is her fourth term in the legislature and is the Lyon County Health Officer.

Dr. Titus enjoys skiing, hunting, fishing, hiking, wine tasting, gardening, and spending time with family and grandchildren. She is a long-time proud NRA member and CCW holder, avid morning runner, including 10 marathon finishes, instrument test pilots, and has climbed Mount Everest base camp and summited Whitby, Tanzania Mount Nishan and Mount Kilimanjaro. Nevada gave her the opportunity to become a doctor, a conservative policy maker and a small business owner. She was voted the most conservative member of the legislature. Dr. Titus lives in Wellington with her husband, the retired Lyon County Sheriff Alan Weir.

Dr. Titus will launch her first fundraiser for the State Senate on Friday, December 17th from 11:30 am to 1:00 pm at Bistro 7 in Reno. Send an email to Danielle at dcherry@nvfundraiser.com for more information.

"Everyone knows that the red wave is coming, it will be comparable to the gains made by the Republican Party in 2014, and will crush the gains of the Democratic Party in 2018," said Dr. Robin Titus. "But we can't kill each other and let the Democrats win from the mouth of defeat. I promise to call the active policy center in the Nevada Republicans, activists and elections, and call, it is still unity, strong and triumphant. There is too much between us. We have many stakes, and we must take back our country and nation."

Due to pending rezoning litigation, the route may not be determined for the time being, but as today, District 17 includes all Douglas, Lyon, Churchill, Esmeralda, and Minerals counties. However, it divides Nai County and Tonopah into a community of interests, and shares policy benefits by combining them together.

You can visit Dr. Robin Titus's website to learn more about her: voterobintitus.com.

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Author: Sean Whaley / CARSON CITY, Nevada News Agency-A proposed amendment to the Nevada Constitution that allows the future legislature to establish a school voucher program so that parents can obtain state funding to send their children to private schools, including religious schools, Heard today's Senate panel.

By Andrew Doughman / CARSON CITY, Nevada News Agency-In the end, only the quarrel prevailed. Legislators did not immediately vote on the bill by Senator Michael Robertson from Las Vegas, but the hearing on Senate Bill 343 provoked fierce testimony about how local governments and public sector unions bargain.

Author: Andrew Doughman / CARSON CITY, Nevada News Agency — Governor Brian Sandoval established a working group to review the advisory body of the executive branch. The governor has asked three former state senators to determine, evaluate, and recommend whether the group created by the former governor or state agency should continue.

By Andrew Doughman/Nevada News Agency Carson City-Governor Brian Sandoval has previously stated that he can reform Nevada's education system while still reducing the budget allocated to the state's K-12 system.

After the tragic scuba diving accident in Monterey Bay on Saturday, students, faculty and staff of Carson High School held a commemorative event in the Carson City campus parking lot to commemorate the two lost on Monday.

The following is a press release issued by the Carson City School District:

16-year-old Stephen Anderson and 17-year-old Keegan Aiazzi were killed in a scuba diving accident in Monterey Bay, California, on Saturday, April 9, 2011. The two are part of the scuba diving organization and sponsored scuba diving activities in Reno's business.

After successful dives on Friday night and Saturday morning, the two young people who have recently become certified scuba divers did not surface with others on their second dive on Saturday morning.

Those who have been here before may notice some changes on the Carson Now website this morning. We updated the website over the weekend, but there are still some tasks to be done. Therefore, at least for the next few hours, please treat it as a construction area. Put on your virtual hard hat and report any problems you see. thanks. 

This is the Carson City Road Report as of April 17. Due to utility work, from Monday, April 11th to Wednesday, April 13th, from 7 am to April 13, near the intersection of Clearview Drive, Edmonds Avenue will be reduced to a single lane, and flagpoles will control traffic . 7 o'clock in the evening

On Thursday, April 14th, from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm, the southbound Edmonds Avenue between Colorado Street and Clearview Avenue will be closed to single lanes and traffic will be controlled by flagpoles

Shoulder work will be carried out at the intersection of 5th Street and Butti Way. However, the lanes are not expected to be closed.

Casinos in Nevada did not perform well in February, and the statewide gaming win rate dropped by 6.84% compared to last year.

A report from the Gaming Control Board in February showed that the Las Vegas Strip was down by 9.56%, while North Lake Tahoe was down by more than 15%. The Carson Valley area, which includes Carson City, dropped 2.89%.

In this fiscal year, state gaming industry wins are still in a positive range, but only increased by 0.09% over the previous year.

See the attachment below for the full report.

Carson City-Local officials including the Mayor of Reno and the Mayor of Las Vegas enthusiastically supported a proposed constitutional amendment today that requires two-thirds of the legislature’s vote to reduce Local government funding may impose an authorization without financial support on the local government.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office is seeking help from the public to identify two suspects involved in the strong-arm robbery in the Wal-Mart parking lot near Topsey Lane in northern Douglas County at about 3:30 pm on Thursday, March 24.

In the incident, a Hispanic woman forcibly stole a small black box hung on a detachable lanyard from the victim's neck when the victim was walking towards the car in the parking lot.

Carson City-a major campaign finance reform bill that requires most candidates to submit their donations and expenditure reports electronically, today it was passed by a parliamentary group with an 8 to 7 vote. The bill will also extend the submission deadline to give voters more time to review political contributions and spending information before voting.

"Confessions of a Paper Pimp" by Sam Bauman. Slalom Press, 2011. A hard copy is available on Amazon for $18.95; the Kindle version is available for $10.

By Andrew Doughman / CARSON CITY, Nevada News Agency-Add up, some of them must die. The legislature does not have enough time to listen to every bill, but this has not stopped Republicans from accusing the Democrats of ignoring Republican bills.

A few photos from a cold trip to Lake Tahoe last month. Check out more photos on AroundCarson.com.

By Andrew Doughman / CARSON CITY, Nevada News Agency-This morning, two bills related to illegal immigration sparked heated debates in parliamentary committees. Congressman Ira Hansen from R-Sparks will impose penalties and restrictions on illegal immigrants in a manner similar to the controversial Arizona law enacted last year.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEVapn3XjwU

Another winter weather is expected tonight, with 1 to 3 inches of snow in the Carson City area and 8 inches of snow in Lake Tahoe.

Cold air, more snow and gusts prompted the National Weather Service in Reno to issue winter weather advisories for Carson City, Carson Valley, Lake Tahoe and Reno later tonight until Thursday morning.

This week’s topic is about an old friend, Gene St. Denis, the captain of the Blue Ribbon Charter in South Lake Tahoe, California. He is in his sport fishing boat "PT-109," in Lake Tahoe.

Mackinaw trout weighing in the double digits (10 pounds or more) is not uncommon on these charter flights. In fact, in the past two years, every time Elaine and I used "Gino" to fish, her weight reached double-digit "Mack".

Click here to view this week’s fishing report and click here to view more outdoor stories.

Two years ago, her Mack weighed 20 pounds and 9 ounces (37.5 inches long) and was the largest freshwater fish she ever caught. Last year, her fish weighed more than 10 pounds.

At the request of Spread the Word Nevada, a local children’s literacy non-profit organization, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval flew from Carson City to Las Vegas on March 31 , Studying at Cambello Elementary School.

This was his last stop after visiting three other schools in Las Vegas. As part of "Reading America and Nevada Reading Month", the governor's reading trip ended. On March 2, during his first visit to the school in Reno, Sandoval signed a declaration declaring March 2011 as the Nevada Reading Month.

Federal regulators have spent ten years assessing the uranium and other toxic waste that seeped into the underground water table of an old Anaconda copper mine near Yellington. They stated that they would not be able to clean up the abandoned sites unless they were added to the US Super Fund’s national priority list. Pollution. Click here to read the story.

Author: Andrew Doughman/Nevada News Agency Despite raising the outlook for Nevada from negative to stable, credit rating agency Moody's downgraded Nevada's credit rating from Aa1 to Aa2. The reason behind the adjustment involves the Nevada legislature. Moody's lists the two-thirds absolute majority required for tax increases in Nevada as a negative factor.

By Sean Whaley / Nevada News Agency Carson City-Governor Brian Sandoval today signed a bill requiring funeral directors to report to the Office of Veterans Services when they obtain unclaimed remains that they know or have reason to believe are the remains of veterans report. Sandoval signed Parliamentary Bill No. 124 at a ceremony held by family veterans at Kit Carson VFW Post 3726 in the capital. After today’s bill signing ceremony, Governor Brian Sandoval had a meeting with veteran Robert Primeaux. Photo courtesy of Cathleen Allison/NevadaPhotoSource.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wARB2COiwZc

Author: Sean Whaley / Nevada News Agency Carson City-Governor Brian Sandoval emphasized today that he will veto a bill passed by the Democratic Party in the legislature that will allow school districts to use up to $300 million in bond reserve funds to repair old schools . He also expressed his belief that the $60 million general fund Medicaid rate reduction included in his budget is legally sound and can be implemented, despite legal opinions to the contrary.

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Another winter storm system is preparing to hit the Carson City area today, with rain turning to snow later this afternoon.

The National Weather Service has issued winter weather warnings for the Carson City, Carson Valley, and Reno regions. Winter storm warnings for Lake Tahoe and Sierra Mountains will continue until 11 AM on Friday.

Author: Mike Clifford/Public News Service Carson City-When the Joint Finance K-12 Subcommittee met this morning, Nevada lawmakers today again tried to deal with Governor Sandoval’s proposal for K-12 education. 1 billion dollar reduction plan. Gary Peck, executive director of the Nevada State Education Association (NSEA), said that recent opinion polls show that almost no one supports Governor Sandoval’s tough stance on taxes.

Last month, the Carson City Board of Supervisors heard complaints from two private golf course owners, saying that the city subsidized all the city’s Eagle Valley golf course operators by waiving their $200,000 rent.

One question raised at the time was that the city needed Eagle Valley Stadium to help treat sewage from the sewage treatment plant. If Eagle Valley does not operate, then the city will be forced to spend more money to build more reservoirs.

On Tuesday, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval, U.S. Rep. Dean Heller and Rep. Tom Grady and Lyon County district officials witnessed the first Lyon County Centennial Medal to be minted in Dayton Northwest Territories. Factory casting.

The Lyon County Commissioner, Sheriff, School Trustee, Superintendent, and members of the Dayton Valley Historical Society all participated in the Mint’s activities and visits along with the governor and other dignitaries.

Carson City-Nevada Department of Health and Human Services Director Mike Weldon said today that he believes the state can lower the Medicaid rate for medical providers in accordance with Governor Brian Sandoval’s budget proposal, but admits this The problem is the "muddy field". Weldon’s view suggests that, according to the recent Court of Appeals ruling, Medicaid reductions can be implemented without the state government facing successful legal challenges.

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