Coverage Area — ZIP 89119
About Employment Law in ZIP 89119, Las Vegas
Nevada employees in Las Vegas Strip have strong legal protections under NRS 613 and federal employment law. Whether you've faced wrongful termination, workplace discrimination, sexual harassment, or wage theft, a Las Vegas Strip employment attorney can evaluate your claims and fight for your rights.
ZIP code 89119 is part of the Las Vegas Strip area of Las Vegas, Nevada. NevadaAttorneyFinder's listings for this ZIP code include attorneys who are familiar with the Las Vegas Strip community, Clark County courts, and Nevada's employment law statutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Nevada is an at-will employment state under NRS 613.010, meaning employers can generally terminate employees for any reason or no reason. However, wrongful termination occurs when: the employee is fired for a discriminatory reason (NRS 613.330), the termination violates an employment contract, the employee was fired for whistleblowing (NRS 613.800), or the firing is in retaliation for protected activity (filing a workers comp claim, reporting safety violations). A Las Vegas Strip employment attorney can evaluate your case.
Nevada's minimum wage is tiered under NRS 608.250. In 2024-2026, Nevada's minimum wage is $12.00/hour for all employees (the prior two-tier system based on health benefits was eliminated). Tipped employees must still receive minimum wage. Overtime is owed at 1.5x the regular rate for hours over 8 per day or 40 per week under NRS 608.018. A Las Vegas Strip employment attorney can help you recover unpaid wages.
Discrimination claims in Nevada must be filed first with the Nevada Equal Rights Commission (NERC) or the EEOC within 300 days of the discriminatory act. After receiving a 'right to sue' letter, you have 90 days to file a lawsuit. Discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, disability, age (40+), sexual orientation, and gender identity are all prohibited under NRS 613.330 and federal law. A Las Vegas Strip employment attorney can guide you through the process.
Sexual harassment in Las Vegas Strip workplaces violates NRS 613.330 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. It includes: quid pro quo harassment (job benefits conditioned on sexual favors) and hostile work environment (severe or pervasive conduct that creates an abusive work environment). Nevada employers with 15+ employees must have written sexual harassment policies and training. A Las Vegas Strip employment attorney can help you document and report harassment.