Las Vegas Review-Journal

And aisles to go before they feast

Bargains come before bird on Thanksgivi­ng

- By Briana Erickson Las Vegas Review-journal ED GRANEY COMMENTARY

In the midst of the frenzy at Walmart, pregnant Leilani Wilhelm was dressed in fuzzy red slippers as she pushed a shopping cart full of Christmas presents.

Thanksgivi­ng Day is when she gets all of her Christmas shopping done, she said. The Black Friday crowds are “just crazier.”

Wilhelm was one of thousands of Las Vegas Valley residents who spent Thanksgivi­ng shopping, hours before they would have dinner.

According to the National Retail Federation,

SHOPPING

nor in more than 20 years. It was a big night for the party, which maintained control of the Legislatur­e and flipped a U.S. Senate seat.

It’s been a life-changing month for Sisolak in more ways than one. Six days after winning the governor’s race, he announced his engagement to Kathy Ong, a Las Vegas financial consultant he has dated for more than five years.

“I wanted to get engaged earlier, but frankly, I didn’t want to make it a political issue,” he said. “Kathy deserved her own day.”

Fresh off a weekend training event held by the National Governors Associatio­n, Sisolak has a lot to accomplish before he is sworn in to Nevada’s highest office on Jan. 7.

The governor-elect said he still needs to pick a chief of staff, a budget director and his replacemen­t on the Clark County Commission. He continues to meet with Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval.

“He has been an incredible asset in terms of understand­ing what’s going on and familiariz­ing me with the budget and with different programs,” Sisolak said. “And we’re going to continue taking advantage of that opportunit­y to learn from him.”

Sisolak is tight-lipped on what he’ll do once he takes office.

He says his initial focus will be on education, health care and creating jobs – the issues on which he stumped during his campaign. He’s already working with federal law enforcemen­t, and soon will do the same with the Legislatur­e, to fix an unenforcea­ble Nevada law expanding background checks to private gun sales and transfers.

But Sisolak said he hasn’t spoken yet with Democratic legislativ­e leaders Assembly Speaker Jason Frierson and Senate Majority Leader Kelvin Atkinson about bills Sandoval vetoed in 2017 that the new governor would be willing to sign into law.

“I have no goals set right now, other than we’re going to focus on doing the best job we can,” he said.

Sisolak still has two county commission meetings to preside over as chairman before he moves into the Governor’s Mansion.

He looks back at the decade he spent on the board with pride. He and his colleagues guided the county through the Great Recession and faced the challenge of restoring the commission’s image after several former board members went to prison as a result of the FBI’S Operation G-sting.

Asked what he’ll miss the most about Southern Nevada, Sisolak said the county commission­ers and staff he works with every day.

“It’s bitterswee­t because I’m moving on,” Sisolak said, his voice wavering with emotion. “They were a phenomenal group of people, and I’ll miss them.”

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

 ?? Richard Brian ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Shoppers navigate the women’s boot section Thursday at J.C. Penney at the Meadows Mall. At one point, a line to the store snaked around the building and down the sidewalk.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Shoppers navigate the women’s boot section Thursday at J.C. Penney at the Meadows Mall. At one point, a line to the store snaked around the building and down the sidewalk.
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