Celebrating International Women’s Day

McDonald Carano honored International Women’s Day by supporting women-owned businesses in Reno and Las Vegas. Organized by our Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee, we enjoyed celebratory lunches from the Cheese Board in Reno and Letty’s De Leticia’s Cocina in Las Vegas. The Cheese Board opened in 1981 as Reno’s first specialty cheese and wine boutique. In 2017 Krista Phillips and her sister Caitlin Fletcher purchased the Cheese Board after working there for a decade. The Cheese Board is a popular restaurant and catering company. In 1964 Leticia Mitchell’s father brought her family from Mexico City to Las Vegas. Chef and owner Leticia opened her first Letty’s De Leticia’s Cocina in 2009 and after opening several more in the Las Vegas Valley she is a household name in the Mexican food scene. 

International Women’s Day (March 8) is a global day recognizing the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating women’s equality.


About McDonald Carano

McDonald Carano has been shaping Nevada’s legal, business, and policy landscape since our founding in 1949. With more than 60 lawyers and government affairs professionals working from offices in Reno, Las Vegas, and Carson City, we are Nevada’s law firm for business. Our local, national and international clients include Fortune 500 corporations, fast-growth and mid-market companies, entrepreneurs and startups, non-profit organizations, government entities, and high-net-worth individuals. Our attorneys deliver cross-discipline, one-stop, business law and government affairs counsel. Please visit mcdonaldcarano.com

Media Contact

Mark Buckovich


702.257.4559

You have chosen to send an email to McDonald Carano. The sending or receipt of this email and the information in it does not in itself create an attorney-client relationship. If you are not already a client, you should not provide us with information that you wish to have treated as privileged or confidential without first speaking to one of our lawyers. If you provide information before we confirm that you are a client and that we are willing and able to represent you, we may not be required to treat that information as privileged, confidential, or protected information, and we may be able to represent a party adverse to you.

I have read this and want to send an email.