Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sandoval rolls the dice

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Gov. Brian Sandoval leads the center of the gambling universe in the United States, so it wouldn’t be a surprise to find he’s a gambling man. Because the governor has just rolled the dice in a very high-stakes game.

Despite pressure from conservati­ves, Sandoval declined to add the issue of funding for his stalled school choice plan to the agenda of this week’s special session. It’s a decision that could end up killing the program for good, depending on the results of November’s election. First, a little background. The 2015 Legislatur­e passed the Education Savings Accounts program, or ESAs, on an entirely party-line vote. They allow parents to take a large portion of state perpupil spending and use it for any educationa­l expense, from books to tutoring to tuition at private schools.

Two lawsuits were filed to stop the program, one of which contended state education money could be used only for public schools, and another arguing that a constituti­onal ban on using state education funds for “sectarian purposes” prohibited school money from flowing to religious institutio­ns.

But the Nevada Supreme Court rejected those arguments last week. Justices found only that the particular way lawmakers funded ESAs violated the constituti­on, but they provided a virtual legislativ­e road map to overcoming the problem.

By happy coincidenc­e, the governor was about to call the Legislatur­e into special session. Conservati­ves asked: Why not deal with the ESA issue at the same time? Good question. I should stipulate that I’ve opposed ESAs on the grounds that our existing public school system needs all the attention, all the reform and all the money it can get if we expect better results. I’m also extremely skeptical that public funds can wind up in the coffers of religious institutio­ns without offending the constituti­on.

But the court has ruled. And it makes sense that conservati­ves want to move with dispatch — they know that the current GOP majority in both houses of the Legislatur­e may be lost after the Nov. 8 election, which makes repairing the ESA program much more uncertain.

But Sandoval insists there “may be a path for a legislativ­e solution,” although “such a solution is complex and must be well thought-out to meet constituti­onal muster.”

A well-thought out solution to a complex constituti­onal problem, fashioned by the Nevada Legislatur­e? Oh, why start now, governor?

And again, on Oct. 5, Sandoval allowed that “protecting this program is a top priority for me. There is simply not enough time to add it to next week’s special session with full confidence that a rushed outcome will pass constituti­onal muster.” Instead, Sandoval said, he’ll put state Sen. Scott Hammond — the father of ESAs — in charge of a working group designed to unravel funding issues in time for the 2017 session.

Sandoval is right about the solution’s complexity, and the need for proper time and attention. And the governor may also be legitimate­ly worried that the politics of ESAs could disrupt the special session’s other business.

But if Democrats take over one or both houses of the Legislatur­e, the politics of ESAs become infinitely more complex. It’s possible Sandoval and the Republican­s could still work out a deal, but Democrats never liked this idea and the court’s ruling has given them a second chance to kill ESAs.

“The idea that we don’t need to deal with this now is nonsense,” said Ira Hansen, a conservati­ve assemblyma­n from Sparks, speaking for many in Nevada.

I suppose Hansen, unlike Sandoval, is just not a gambling man.

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