Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Extension service veto an affront

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Reading Gov. Brian Sandoval’s veto note on a bill to examine the effectiven­ess of the state’s Cooperativ­e Extension Service, you’d come away thinking the measure was an attempt to rob Sandoval’s alma mater, UNR.

Sandoval contended that the bill threatened to divert 70-75 percent of the federal funding currently received by UNR for extension services, which it oversees statewide, by potentiall­y allowing UNLV and the Desert Research Institute to take over direction of the services in Southern Nevada.But that’s not what the bill would have done, which makes Sandoval’s veto a maddening affront to Southern Nevada.

Here are the two things the bill actually called for: an audit of the extension service between now and the 2019 legislativ­e session, and an affirmatio­n that UNLV and DRI are land-grant institutio­ns as part of the University of Nevada system.

It didn’t call for regionaliz­ation of the extension service, but rather to study whether the current system is being operated effectivel­y.

Might that result in a subsequent discussion about whether UNLV should take over services in the south? Yes, but there’s every reason to examine the issue and have that discussion.

A Lincy Institute study in May showed that UNLV had the ability to staff and legally administer extension services in the region, and local government­s have expressed a preference for UNLV to run the programs.

What’s more, UNR has operated its Southern Nevada service at a $12 million surplus in recent years, suggesting it has underinves­ted in the area, as UNR is barred from transferri­ng the surplus money to Reno.

UNLV also is far better connected than UNR to Southern Nevada community service providers. That’s important, because the cooperativ­e extension service addresses a broad range of community needs — it does much more than administer 4-H programs for kids and produce brochures with gardening tips. Extension offers classes and educationa­l materials for the public on nutrition, the environmen­t, small-business developmen­t and natural resources are some of the topic areas covered by the service. So why not allow the study? In his veto message, Sandoval also contended that UNR was the state’s only land-grant institutio­n, a critical point considerin­g that the cooperativ­e extension service is a partnershi­p between the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and land-grant institutio­ns.

But the Nevada Board of Regents establishe­d UNLV and UNR as co-equal branches of the University of Nevada in 1969. Also, a member of the Nevada Legislativ­e Counsel Bureau told lawmakers this year that based on a 1969 Nevada Attorney General’s Office opinion, land-grant status was held by the University of Nevada system as a whole — meaning UNR, UNLV and DRI.

Plus, it’s not as if the bill was a flawed or even iffy piece of legislatio­n that barely squeaked through the Legislatur­e. It passed with solid majorities in both chambers — 15-6 in the Senate and 30-12 in the House.

By all appearance­s, it seems like Sandoval took UNR’s objections to an original form of the bill, which included regionaliz­ation of the extension service, and applied them to the final version.

At the least, Sandoval came off looking like he didn’t read the amended bill. At worst, he looked like he was acting with a UNR/Northern Nevada bias.

The veto calls to mind a lyric in UNR’s alma mater: “We will ever live to serve her.”

Sandoval appears to be doing just that, regardless of what might be best for Southern Nevadans.

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