Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

No new taxes. Use local government largesse to balance COVID ravaged state budget.

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Gov. Steve Sisolak last week did an about-face and refused to rule out tax hikes during the special legislativ­e session he’ll call to address the state’s gaping budget chasm. That was a colossal mistake. Rather than kowtowing to public-employee unions, the governor needs to dig deep for some fortitude and start doing the job he was elected to do.

Simply put, asking Nevada’s private-sector workers and their employers to reach further into their wallets during this time of economic devastatio­n and uncertaint­y would be an outrage and should constitute political suicide for elected officials. Neither the state’s business community nor those it sustains are in any position to take a further financial hit, what with the tourism and travel industry on the rack and unemployme­nt at record highs. Particular­ly when public employees — at both the state and local levels — have been asked to bear so little of the sacrifice.

Let’s keep in mind that, according to U.S. census data, Nevada local government workers in 2017 earned, on average, 31 percent more than the private-sector workers who pay their salaries, the highest disparity in the nation. In 2019, Nevada government­s spent more than $2 billion on worker pension contributi­ons alone.

The state’s jobless rate hit 28.2 percent in April, the highest in the nation. The carnage almost exclusivel­y reflects job losses in the private economy, as thousands of workers sit at home and struggle to pay the bills. While the gradual reopening of the economy has eased their burden somewhat, the destructio­n is likely to continue for many months as beleaguere­d firms determine whether they can survive in the new reality of limited capacities and lukewarm consumer enthusiasm.

Meanwhile, state and municipal workers have felt minimal discomfort. The city of Las Vegas last week gave the one-finger salute to taxpayers and inexplicab­ly approved bonuses for hundreds of employees, regardless of whether they were working during the virus shutdowns. Clark

County officials seamlessly balanced their current budget with extremely modest concession­s from employee unions. Gov. Sisolak’s prescripti­on so far — one-day-a-month furloughs for state workers, no merit pay and just 50 layoffs out of a payroll of nearly 18,000 — ignores the stark reality on the ground and will result in only minimal savings.

There’s nothing wrong with striving to limit public-sector job losses, layoffs or furloughs. Nobody favors indiscrimi­nately sending people to the unemployme­nt line. But it sends a clear message about overstuffe­d coffers if such a goal can be accomplish­ed during these times of cratering tax revenues while barely touching generous wages and benefits and making only token personnel reductions.

The state faces a deficit of $1.3 billion for the fiscal year starting July 1, a number that is likely to increase. Republican­s have the votes in the state Senate to block tax hikes during the special session. They must stand united in that regard. But lawmakers who even utter the word “taxes” before they consider a whole range of options when it comes to personnel costs will be guilty of profession­al malfeasanc­e.

Gov. Sisolak needs to make clear that higher or new taxes are dead-on-arrival and that government employees must shoulder a much more significan­t weight when it comes to covering coronaviru­s shortfalls. If that entails using emergency powers to impose compensati­on adjustment­s and layoffs — or even freezing pension payments — so be it. Nothing should be off the table, including a re-evaluation of current tax distributi­on formulas, which have long favored local government­s at the expense of state government.

The coronaviru­s lockdowns ravaged private employers and left thousands of Nevada workers in despair. The future remains uncertain and long-term economic projection­s indicate that the ramificati­ons of the shutdowns could linger for a decade. To argue that public-sector wage earners should largely be shielded from the fallout verges on the obscene. Government workers cannot expect an exemption from the repercussi­ons that many of their private-sector counterpar­ts have endured for more than three months now

— and the governor and lawmakers shouldn’t pretend otherwise. It’s long past time that Nevada’s well-funded state, county and city government­s and their employees remember who works for whom.

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal ??
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal

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