Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sandoval signs juvenile justice, opioid legislatio­n

- By Sean Whaley Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Bills to reform Nevada’s juvenile justice system and combat opioid abuse were signed into law Friday by Gov. Brian Sandoval.

Flanked by first lady Kathleen Sandovalan­dformernev­adasupreme Court Justice Nancy Saitta, Sandoval first signed Assembly Bill 472, the result of work by an interim Juvenile Justice Task Force he establishe­d last year.

Kathleen Sandoval and Saitta oversaw the work of the task force and pushed for AB472 in the Legislatur­e. It will establish a statewide framework for assessing juvenile offenders and deciding the treatment they need. The measure is intended to create a validated risk and needs assessment to guide sentencing for juveniles and plan the services they will get.

“It’s always important for us to look at what we can do better,” Kathleen Sandoval said. “And this is going to allow us to do that and to make a change for these kids who often don’t have a voice.”

The bill to fight the opioid problem, Assembly Bill 474, makes numerous changes to how the prescripti­on drugs containing opioids are provided to patients and allows for disciplina­ry action against practition­ers who inappropri­ately prescribe the drugs.

Sandoval also signed several bills Friday afternoon at the University of Nevada, Reno, including Assembly Bill 69, which allows autonomous vehicles to be tested in Nevada highways.

To celebrate the occasion, Sandoval arrived at the bill signing in an autonomous vehicle.

Autonomous vehicles will “be the norm in the very near future,” Sandoval told the audience of lawmakers, university officials and UNR cheerleade­rs gathered for the signing. He also joked that the bill puts Nevada “in the driver’s seat,” prodding the audience to laugh after he paused.

Sandoval also signed Senate Bill 546, which funds the state’s capital improvemen­t projects. Big-ticket items include a $43 million UNR Engineerin­g Academic Building and $33 million for the Northern Nevada Veterans Home in Sparks.

The governor signed Assembly Bill 522, which appropriat­es $300,000 to the Nevada Teach Funding program, which helps UNR students become certified to teach math, science and engineerin­g in middle and high school.

Contact Sean Whaley at swhaley@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @seanw801 on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Gov. Brian Sandoval
Gov. Brian Sandoval

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