Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sandoval lays blueprint for Sisolak

Incoming governor to have final say in budget for next two years

- By Colton Lochhead and Bill Dentzer Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Nevada Gov.-elect Steve Sisolak had measured words Wednesday for an $8.8 billion state spending plan being finished by his predecesso­r as both incoming and outgoing administra­tions await the release of final revenue projection­s that will chart the state’s fiscal course for the next two years.

Sisolak, who takes office in January, will have final say on the budget that will go to the Legislatur­e in February. But he will work from a fully formed blueprint prepared by the outgoing governor, a requisite duty for the current administra­tion in its waning weeks.

In a statement Wednesday, Sisolak, the first Democrat to serve as governor in 20 years, praised his predecesso­r, a moderate Republican, for his stewardshi­p and cooperatio­n. Gov. Brian Sandoval’s administra­tion has briefed Sisolak’s transition team on budget details and taken feedback from the incoming governor.

“Gov. Sandoval has done a good job leading our state over the last eight years, and I look forward to keeping our state moving forward,” Sisolak said. He said he will spend the coming weeks “working with

BUDGET

my team to craft a budget that puts our priorities first.”

Based on Sandoval’s proposal, with interim financial projection­s, Sisolak will probably have new money to work with in the coming two-year budget cycle — about $700 million more. Sandoval’s final $8.8 billion proposal is nearly 9 percent higher than the $8.1 billion budget for the 2017-2019 biennium. The plan will get fine-tuned after official revenue projection­s are released at a meeting in Carson City on Monday.

The outgoing governor wants to make the transition for his successor as “smooth as possible,” said Mike Wilden, Sandoval’s chief of staff.

“We want to leave them with something that is pretty well-baked,” he said. “If we waited until after the election, and we’d done nothing to build a budget, it would not be physically possible for the incoming governor to build a budget in the six weeks they have for the transition.”

Wilden said he has had several meetings in the last few days with Michelle White, the executive director of Sisolak’s transition team, and has exchanged emails and data to start working Sisolak’s priorities into the mix.

Sandoval’s proposal includes a change on how marijuana tax money is allocated, and an increase in state spending on Medicaid. The governor set aside no funding for a controvers­ial, and now moribund, state program for enhanced school choice.

Marijuana money

Revenue from a 10 percent special sales tax on marijuana that now goes into the state’s rainy day fund would be diverted to education. The tax, estimated to generate $50-$65 million annually, would fund projects recommende­d by Sandoval’s school safety task force, including new fences, locking doors and security cameras at schools. Other funding would go to bolster the Millennium Scholarshi­p fund. Wilden said the state treasurer’s office is projecting a $31 million deficit in that fund through 2021.

Sisolak, during the campaign, said he wanted the excise tax revenue to go to education. Asked last week about funding school safety projects and the Millennium Scholarshi­ps, he demurred pending appointmen­t of his transition team and budget director.

Medicaid spending

The projected $700 million in new spending Sandoval is proposing is largely spoken for in his budget to offset increased expenses, among them the state’s contributi­on to Medicaid. Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government’s match on Medicaid funding gradually has declined from 100 percent to a final rate of 90 percent in 2020. Wilden said that means the state will be on the hook for more than $210 million in higher Medicaid costs over the next two years.

Education

Sandoval wants $20 million for the state’s opportunit­y scholarshi­p fund. Launched in 2015, it allows businesses to donate tuition money for low-income students in exchange for a tax write-off. Lawmakers gave the fund $20 million in 2017, more than quadruplin­g the number of recipients. Sandoval has proposed to continue the higher funding.

But his budget includes no funding for Education Savings Accounts, a voucher-like program that offers another form of school choice. The program was effectivel­y abandoned in 2017 amid a deadlocked Legislatur­e.

Sandoval supports ESAS, but Wilden said the opportunit­y scholarshi­ps are “effectivel­y similar,” allowing greater choice for low- and middle-income families.

Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Contact Bill Dentzer at bdentzer@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-0661.

 ?? Benjamin Hager ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file Steve Sisolak after winning the Nevada governor’s race Nov. 6. The incoming governor will have final say on the budget.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal file Steve Sisolak after winning the Nevada governor’s race Nov. 6. The incoming governor will have final say on the budget.

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