Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sisolak asks lawmakers to make key decisions

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

CARSON CITY — As legislator­s met in special session Wednesday to consider how to close a $1.2 billion state budget gap, Gov. Steve Sisolak said a second special session to consider “extraordin­ary” policy questions on spending, criminal justice and the state’s social safety net could quickly follow on the first.

In a brief stand-up interview outside the Capitol on Wednesday, he also cited the political difficulty of raising taxes to address the massive budget shortfall, and said doing so also would take a long time to generate revenue when the state needs cash now.

“My staff and I looked at a plethora of taxes,” the governor said in an

interview with the Review-journal. “There’s an implementa­tion time and a lot of ideas for taxes would take time to implement, to set up — and to generate and actually receive any revenue could take six months to a year. If it takes a year, it’s not going to help me with this pandemic and the shortfall.

“So we looked at all the possibilit­ies of adjustment­s to some taxes that currently exist that wouldn’t have that ramp-up time that you could recognize revenue quickly. But it’s gonna to be up to the Legislatur­e.”

A tax increase would require a twothirds vote of both houses. If necessary, Democrats have the numbers to win party-line approval of an increase in the Assembly but are one vote short of the same in the Senate.

“I’m not naïve. I knew they need one more vote in the Senate and they need to hold everybody else,” Sisolak said. “That remains to be seen, what leadership wants to do, what appetite there is. And I don’t want to guess as it relates to that. I’ll just wait and see what they come back with.

“I don’t know how realistic, what the possibilit­ies are,” Sisolak continued. “It’ll be up to them on the Republican side to see if somebody is willing to step up and want to fund education fully the way we had it funded or they’re gonna just step back and keep pushing red buttons.”

Education cuts

On the potential cuts to education, Sisolak said, the administra­tion’s proposals are now “in the Legislatur­e’s hands.”

“They’re gonna have to decide how important education is for them, if I can get somebody to step up and give me the votes necessary in order to pass some revenue,” he said. “But that’s totally out of my control right now.

He added: “I wish we didn’t have to make these cuts. We spent countless hours just frustrated in dealing with, you know, every single cut especially as related to education but felt that this was the fairest that we could possibly come up with. If somebody in that building has another idea, I’m all ears.”

Education cuts occupied much of the first day of the special session that kicked off at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, as state and local education officials described to members of the Assembly the impact that proposed cuts would have on Nevada schools.

Police, unemployme­nt reform

As for a second special session, the governor said it “would be my hope that if things go smoothly and they deal with this budget quickly that we’d be able to immediatel­y call a second special session and deal with any extraordin­ary policy issues that might be on the table.”

A subsequent session could come as soon as 24 hours after the current one concludes, he said, with police reform a potential policy subject.

“Clearly with what’s going on in the country, that’s an extraordin­ary issue, social justice and police reforms,” he said. “We’ll come forward with what we think is most appropriat­e and needs our attention immediatel­y and can’t wait till the next legislativ­e session.”

Other areas could include the state’s unemployme­nt claims system, virtually crippled by the unpreceden­ted job losses caused by the pandemic starting in mid-march.

“I’d like to get that resolved as quickly as much as anyone else would,” the governor said. “And if we can come up with a way to do that, that’s something definitely we’ll look at,” he said.

First day

The first day of the special session started with a brief debate over coronaviru­s-inspired rules, specifical­ly one that would allow lawmakers to participat­e and vote remotely if they had to quarantine.

Republican lawmakers voiced their concern with the rule change. Senate Minority Leader James Settelmeye­r, R, Minden, said people voting remotely could be outside the state, or even the country, creating “a problem of accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.”

Through other crises, lawmakers “always had the ability to meet in Carson City,” Settelmeye­r said. “Even now, we’re still under rules and protocols (for) safety and have all done everything we can, from wearing masks to getting tested, to make sure to alleviate these concerns. I think this is improper to violate the constituti­on and will be voting against it.”

Under Article 4, Section 1 of the Nevada Constituti­on, “…the sessions of such Legislatur­e shall be held at the seat of government of the State. Article 15, Section 1 of the constituti­on identifies that seat as Carson City.

The rule passed on party lines in the Democrat-controlled Senate. A similar resolution to change the rules passed in the Assembly on a voice vote, with some Republican lawmakers voting against it.

Both chambers voted to suspend rules that require bills to be read three times before they can be voted on as a way to speed up the process.

The day marked the first of what’s expected to be at least a few days of deep dives into the governor’s proposed budget cuts.

The Senate dug into the

$233 million in cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services and and reductions to state capital improvemen­t projects, while the Assembly took on cuts of $156 million to K-12 and $190 million to the Nevada System of Higher Education.

Contact Bill Dentzer at bdentzer@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Dentzernew­s on Twitter. Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

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