Las Vegas Review-Journal

Council to review arena petition Hospital planned near Raiders facility Legislatur­e calls for federal assistance

Resolution carries no real weight; progress scant on budget hole

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

CARSON CITY — Both houses of the Nevada Legislatur­e moved through featherwei­ght agendas Tuesday on day seven of a special legislativ­e session increasing­ly notable for its seeming lack of urgency or progress to address a $1.2 billion state budget shortfall, which represents one of out four dollars in the state’s general fund.

Both houses passed a resolution that calls on the federal government to provide additional “flexible” funding for Nevada to help the state manage its fiscal shortfall.

Both also approved Senate Bill 4, which allows the state to open a short-term line of credit of up to $150 million this year if it runs into a cash flow crunch. The measure applies to the current fiscal year only.

Speaking in favor of the resolution on the Assembly floor, Assemblyma­n Howard Watts III, D-las Vegas, said that the state’s proposed budget cuts are “balanced on the backs of the least

The Interim Finance Commission approved the distributi­on of more than $34 million in federal pandemic assistance to Nevada under the CARES Act.

Vegas hospice facility on July 6 — just two days short of his 91st birthday.

“He used to say the ‘H’ in his middle name stood for honor,” said his widow, Susan. “Most people didn’t realize until long into knowing him it was Herman. But honor more than anything epitomizes what he was. He was the most honorable man I ever knew.”

Susan and John celebrated their 50th marriage anniversar­y in March. She said her late husband lived his life with clear principles: Honesty, dignity and integrity.

“He didn’t get along with everyone, and a lot of times, it was because they didn’t share those ideals,” Susan Robinson said.

‘A life well lived’

The couple raised three daughters, Krista, Brittany and Carey, from John’s previous marriage. Each married men whom John adored, his wife said, as they shared much of his value set. He had three grandchild­ren, with a fourth on the way.

“His timing was impeccable, as he hated birthdays and insisted that he had stopped having them years ago,” Krista Robinson Hadavi said in a Facebook post. “My dad lived a long, wonderful life full of love and adventure. Truly a life well lived.”

Hadavi included a photo of her and Robinson dancing at her wedding.

“My dad loved to tell stories, and I can see he is telling one to me here,” she said. “I can also tell by the look on my face that it might not have been entirely appropriat­e for the situation.”

Robinson grew up in Oklahoma. Like so many others living through the Great Depression, his parents loaded up their old Ford and headed for California. They camped along the highway until reaching the Golden State. The family picked fruit in the fertile Central Valley before ultimately settling in Sanger.

Robinson attended Sanger High, where he set a record in the hurdles. He joined the U.S. Navy on his 19th birthday, July 8, 1948, and served as a navigator until 1952.

He then attended Fresno State University, where he studied criminolog­y. He befriended another student, Gene Sadoian, whom he later worked with in the federal probation and parole department for Southern Nevada.

Through Sadoian, he met a young basketball player who would follow a similar journey from Fresno State to Las Vegas: Jerry Tarkanian.

Susan Robinson met her husband during his first law enforcemen­t job at the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, where he worked undercover throughout the 1960s. The two were married in 1970.

Posts in Vietnam, Nicaragua

Robinson eventually moved to the State Department. Susan Robinson also was able to secure a federal job that allowed her to travel with her husband to Vietnam, where he advised local law enforcemen­t.

At least officially.

“I don’t know how much of this I can tell you, but he worked for the Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t,” she said. “He was a police adviser. That was his cover, at least.”

After the peace agreement in 1973, the couple moved to Nicaragua, which was rebuilding after a horrific earthquake. Robinson served as a consultant on the rebuilding of the nation’s police force.

The couple settled in Las Vegas in 1975.

Susan Robinson said her husband didn’t speak often about his work in federal law enforcemen­t, but he regularly interacted with members of organized crime.

“He enjoyed working with the mob,” she said. “They were gentleman. They had a code of ethics. It was very different from his or society’s, but it made them predictabl­e. They agreed to disagree. There was a sort of mutual respect there.”

Neverthele­ss, her husband hated the idea of the Mob Museum and never visited it, saying it glorified the horrible crimes committed in this area.

When he retired in 1993, his youngest daughter was only 9. With Susan Robinson still working, her husband took on a role as primary caregiver, chauffeur and cheerleade­r.

Hospitaliz­ation

Robinson entered the hospital on June 2 with a variety of symptoms, his wife said. He tested negative for COVID-19 and seemed to be improving after being moved to a rehabilita­tion center.

Then his condition took a turn for the worse, and a second COVID-19 test came up positive.

“People ask me if I’m angry, since it appears he got it in the hospital,” Robinson said. “No, these things happen. We took him to four different hospitals, and everyone was taking precaution­s. I got my temperatur­e taken and screening questions everywhere we went. They did the best they could.”

Robinson said she and her husband had stopped leaving their home, save for doctors appointmen­ts, since the pandemic broke out. She cautioned others to do the same.

“Take precaution­s, lower your odds, but also don’t take anything for granted,” she said. “I do get a little upset when people say this is no big deal. My husband died because of it.”

Robinson was able to see her husband on Sunday, and her youngest daughter said goodbye just hours before his passing on Monday. He will be cremated, she said, but any memorial will have to wait until after the pandemic.

“He didn’t open his eyes, but I think he knew we were there,” Susan Robinson said of that last visit. “He moved when I said who I was and talked about the girls. He lived a full life. An exciting life… his family loved him, and he loved them.”

Contact Rory Appleton at rappleton@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-0276.

Follow @Rorydoesph­onics on Twitter.

The Review-journal wants to tell the stories of those who have died due to the coronaviru­s. Help us by submitting names of friends or family, or email us at covidstori­es @reviewjour­nal.com.

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