Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tax hike plans

- By Colton Lochhead

Two tax petitions from teachers union head to 2021 Legislatur­e

A pair of tax proposals from the Clark County teachers union that would raise more than $1 billion per year for Nevada schools will head to the Legislatur­e next year after gathering more than enough signatures to qualify.

To qualify, the Clark County Education Associatio­n needed to gather and submit 97,598 valid signatures from registered Nevada voters. The associatio­n said it submitted more than 200,000 signatures for each petition.

One of the proposals calls for a 1.5 percentage point increase in the Local School Support Tax, a component of the state’s sales tax, which would generate more than $1 billion annually. The second would raise another $300 million by increasing taxes on the state’s largest and most profitable gaming establishm­ents. Together, the two proposals aim to raise $1.4 billion in new revenue each year for Nevada.

John Vellardita, executive director of the teachers union, said he wasn’t surprised that the petitions gathered the required number of signatures.

He said he was, however, surprised that they gathered more than double the required signatures, especially given that most were gathered amid the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown and related dip in the economy.

The Nevada Resort Associatio­n, in a statement Wednesday, said that “now is not the time” to raise taxes on gaming properties, and that it “would further damage Nevada’s recovery efforts, create permanent job losses and further jeopardize capital investment and future economic developmen­t.”

Now that they have been certified, the measures will head to the 2021 Nevada Legislatur­e. If the Legislatur­e fails to act or rejects the measures, the tax proposals would then go on the ballot in 2022 for voters to decide, and would take effect the following year.

Vellardita said their focus now “is to force a conversati­on in the Nevada Legislatur­e about how do we rebuild and diversify the economy,” after the fiscal constraint­s that the COVID-19 pandemic has put on the state’s budget.

“And you’re not going to do that without investing in education,” he added.

 ??  ?? John Vellardita
John Vellardita

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