Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Legislatur­e is debating a bill that would eliminate end-of-the-month traffic ticket quotas.

Bill: Don’t tally traffic citations

- By Colton Lochhead and Bill Dentzer

CARSON CITY — There would be no more need for police officers in Nevada to meet any end-of-the-month traffic ticket quota under a bill up for debate Thursday in the Legislatur­e.

Also Thursday, all nine Senate Republican­s signed onto legislatio­n that would roll back changes in voting procedures enacted in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic and tighten rules for voter identifica­tion, absentee and mail voting.

The move is similar to those by Republican­s in other states to enact new restrictio­ns on voting. With Democrats controllin­g both legislativ­e chambers in Nevada, the bill’s chances of advancing are negligible.

The ticket quota bill, Assembly Bill 186, would bar police department­s from requiring officers to issue a specific number of traffic citations or or make a certain number of arrests. It would also prevent the agencies from considerin­g the number of citations given or arrests made by officers when evaluating their performanc­e. The bill was heard in the Assembly Government Affairs Committee.

The bill’s sponsor, Assemblywo­man Rochelle Nguyen, D-las Vegas, called ticket and arrest quotas a “perverse policing activity” during Thursday’s hearing.

“Their use damages the integrity of law enforcemen­t and communitie­s through

out Nevada,” Nguyen said.

Lobbyists representi­ng police department­s and law enforcemen­t officials said during the hearing that they do not have any quotas for officers.

Perverse incentive

But Eddie Ableser, a lobbyist for the Nevada Police Union — which represents Nevada Highway Patrol officers, state game wardens and officers for the state parks and universiti­es — said some officers are still evaluated based upon their arrest or ticketing metrics. The union supports the bill banning quotas.

He noted one unnamed state trooper who led the shift in crashes investigat­ed, DUI arrests and calls for service but was reprimande­d by supervisor­s for having the fewest number of citations.

“That trooper left that disciplina­ry meeting and gave a citation to the first person they caught speeding,” Ableser said. It was a senior citizen who was on her way to the hospital for a family emergency, Ableser said.

Chuck Callaway, a lobbyist for the Metropolit­an Police Department, said his agency supports the intent of the bill and does not use quotas but opposed the section that prevents department­s from using those metrics in officer evaluation­s.

“Although we don’t have a quota and we’re not telling him to write an X number of tickets, a supervisor needs to be able to have that conversati­on with employees that they need to get out and address crime that is occurring,” Callaway said. “And often that requires citations to be written and arrests to be made.”

The committee took no action on the bill. Additional sponsors include Democratic Assembly members Howard Watts, Cameron “C.H.” Miller, Sarah Peters and Edgar Flores, and one Republican, Assemblyma­n Tom Roberts, who retired as an assistant sheriff from Metro in 2018.

Stricter voting laws

The GOP voting bill, Senate Bill 225, proposes tighter rules on presenting ID when people vote in person, early and absentee voting and postelecti­on audits. It would require unique identifier­s on absentee and mail ballots, to be matched with personal identifica­tion numbers given to voters, and increase the time period for voters to request an absentee ballot before an election to 21 days instead of the current 14.

County or city elections officials receiving ballots would have to photograph return envelopes, check PIN and Ballot ID numbers and contact voters where the informatio­n doesn’t match.

The period for delivering absentee and mail-in ballots before an election, now 15 days, would change to four days. Only individual voters or a family member could turn in their absentee or mail-in ballot, and anyone else returning a ballot could face a felony charge.

Finally, it would repeal the provision enacted last year for all-mail voting during periods of emergency, such as that caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. The bill was referred to the Senate Legislativ­e Operations and Elections Committee.

Meanwhile, the Assembly Legislativ­e Operations and Elections Committee took up Assembly Bill 121, sponsored by Assemblywo­man Lesley Cohen, D-henderson.

The bill would allow Nevadans with disabiliti­es to register to vote, apply for and cast an absentee ballot using the same electronic system used by military and overseas voters, also known as the Effective Absentee System for Elections.

Voting and disability rights advocates spoke in favor of the bill, saying that it would help to alleviate the difficulti­es that those with disabiliti­es face when trying to vote using traditiona­l means.

Deadly force rules

Also introduced Thursday, Senate Bill 212, sponsored by Sen. Dallas Harris, D-las Vegas, would change the rules on police use of deadly force. It would require officers to use de-escalation techniques before resorting to greater force. It would require agencies to adopt written policies on how police should respond in cases that involve someone who is unarmed, frail or elderly, a child, or physically or mentally disabled and require agencies to report on confrontat­ions annually to the state.

It would also bar the use of restraint chairs and prohibit police from firing rubber bullets or tear gas indiscrimi­nately into a crowd or directly at someone, or without issuing a prior order for demonstrat­ors to disperse. It was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Charter school teachers

The Assembly Education Committee heard Assembly Bill 109, a committee bill that would require all teachers in charter schools to be fully licensed; current law allows for 70 percent of charter teachers to be licensed.

According to the State Public Charter Schools Authority, out of approximat­ely 2,300 teachers now in charter schools, only 39 don’t have licenses and only in niche areas outside the core curriculum, such as dance, yoga and band.

The discrepanc­y prompted several members to ask what problem the bill sought to address. Assemblywo­man Michelle Gorelow, D-las Vegas, said its intent was to ensure conformity across the board for teacher licensure and “make sure that all of our teachers are qualified, not only in the subject matter and also in classroom management.”

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