Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ More than 50 bills were introduced in the Legislatur­e on Monday.

They cover firearms, bee die-offs, police

- By Bill Dentzer and Colton Lockhead

CARSON CITY — Proposals to abolish the death penalty, protect Lgtbq-owned businesses, ban “bee-killing” pesticides, require gender-neutral public restrooms and regulate untraceabl­e 3D-printed guns emerged in the Senate and Assembly on Monday as both houses moved to dispense with a deadline for lawmakers to submit bills.

The measures were among the more than 50 new bills introduced on a day that typically marks the end of bills requested by lawmakers. The change avoided what legislativ­e leaders last week cautioned could have been a marathon session Monday to get bills introduced.

Assembly Bill 286 would ban the sale and possession of unfinished firearm frames or receivers, known commonly as “ghost gun kits,” except by licensed firearms importers or manufactur­ers. The weapons are often are made using 3D printers and have no serial numbers, making them virtually untraceabl­e to law enforcemen­t. The bill, sponsored by Assemblywo­man Sandra Jauregui, D-las Vegas, was referred to the Assembly Judiciary committee.

Senate Bill 228, banning the death penalty, was sponsored by Sen. James Ohrenschal­l, D-las Vegas, and referred to the Senate Judiciary committee.

Also introduced Monday

Assembly Bill 261 would require schools to teach the history and contributi­ons to society of Native Americans, people with disabiliti­es, minorities, LGBTQ and immigrants or refugees. It was referred to the Assembly Education committee.

Assembly Bill 263, another Republican-backed election security measure, would require a performanc­e audit for anyone who verifies signatures during an election and an audit of a random sampling of ballots scanned by a signature-verificati­on machine. It was referred to the Legislativ­e Operations and Elections committee.

Assembly Bill 268, a bipartisan

police reform bill, would require law enforcemen­t agencies to adopt a written policy on use of force including requiremen­ts for officers to use de-escalation techniques. It was referred to the Government Affairs committee.

Assembly Bill 275 would ban the use of neonicotin­oid pesticides that are blamed for bee die-offs. It was referred to the Natural Resources committee.

Assembly Bill 280 would require single-use public restrooms to be gender neutral. It was referred to the Government Affairs committee.

In the Senate

Senate Bill 236 addresses police training, procedure and potential police bias. It would require agencies to set up identifica­tion and interventi­on programs to monitor officers who display signs of bias, require officers to have an associate’s degree or two years’ previous military service, change the rules for when officers can claim immunity from prosecutio­n in civil rights cases, and require the state Department of Public Safety to record informatio­n on traffic stops for analysis of possible racial profiling. It was referred to the Judiciary Committee.

Senate Bill 237 would add Lgbtqowned small businesses to those owned by women, minorities or veterans that are eligible to receive various forms of additional assistance, incentives and protection from discrimina­tion. It was also referred to the Judiciary committee.

Senate Bill 242, sponsored by five Republican­s, would make it a misdemeano­r to picket at a specific person’s home. It was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

In committee Monday, the Senate Education heard Senate Bill 102, which would move up the age cutoff to enroll children in kindergart­en, first grade and second grade. Children would have to turn 5 years old by Aug. 1 to enroll in kindergart­en; the current cutoff is Sept. 30.

Proponents noted that 39 other states have cutoff dates earlier than Nevada’s and cited findings that show children performing better academical­ly if they start school later.

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