Las Vegas Review-Journal

▶ SURCHARGE

- Contact Sabrina Schnur at sschnur@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-0278. Follow @sabrina_schnur on Twitter. The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

the surcharge statewide.

Tom Verducci, a board member, said state employees haven’t had a raise in several years.

“I think of the soul out in Lovelock working for the Department of Correction­s is paying $800 a month in a trailer with three kids,” he said. “I have a hard time with this one.”

Dean Heller, a Nevada Republican running for governor, called the decision “beyond despicable.”

“This is one of the most arrogant, disrespect­ful, and power-hungry moves any Governor has ever made toward the working men and women of our state,” Heller said in a statement. “It is beyond despicable to force employees to undergo testing, then demand they pay out of their own pockets for the mandate. I’m sure our workers are outraged, and rightfully so. They deserve a better Governor.”

In a statement, Meghin Delaney, spokeswoma­n for Sisolak, called the governor a national leader in requiring weekly testing. She also said the board is independen­t of the governor’s office.

“Vaccines help prevent severe cases of COVID-19, hospitaliz­ation and death, and having a safe and healthy State workforce is critical for the State to continue to serve Nevadans now and in the future,” she said.

Weekly testing was mandated nationally on Sept. 10 for companies with more than 100 employees.

In Nevada workplaces where less than 70 percent of employees have gotten shots, employees are required to be tested weekly to prevent the spread of the virus. Although President Joe Biden’s workplace mandates face court challenges, if they go into effect, all unvaccinat­ed workers will have to submit to weekly testing — a developmen­t that would significan­tly increase the state’s costs.

Officials said coronaviru­s-related claims filed by state workers were on track to surpass $6 billion in 2021. By charging state workers and their dependents age 18 and older, the plans will help offset the cost of testing people who refuse to be vaccinated.

The surcharge presented liberal-leaning labor unions with a dilemma. It pit a policy intended to encourage vaccinatio­n against increasing health care costs for workers — a longtime centerpiec­e of their advocacy. Labor lobbyists from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the Nevada Faculty Alliance testified in neutral about the surcharge proposal.

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