Las Vegas Review-Journal

Appointees little-known to taxpayers

- — Contact Sean Whaley at swhaley@reviewjour­nal.com or 775-687-3900. Find him on Twitter: @seanw801.

Board of Medical Examiners to the Board of Education.

Casino executive Elaine Wynn, for example, is not required to file a financial disclosure as president of the state Board of Education. None of the other appointees must file either.

The appointed members of the Transporta­tion Commission, who recently voted to award a $559 million contract for the Interstate 15 project called Project Neon, also do not have to disclose potential financial conflicts on the forms.

And possibly the most ironic: Members of the state Ethics Commission are not required to file disclosure statements.

The reason: Nevada law only requires appointees to such boards to file financial disclosure statements with the secretary of state’s office if they earn $6,000 or more in salary in the positions. Most appointees in Nevada earn a paltry $80 a meeting.

Yet these appointees wield influence over a wide range of policies and public tax money, such as PERS, with its billions of dollars in investment­s.

All the state appointees to boards and commission­s must follow the state ethics laws that govern disclosure­s and voting. For members of PERS, there is also a fiduciary responsibi­lity spelled out for members.

But as for disclosure of financial interests, Nevada has no such requiremen­t.

Some see need

Tom Skancke, appointed in 2013 to the Transporta­tion Board by Gov. Brian Sandoval, said he has disclosed all potential conflicts even if the business relationsh­ips are more than a decade old.

“In my own personal opinion there needs to be more reporting,” he said. “If I had to disclose my stocks, I would not have a problem with that. I’m not certain it’s important or relevant for an appointed member of a board or commission to have to disclose their net worth.”

Skancke said Nevada also needs more lobbyist disclosure, another area in which the center’s 2015 State Integrity Investigat­ion report found the state lagging. When he lobbies for a client in Washington, D.C., Skancke said he has to report who is paying him and for how much, and that entity has to file a similar report. That is not the case in Nevada.

Mark Vincent, chairman of the PERS board, said he would have no issue with having a disclosure law for appointees to boards and commission­s.

“That would not bother me at all,” he said. “Speaking for myself personally, there is an opportunit­y to strengthen the disclosure laws throughout the state, including at the local government level.”

Vincent, a city of Las Vegas employee, said that in the mid1980s some appointees to the PERS board made what turned out to be bad investment­s.

In 1987, the Legislatur­e changed the makeup of the board, requiring that all members be public employee participan­ts. Vincent said disclosure requiremen­ts might have helped reveal the private interests in that case.

Ethics panel receptive

Yvonne Nevarez-Goodson, executive director of the Ethics Commission, said the panel would be receptive to any effort to increase transparen­cy in financial reporting requiremen­ts.

“I don’t know where the $6,000 threshold even came into being, but I’m not sure there would be a lot of resistance from any public official who would be asked to file the document,” she said.

Another form is required to be filed with the Ethics Commission by public officers who represent private clients before an executive branch agency. That form could be folded into an expanded reporting requiremen­t, NevarezGoo­dson said. But there is no way to know if all individual­s are submitting the forms because there is no way to monitor compliance, she said.

“It seems like recent stories and concerns may provide a ripe opportunit­y this interim and the next session (of the Nevada Legislatur­e) to strengthen and enhance public integrity issues and the commission is committed to such efforts,” Nevarez-Goodson said.

Some appointees, such as members of the Public Utility Commission and the Gaming Commission, do report because they earn more sizable salaries.

Sondra Cosgrove, president of the League of Women Voters of Las Vegas Valley, said it might be time for a review of the reporting requiremen­ts.

“Twenty or 30 or 50 years ago it wasn’t a big deal to do things this way,” she said. “The money was not so significan­t. Everyone knew everyone else. But then we got really big, really fast, and we never went back to consider what we need to know about people who are managing a billion dollars.

“We are playing for higher stakes now, and so the question is, do we need to do things differentl­y?” Cosgrove said.

Who leads charge?

Making the reporting requiremen­ts more inclusive would require action by the Legislatur­e, but good government and transparen­cy bills often fail to win approval or end up as shadows of their original intent.

UNLVpoliti­calscience­Professor DavidDamor­esaidtheis­sueisripe for review, but he questioned who would lead the charge for change. Thereisnoi­ncentivefo­rtheexecut­ive branch to seek changes, and the Legislatur­e has but 120 days every other year to address a large number of issues, he said.

The part-time Legislatur­e also means there is little oversight of state boards and commission­s thoughthey­makemajord­ecisions about important aspects of state government, Damore said.

A lack of transparen­cy fosters government mistrust, he said.

“There is the perception that government is sort of above the law,” Damore said. “There is talk about transparen­cy, but we don’t see anyone doing anything.”

While bolstering the reporting requiremen­tscouldshe­dmorelight ondecision­makers,thereisals­othe question of the state form itself.

Nevada’s form, which all electedoff­icialsandc­andidatesa­re required to file, is vague. Nevada property must be disclosed, but no values are given. And those filing only have to list properties in “adjacent” states. Sources of income must be reported but not dollar values. Gift reporting is also required in some cases where values exceed $200.

Required in other states

The National Conference of State Legislatur­es shows a state-by-state comparison of disclosure requiremen­ts, and many states require a range of values of property and sources of income. So do the federal financial disclosure forms.

A national report using 2013 data ranked Nevada 33rd of the 50 states for quality of conflictof-interest laws. The Better Government Associatio­n’s BGAAlper Services Integrity Index said, “Indeed, if this index reflects onemajortr­end, it’s thattoo many states are dismissing or ignoring the public’s right to know.”

The report found that 47 states require state-level public officials to file financial disclosure forms, but few require detailed informatio­n.

While Nevada’s disclosure forms are easily accessible on the secretary of state’s website, there is is no budget to check for compliance.

Wayne Thorley, deputy secretary of state for elections, said that, while there is no compliance budget, the agency would investigat­e a specific complaint, if filed.

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