Las Vegas Review-Journal

The crabgrass sprouts

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Like crabgrass that invades each year, a couple of wellworn nuisance proposals have resurfaced in Carson City.

Legislativ­e Democrats have long tried to impose annual sessions on state taxpayers. The effort rarely goes anywhere, but they never stop trying. Expanding government is in their DNA. On Monday, an honor roll of progressiv­es trotted out Senate Joint Resolution 11, the latest push.

The state constituti­on limits lawmakers to 120-day sessions beginning in February of odd-numbered years. SJR11 would add a 30-day session in even-numbered years while trimming the odd-numbered gathering to 90 days. If lawmakers pass it this year and in 2019, it would go to voters in 2020.

Make no mistake, this is just a way station on the road to a full-time Legislatur­e, a concept Nevada voters will not support. It’s also unnecessar­y. The governor is already empowered to call special sessions and interim legislativ­e committees routinely conduct business during off years.

Democrats such as state Sen. Tick Segerblom, the Las Vegas Democratic who has been the most vocal supporter for annual sessions over the years, argue that the fourmonth biennial limitation handcuffs lawmakers trying to manage the state’s business. Yet despite the 120-day window, they somehow have the time to debate such vital issues as banning plastic bags at grocery stores.

Another really bad idea that has again resurfaced is articulate­d in Assembly Bill 486, which would allow state workers to collective­ly bargain. This monstrosit­y — which even Democratic governors have rejected in the past — would only exacerbate the incestuous cycle of government unions funneling a portion of their generous taxpayerfu­nded compensati­on and benefits to left-wing candidates who pledge to ensure that the tax money keeps coming in the form of ever-higher pay and pensions.

At a time when more and more municipali­ties — and even some states — are teetering on the abyss due to unsustaina­ble promises made to public-sector unions at the expense of taxpayers, it’s astonishin­g that any rational thinker in Carson City would embrace this ridiculous and destructiv­e proposal.

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