โIโm going to vote for the bill, but Iโm going to do so with a heavy heart. Nevada has sold its soul and tarnished its already shaky reputation today, just in exchange for a $30 million Band-Aid.โ
โSenate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas
Lawmaking in Nevada takes its toll, even on those elected representatives with the best intentions. End-of-session wheeling and dealing manifests itself in many ways. Two examples: education and electricity.
The above quote from Dina Titus, as reported in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, referred to the passage of Senate Bill 577 Saturday. The billโs candy coating? It would raise $30 million over two years by increasing the fees charged to corporations by the Secretary of State.
What made Titus gag was the billโs bitter nuggetโa measure to protect the private assets of corporate muckies. Titus worried that the change would โopen Nevada to dishonest and unscrupulous business people.โ
The money raised by the bill, though, would do Good Things for Nevadaโs kids. It was coupled with a $20 million bill to upgrade technology in public schools and to give new teacher recruits a bonus of $2,000. This would help Nevada head off an inevitable teacher shortage, Gov. Guinn enthused.
But thatโs not the worst news from the Last Days of the Legislature.
Check it out. Iโll bet you thought that savvy Nevada lawmakers nixed the idea of utility deregulation weeks ago. Yeah, right. At this very moment, lawmakers are working hard to deregulate utilities for a couple of key Nevada industries. AB 661, passed last week, deregulates utilities for โฆ drum roll, please โฆ big buyers, like mines and casinos.
Huh? What the heck? I thought we observed Californiaโs mistakesโmade by Golden State legislators after an all-night wine tasting event in Napa Valley. Given the frequency of the word โdebacleโ coupled with โderegulationโ in headlines across the nation, youโd think weโd have learned something.
This re-deregulation pill is made palatable by another Good Thing for Nevadaโa requirement in the Senateโs version that requires utilities to purchase at least 15 percent of their power from renewable sources by 2013. Hooray for the good guys.
When first proposed, the legislation allowed consumer groups to form aggregates to buy power at new, improved rates. This received a gubernatorial nix.
Assemblywoman Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, said she didnโt get why consumers couldnโt get together and, like mines and casinos, also be allowed to buy power on the open market. Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno, predicted that utility rates will skyrocket for the average residential consumer.
Oh, by the way, you did not read about the re-dereg bills in the Reno Gazette-Journal, because, compared with Gov. Guinnโs veto of the loud stereo bill, it was hardly news at all.
Thereโs just no telling what Nevada legislators will cook up in the next few days. Whatever it is, weโll be stewing in it for two years. So pay attention. And those of you legislators who havenโt yet bowed the knee to Baal (aka Harvey Whittemore)โhang in there. Weโre counting on you.
