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Sales plunge, worsening budget woes

CARSON CITY -- Nevada's funding problems worsened Friday when the state Department of Taxation announced that taxable sales for January plunged nearly 5 percent from the year before, the biggest drop of the state's current economic slowdown.

Statewide taxable sales totaled $3.52 billion in January, down from $3.7 billion in January 2007. The 4.9 percent decrease pushed taxable sales for the first seven months of the fiscal year to a 1.8 percent decline over the same period during the previous fiscal year.

Clark County taxable sales were down 4.2 percent in January to $2.67 billion. Washoe County sales were off by 7.2 percent.

Every major component of the taxable sales base was down in January, from auto sales to restaurant purchases.


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  • In a separate report issued Friday on Nevada's February unemployment rate, Bill Anderson, chief economist for the Nevada Department of Employment, Training & Rehabilitation, suggested that an upswing in the economy isn't expected immediately.

    "The economic environment in which the Nevada economy operates will remain challenging in the near- term," he said.

    Gov. Jim Gibbons is expected to discuss the state's budget and economic problems Monday. One round of 4.5 percent cuts has already been implemented at most state agencies, the university system and the public schools due to lower-than-expected tax revenues.

    A new round of cuts, one that could include layoffs, is expected to be announced by Gibbons in the coming weeks.

    The projected revenue shortfall for the current two-year budget is now expected to reach $800 million by mid-2009.

    Sales tax collections so far this year are now off by more than $60 million from what was projected.

    "The January economic numbers show that Nevada's economy is experiencing many of the same challenges that are being seen in many other states," said Gibbons in remarks accompanying the report. "Clearly, the drop in consumer spending is having an adverse effect as well as the nationwide housing problem, which is particularly acute in Nevada."

    Senate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, said there is no reason to expect the revenue shortfall to ease; if anything it could worsen and even hit $900 million by the end of the two-year budget on June 30, 2009.

    "We haven't hit bottom in the housing market," she said.

    Titus, who will attend the meeting with Gibbons and others on Monday, said lawmakers are looking at alternatives to across-the-board cuts, including delaying major construction projects and using bond funds to pay for programs.

    Job cuts at a time when there is a dire need for parole officer and health inspector positions to be filled doesn't make sense, she said. And there is the flip side to the reduced revenues: an increasing demand for services due to the slow economy, such as a rising Medicaid caseload, Titus said.

    The Taxation Department report showed that some taxable sales categories increased in January. Health and personal care stores were up 31.9 percent; amusement, gambling and recreation industries, up 41.8 percent; and rental and leasing services, up 10.9 percent.

    But the major categories that bring in most of the sales tax revenue were down. The construction industry was off by 8 percent; merchant wholesalers/durable goods was down by 7.6 percent; motor vehicle and parts dealers were off by 7.4 percent; and general merchandise stores were down by 12.1 percent.

    Other declines were seen in clothing and accessory stores, off 1.2 percent; food and beverage stores, down 5.1 percent; home furniture and furnishings, down 9.6 percent; accommodations, off by 12.8 percent; and food services and drinking places, down 0.2 percent.

    That bars and restaurants' sales were close to year-ago levels could be considered a positive given the numbers in other categories.

    Nevada Restaurant Association President and CEO Paul Hartgen said the flat numbers might reflect increasing sales due to higher restaurant prices, however. The cost of food supplies continues to rise, he said.

    But Hartgen said he would rather weather the current economic problems in Las Vegas and Nevada than a lot of other places where jobs are migrating to cheaper locations.

    "At least our jobs aren't moving out of the area," he said. "We are a destination and it's hard to lose that."

    According to the report, 10 of Nevada's 17 counties recorded a decrease in taxable sales for January 2008 compared to January 2007: Carson City, Clark, Douglas, Elko, Eureka, Lander, Mineral, Nye, Storey and Washoe counties.

    Tax collections from sales and use taxes amounted to $264 million for January 2008, which represents a 6.2 percent decrease compared to January 2007.

    Compared to the May 1, 2007, Economic Forum projections, the general fund portion of the sales and use taxes is 5.7 percent, or $61 million, below its forecast for fiscal year 2008.

    Contact Review-Journal Capital Bureau reporter Sean Whaley at swhaley@reviewjournal.com or (775) 687-3900.

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    FYI wrote on March 29, 2008 07:00 PM: NEVADA

    Copy and paste the link below to your browser and vote out everyone on the list especially the judicial and legislative branches

    http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:eI_veLU4afMJ:www.co.clark.nv.us/election/2008/Offices.pdf+clark+county+incumbents+2008&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=4&gl=us


    politik wrote on March 29, 2008 06:35 PM: The real "shortfall" for Nevada taxpayers and voters is in the elected officials themselves and what we are getting for the wages we are paying them.

    All incumbents must be voted out of office and the balance investigated


    ploitik wrote on March 29, 2008 06:31 PM: 'send all the illegals back home,then they'll be hope for the us citizens...'

    But who will run the leaf blowers?


    cas127 wrote on March 29, 2008 01:25 PM: "The projected revenue shortfall for the current two-year budget is now expected to reach $800 million by mid-2009."

    It must be said again and again and again...

    $800 million off the fantasyland projections that the state *projected* its revenue to be, based on the absurd housing bubble.

    No citizen is obligated to indulge endless government grabbing based on nothing more than the endless thirst for stolen power that the political class in this dying country displays.

    How much are revenues "off" the *last* two years?

    Quite possibly they are not lower *at all*.

    The only "shortfall" is in the demented minds of power-hungry politicians who intentionally create "crises" that only *they* can solve with *our* wages.

    An honest audit could easily shave 5% off existing budgets (how many essentially do nothing, "bought vote" jobs do you think there really are among government workers? My sense is that 1 out of 20 is a low estimate).

    If the pols redistributed existing resources *honestly*, any current *crises* would be solved.

    But *that* does not serve the political class' interests.

    Perpetual "crises" and the pleas/extortion for money that accompany them is now the only way our sick government knows how to operate.

    Pick 10 random business owners from anywhere in the state, give them access to the true financials of government, and in six months the "budget crisis" would be solved.

    Sure, there would be plenty of fat-back government employee union strikes - who cares? The citizens are sick of their extortion ("it's for the children") and sick of being financially second-class for no other reason than political mafias like the teachers' union have warped our system of governance.

    Enough. Fatally, enough.


    DLW wrote on March 29, 2008 11:49 AM: All we need to do is to promote the illegal population to spend five percent more locally and that will solve all the state's woes by leaps and bounds.


    tim wrote on March 29, 2008 07:15 AM: let the layoffs begin,there are too many of them as it is.smaller gov.,less taxes they suck from us.