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ERIN NEFF: A vision for Nevada

Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley may as well have titled her community meetings on the state's financial structure "Nevada 2010."

Instead, the Democratic leader -- who will host a series of town hall meetings designed to find solutions to the state's "boom-bust" financial structure -- calls it "Nevada 2020" because she chooses to view Nevada in terms of what can be.


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  • But for now, Buckley's town hall meetings and general strategy seem much more designed to drum up support for 2009 policy in Carson City, and with any luck, her own statewide bid the following year.

    "In our state, I think we're also lacking vision and leadership," Buckley said. "I'm convinced the economy is going to rebound -- that it's a matter of when -- and if we haven't plotted the right course, we'll have missed an opportunity."

    Usually it's a governor that initiates this kind of discussion.

    Kenny Guinn gave us a series of meetings on tax policy, for example. But Buckley sees no point in working with the current governor. During the special session Jim Gibbons skirted her house completely, meeting only with allies in the Republican Senate.

    She hasn't invited Gibbons to her discussion for the same reason Gibbons wasn't invited to Harry Reid's recent green confab. He's just not part of the solution on anything.

    One thing no legislative Democrat is ignoring, however, is the governor's absolute veto threat for any new taxes or fees.

    Buckley joined the no new taxes refrain Monday when announcing her community discussions. "I am not proposing new taxes," she said.

    Her counterpart in the Senate, Steven Horsford, has also said new taxes will not be part of the mix in Carson City next session.

    So how will Buckley's community discussions get Nevada off the boom-bust cycle?

    Buckley floated several ideas Monday, including a look at spending and re-examining current tax abatements and exemptions. An old study, frequently discussed in legislative budget hearings over the years, estimated the state had roughly $1 billion in exemptions.

    Buckley is still working to establish a current number. Economic development exemptions alone total $132.1 million over the past 10 years.

    Better schools and meaningful higher education degrees would go further than some of those exemptions in luring business to Nevada, she suggested. But she said some exemptions might still make sense.

    Buckley said that looking at such exemptions would have to be considered one of the state's priorities. She listed others as funding education, health and human services and public safety.

    Buckley said she doesn't know if Gibbons will support revoking certain tax abatements. She also said she's confident she'll pick up one to three seats this election, giving her a veto-proof majority in the lower house.

    "This is about examining the fairness of your revenue system, and if your exemptions don't match your priorities, it doesn't make much sense," she said.

    Buckley also said she thinks the state could generate revenue by cracking down on sales tax collections ($100 million estimate) and by working with Sen. Harry Reid's office to get the federal government to give up more land in Nevada.

    Several years ago, Buckley worked to turn former BLM land into a housing project for senior citizens. The project was feasible only because the state had acquired the land.

    Buckley envisions getting BLM parcels to lease to the private sector for construction of renewable energy projects. Those projects would create good green jobs and the state would get royalties, she said.

    Buckley also wants to revamp the state's rainy-day fund to make it a "forced savings account." During the recent downturn, that stabilization fund was quickly drained. In other states, payments are automatically made to stabilization funds up to a certain level. "In that way when you have bad times you don't have to destroy what you created in good times," Buckley said.

    Lastly, she said she wouldn't move forward stabilizing the financial structure without some real accountability in the education system. The business community and parents both demand it. No empty talk from her when she said, "We all have a stake in the public school system." Her son is in a fourth-grade class of 40.

    Buckley's series of town hall meetings -- the first is Sept. 29 at 5:30 p.m. at Spring Valley High School -- is designed to plot a course for the next five or 10 years.

    Buckley demurred when asked about whether this is a strategy for running for governor in 2010. "The state is facing a crisis," Buckley said. "This is about the future. I am speaker for the state, not just Southern Nevada."

    She's gotten a number of discussion leaders lined up from the education and business community, including Thom Reilly of Harrah's, Steve Hill of the Chamber of Commerce, former United Way officer Deborah Campbell and former UNLV law school dean Dick Morgan.

    Buckley, thankfully, has stepped up.

    It's up to Nevadans to finally start the conversation on the state's most pressing issue. At least they know someone in Carson City will listen.

    Contact Erin Neff at (702) 387-2906, or by e-mail at eneff@reviewjournal.com.

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    Sad Summerlin wrote on September 23, 2008 06:12 PM: It is no surprise that Buckley will not engage Governor Gibbons... just as Reid will not engage George Bush.

    Unfortunately, rather than spitting on each other... both branches of government need to figure out how to work together... unfortunately, partisanship wins over solutions...

    I wish Erin would point that out someday... but instead... I think she revels in being part of the partisan problem...


    Justin C wrote on September 23, 2008 04:24 PM: Yeah vision, but Allison is way goodlooking too...


    Jen wrote on September 23, 2008 04:18 PM: You would think wildbill - if a bunch of homeowners banded together, would they qualify for a "corporate discount" - you know buying in bulk?


    HELENWEILS wrote on September 23, 2008 03:02 PM: A vision for Nevada, Erin and Buckley
    move to California where they belong.


    wildbill wrote on September 23, 2008 02:09 PM: It's a joke Jen. By now there must be the technology to make it possible....more installs should lower the cost per unit also....See, who needs politicians to figure things out. This should have been thought of well before now.


    howard wrote on September 23, 2008 02:03 PM: Kenny Guinn is the only Republican that moon unit loves because he is a RINO that raised taxes.

    vision = new taxes
    leadership = new taxes

    How can the democrats say they are not going to raise taxes with a straight face. Liberalism is a mental disease and cronic lying is just one of it's symptoms.


    Jen wrote on September 23, 2008 12:45 PM: Great idea wildbill!! Otherwise, the cost to do so is almost 40k per house. They were talking about leasing possibities a while ago. Hopefully something will be done soon - it's a shame we're not taking advantage of our endless sun here!!


    wildbill wrote on September 23, 2008 11:30 AM: Along with houses with solar panels, why not put them on top of every school that is possible to do so? Let the power company install and maintain them and in return, free power for the school site and a little taste of the profits for the district.


    endrun wrote on September 23, 2008 10:28 AM: "In our state, I think we're also lacking vision and leadership," Buckley said. ( she's allegedly part of the leadership isn't she?)

    "I'm convinced the economy is going to rebound...'

    Yes, and most likely due to the federal government and not the State of Nevada or even Harry Reid who babels about things he has no control or influence over in this national crisis.

    But when the smoke clears...nothing will negate the fact that Nevada officials have wrecked the state at the expense of tax payers and voters due to patterns and practices beginning long before the Wall Street problems.


    ? wrote on September 23, 2008 10:18 AM: Neff looks a lot like one of those FLDS ladies. Sure she's not a Reid robot? Underneath the the Buckley statements comes the impression that Harry Reid is going to fix everything.

    Does he want to get the credit for the 'fix' the State is in now, or maybe he wants to leave that to his puppets?


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