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CARSONCITY Gov. Jim Gibbons said Tuesday he was pleased with the legislatures approval of renewable energy legislation this session.
Nevadas future is renewable energy, he said.
He said the incentives contained in legislation he and lawmakers supported could help Nevada become the Texas of renewable energy. But he repeated his opposition to the tax increases saying if he ends up running for re-election against Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, he will keep the voters focused on those tax hikes.
The Buckley-Horsford tax increase of 2009 is the largest tax increase in the history of the state of Nevada and is an insult to the people, Gibbons said. I think the public is going to keep this in the forefront. People paying their taxes are going to keep this in the forefront.
If the two face each other in the 2010 elections, he said her voting record will be prominently featured in his campaign.
Im going to remind the public every day of her biggest tax increase in history, he said.
The governor said he remains convinced Nevada needed a smaller, more efficient government, not more spending.
Gibbons said he was willing to work with lawmakers but, instead, they chose to develop their tax proposals behind closed doors, excluding the people and media, hiding in back rooms doing sweetheart deals.
The public who is footing the bill needs to be informed, Gibbons said. Instead, what the got was a late night deal that was cast upon them.
Buckley said those were tough decisions made by both parties that were right for the state.
The very idea of closing down UNR or UNLV, massive layoffs of teachers, knocking children and the elderly off health insurance those would have been the wrong decisions for the state, she said. So one had to act like a grown-up.
Meanwhile, at the end of a legislative session marked by a historic drop in revenue, Nevada lawmakers approved two bills early Tuesday that could pave the way for new taxes in the future. State coffers suffered everywhere, but Nevadas problems were more acute because the state has historically low taxes on business, no personal income tax and the economy is dependent on tourism and gambling, industries where earnings dropped month after month.
Throughout the 2009 legislative session, lawmakers struggled to deal with a 44 percent drop in revenue, and in the end passed a $6.8 billion, two-year state budget and $1 billion in tax increases, including a $781 million tax package and a room tax increase projected to generate about $220 million over two years.
Legislators couldnt consider a personal income tax because it is prohibited by the Nevada Constitution. Some wanted to see new levies such as a tax on profits, business transactions or prostitution acts, but those suggestions failed to win approval.
The Associated Press contributed to this report
At the end of the session, Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-North Las Vegas, introduced legislation to create a study between now and the 2011 session that would explore which broad-based taxes would be right for the state, and to start setting the stage for those changes.
As we said prior to the session and throughout, its time for us to create a broad-based solution for our state and to fix our budget once and for all, Horsford said. When you look at the next session, we know we will have an enormous budget shortfall, because we will not have that one-shot funding.
Horsford worked on a proposal for a net profit tax during the session, but said it became clear that implementing the broad-based tax wouldnt be possible, and even if it was it would not raise enough revenue in time to help balance the budget for the next two fiscal years.
Also, political support from Republicans was crucial to pass the budget and tax package over Gov. Jim Gibbons veto, and some made it clear they would only support certain types of taxes.
In the final days of the session, Senate Minority Leader Bill Raggio, R-Reno, suggested a competing interim study that would explore changes to the tax structure, but would not include details on which taxes to raise, or fund the implementation of a major tax change.
In the end, a compromise included elements of both tax plans. SCR37 won approval early Tuesday, along with SB143, a companion proposal that funds the study.
Horsford said his original proposal would have allowed the interim committee to put the structure in place to implement new taxes, so that rather than facing a yearlong process, a future legislature could implement a new tax in about six months.
Assembly Majority Leader John Oceguera, D-Las Vegas, who co-sponsored SCR37, said the Legislature discusses the tax structure every session, but usually doesnt have enough time to begin implementing a major change.
It wasnt everything we hoped for, Oceguera said. We had hoped for an implementation plan, but there had to be a lot of compromises.
Assembly Taxation Chairwoman Kathy McClain, D-Las Vegas, said she also had hoped for a long-term changes to the tax structure.
The situation itself didnt really lend itself to long-term planning, McClain said. We had the stimulus money, the budget had to be balanced and the economy just kept getting worse and worse. But Im happy with the concept, and I hope it works out.
Nevadas future is renewable energy, he said.
He said the incentives contained in legislation he and lawmakers supported could help Nevada become the Texas of renewable energy. But he repeated his opposition to the tax increases saying if he ends up running for re-election against Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, he will keep the voters focused on those tax hikes.
The Buckley-Horsford tax increase of 2009 is the largest tax increase in the history of the state of Nevada and is an insult to the people, Gibbons said. I think the public is going to keep this in the forefront. People paying their taxes are going to keep this in the forefront.
If the two face each other in the 2010 elections, he said her voting record will be prominently featured in his campaign.
Im going to remind the public every day of her biggest tax increase in history, he said.
The governor said he remains convinced Nevada needed a smaller, more efficient government, not more spending.
Gibbons said he was willing to work with lawmakers but, instead, they chose to develop their tax proposals behind closed doors, excluding the people and media, hiding in back rooms doing sweetheart deals.
The public who is footing the bill needs to be informed, Gibbons said. Instead, what the got was a late night deal that was cast upon them.
Buckley said those were tough decisions made by both parties that were right for the state.
The very idea of closing down UNR or UNLV, massive layoffs of teachers, knocking children and the elderly off health insurance those would have been the wrong decisions for the state, she said. So one had to act like a grown-up.
Meanwhile, at the end of a legislative session marked by a historic drop in revenue, Nevada lawmakers approved two bills early Tuesday that could pave the way for new taxes in the future. State coffers suffered everywhere, but Nevadas problems were more acute because the state has historically low taxes on business, no personal income tax and the economy is dependent on tourism and gambling, industries where earnings dropped month after month.
Throughout the 2009 legislative session, lawmakers struggled to deal with a 44 percent drop in revenue, and in the end passed a $6.8 billion, two-year state budget and $1 billion in tax increases, including a $781 million tax package and a room tax increase projected to generate about $220 million over two years.
Legislators couldnt consider a personal income tax because it is prohibited by the Nevada Constitution. Some wanted to see new levies such as a tax on profits, business transactions or prostitution acts, but those suggestions failed to win approval.
The Associated Press contributed to this report
At the end of the session, Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-North Las Vegas, introduced legislation to create a study between now and the 2011 session that would explore which broad-based taxes would be right for the state, and to start setting the stage for those changes.
As we said prior to the session and throughout, its time for us to create a broad-based solution for our state and to fix our budget once and for all, Horsford said. When you look at the next session, we know we will have an enormous budget shortfall, because we will not have that one-shot funding.
Horsford worked on a proposal for a net profit tax during the session, but said it became clear that implementing the broad-based tax wouldnt be possible, and even if it was it would not raise enough revenue in time to help balance the budget for the next two fiscal years.
Also, political support from Republicans was crucial to pass the budget and tax package over Gov. Jim Gibbons veto, and some made it clear they would only support certain types of taxes.
In the final days of the session, Senate Minority Leader Bill Raggio, R-Reno, suggested a competing interim study that would explore changes to the tax structure, but would not include details on which taxes to raise, or fund the implementation of a major tax change.
In the end, a compromise included elements of both tax plans. SCR37 won approval early Tuesday, along with SB143, a companion proposal that funds the study.
Horsford said his original proposal would have allowed the interim committee to put the structure in place to implement new taxes, so that rather than facing a yearlong process, a future legislature could implement a new tax in about six months.
Assembly Majority Leader John Oceguera, D-Las Vegas, who co-sponsored SCR37, said the Legislature discusses the tax structure every session, but usually doesnt have enough time to begin implementing a major change.
It wasnt everything we hoped for, Oceguera said. We had hoped for an implementation plan, but there had to be a lot of compromises.
Assembly Taxation Chairwoman Kathy McClain, D-Las Vegas, said she also had hoped for a long-term changes to the tax structure.
The situation itself didnt really lend itself to long-term planning, McClain said. We had the stimulus money, the budget had to be balanced and the economy just kept getting worse and worse. But Im happy with the concept, and I hope it works out.


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