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The Newsroom - 2010 |
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$900 MILLION SHORTFALL: Jobs on line for state, schools

Lawmakers, governor discussing drastic cuts

January 27, 2010 -Nevada's budget outlook is so bleak that lawmakers doubt whether state
government can remain afloat without drastic cuts to everything from prisons to
schools to state parks and services for the poor and elderly.

Legislators met Tuesday with Republican Gov. Jim Gibbons to discuss how they
will cope with a short-term deficit of about $900 million during an upcoming
special session of the Legislature. Some Democratic lawmakers acknowledge
options to bridge the gap probably won't include tax increases.

"It is important for all of us to understand how dire it is," Senate Majority
Leader Steven Horsford, D-Las Vegas, said. "The things we attempted to protect
are now going to be considered for reduction or elimination."

Assemblyman John Oceguera, D-Las Vegas, said pay cuts and layoffs for state
employees are probably inevitable.

"These are drastic, drastic cuts. I would be surprised if some folks didn't lose
their jobs," Oceguera said.

Lawmakers were not specific about how they would arrive at savings, but prior to
the meeting, a budget analyst laid out one grim scenario to the Review-Journal.

Mark Taylor, deputy state controller, estimated that saving $1 billion through
pay cuts, if implemented in March, would mean reducing salaries of state
workers, teachers and university and community college faculty and support staff
by 25 percent to 30 percent through June 30, 2011.

Almost 55 percent of state spending goes to public schools and Nevada's higher
education system.

Taylor said such a cut would hit lower-wage employees extremely hard, especially
because some lower-paying jobs are held by single parents raising children.
There had been talks that salary cuts would be made only to employees earning
more than $40,000 a year.

Oceguera was uncertain whether it would be considered "a socialist type thing"
to tailor pay cuts according to earnings.

"I don't know if it is possible, but I'm open to look at that," he said.

Assembly speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, said the shortfall would take 22
percent across-the-board cuts to overcome and that she and other legislators
agreed with Gibbons they should work together to set priorities and ensure a
special session lasts no longer than a couple of days.

"What we are facing is nothing short of sobering," Buckley said.

Dennis Mallory, chief of staff of the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees Local 4041, expects "massive layoffs" of state employees and
pay cuts during the special session.

"Our folks cannot give up anymore," said Mallory, whose association has 4,000
state employee members. "This is terrible."

A Chamber of Commerce study released earlier this month found state and local
government employees in 2008 earned an average pay of $55,657 in 2008, sixth
highest among states and $6,800 higher than the national average. For state
employees alone, the average pay was $55,266.

Teacher pay in Nevada averaged $48,257 a year in 2008, below the $50,852
national average, according to the chamber study. University and community
college faculty members in Nevada earn $69,282 on average, compared with the
national average of $72,959.

The study also found that Nevada has the fewest number of public employees on a
per capita basis in the country, at 43.7 per 1,000 residents. Sixty state
employees have been laid off in the last year and a half. Another 1,096 state
jobs were eliminated through attrition, according to the state personnel
department.

It isn't any easier in the private sector. Private industries in Nevada last
year cut their work forces by 9.5 percent, or 118,000 workers, according to
state employment records.

Companies in the state are expected to cut 90,000 jobs over the next two years
before slight job growth returns in 2012.

The meeting Tuesday was the third of a series Gibbons has held to get feedback
from Democratic and Republican legislators, many of whom have criticized his
governing style as paranoid and disengaged.

"It is nice to be working with the governor again," Sen. Bob Coffin, D-Las
Vegas, said on his way to the meeting. "He is finally starting to work on this
stuff."

During a similar meeting on Jan. 6, Gibbons unveiled a poorly received plan to
rewrite the way the state funds education. Tuesday's meeting ended with no
concrete proposals. Both sides pledged to work together to hammer out parameters
for a special session.

Horsford said the Legislature's Interim Finance Committee will meet Feb. 3, 4, 9
and 10 to discuss the shortfall. There are plans for a public forum Feb. 13.
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Las Vegas Review-Journal
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Lawmakers,
clockwise from bottom, Barbara Cegavske, R-Las Vegas;
Steven Horsford, D-Las Vegas; Joyce Woodhouse, D-Henderson; Marilyn Kirkpatrick,
D-North Las Vegas, and Bob Coffin, D-Las Vegas, prepare for a video meeting
Tuesday at the Sawyer Building. The meeting, with Gov. Jim Gibbons and other
lawmakers in Carson City, was held to discuss the state's budget woes and the
upcoming legislative special session. Photo by K.M. Cannon.
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"Every agency is going to experience some additional cuts, including education," Horsford said.

Some legislators previously held out hope the state could prevent further cuts
to essentials such as education. That hope suffered a severe blow Friday with an
update from the Economic Forum, five business leaders who by law determine how
much the state can spend. The group projected expenses in the state's two-year
$6.9 billion budget would outstrip revenue by $580 million, thanks to big
declines in nine major revenue sources.

That didn't include a projection of sales tax revenue set aside for schools,
which is expected to fall an estimated $250 million short of expectations. An
increase in the number of people tapping Medicaid could put the state budget
even further upside down.

"The fundamental way in which we provide government services is rapidly coming
to an end, as is the time for half-measures," said Jeremy Aguero, a principal at
the economics research firm Applied Analysis, who has studied the budget. "The
state is in serious trouble."

Fred Lokken, a political science professor at Truckee Meadows Community College
in Reno said the budget and special session will define the entire 2010 election
cycle for candidates.

"It is pretty high stakes," Lokken said. "Both sides of the aisle have
acknowledged we have severe problems. But we never seemed to sit down when we
could to resolve it."

Lynn Warne, president of the Nevada State Education Association, said
legislators and the governor shouldn't rule out raising new revenue through
taxes and fees during the special session in order to prevent cuts to schools.

"I don't have a list of what cuts we would make in education, because I feel we
have already been cut to the bone and there is nothing left to cut," Warne said.

But Gibbons, who sets the agenda for the session, has long said he would veto
any tax increases.

"Our only real option," Horsford said, "is to eliminate or reduce spending."

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Author: B. Spillman, E. Vogel, Las Vegas Review-Journal
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