Could This Happen In Nevada?

Posted by Webmaster on June 23, 2009 under Administration, K-12

Giant school districts sometimes make poor choices. Such is the case in this report from MSNBC on how a school district – just four slots larger than the Clark County School District on the list of America’s most giant school districts – is paying over 700 teachers to not do any work. Paying them in full, with full benefits, summers off, the whole nine years.

Nevada Economy

Posted by Webmaster on May 1, 2009 under Economy In Brief

Here’s the first quarter “Nevada Economy In Brief” published by the Nevada Employment Security Department.

The War On Short Yellows

Posted by Webmaster on April 20, 2009 under Public Safety

The trend for governments to install red-light traffic cameras – which automatically write tickets to cars that are in an intersection when the light turns red – then shorten up the length of the yellow light seems to be generating a backlash.

It may be all about jacking up fine monies to the governments, but it’s about fair play to the public. The Wall Street Journal reports on the trend

Poor Reporting By Associated Press

Posted by Webmaster on April 16, 2009 under State Government

An Associated Press Wire Story that ran in today’s Review Journal and Reno Gazette Journal (read it here) is an example of embarrassingly bad journalism. It states, over and over again, that Nevada has the worst budget deficit in the United States, quoting:

  • Proud socialists PLAN in Reno
  • even prouder socialists Center for Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington
  • Two democrat Nevada Assemblymen

as saying the Nevada has the largest budget deficit of any US state.

Paragraph three does, correctly, yet briefly, note that the gap is calculated by comparing revenue forecasts with what government thinks it needs.

In Nevada’s case, the legislature is planning to increase spending to a level 20% higher than our current revenue.

Meanwhile, our revenue is going to be around 10% less than current levels. 20% more plus 10% less equals a 30% budget gap, America’s largest.

Nevada has the largest budget gap because Nevada has the most unrestrained, irresponsible legislature of any state.

Here’s a reality-based look at Nevada’s actual revenue shortfall – sixteen states have it worse than us.

Area 51 Unwrapped

Posted by Webmaster on April 13, 2009 under News, Public Safety

Great article about a large, non-existent area of central Nevada

Millions of X-Files fans believe the truth may be “out there,” but more likely it’s concealed inside Area 51′s Strangelove-esque hangars—buildings that, though confirmed by Google Earth, the government refuses to acknowledge.

The problem is the myths of Area 51 are hard to dispute if no one can speak on the record about what actually happened there. Well, now, for the first time, someone is ready to talk—in fact, five men are, and their stories rival the most outrageous of rumors.

How Bad Is Nevada’s Tax Shortfall?

Posted by Webmaster on April 9, 2009 under State Government

Worst in the nation, Jon Ralston flashed his audience today, citing the Wall Street Journal:

If you don’t believe what I and others have been saying about Nevada having the largest proportional budget hole, The Wall Street Journal says it’s true – just click on the map

The Journal’s article and chart actually rank Nevada’s tax shortfall as relatively mild, compared to many other states… at 6.5-percent, 16 states have a worse revenue shortfall than we do.

The data does rank Nevada’s legislature as one of the most irresponsible in America. When Nevada’s revenue started tanking, our legislature increased spending by draining all our savings and giving employees an average 6% raise last July. And our legislature plans on increasing spending again in three months – alot.

As a result, Nevada leads the nation in what the Wall Street Journal calls “Projected 2010 Gap as Percentage of FY2009 General Fund” and what Ralston more cleverly calls the “largest proportional budget hole”.

If our Legislature had acted responsibly, and trimmed spending when revenue flattened out instead of increasing spending, we would have an average problem on our hands. This is especially clear in retrospect, but should give the Legislature pause before raising taxes.

Remember, a “budget” is merely a plan to spend… or in Nevada’s recent years, a plan to overspend.