The Nevada Legislative Session is over, and the results are mixed for Nevada students, according to Tom Greene, Senior regional legislative director, Excel in Ed in Action.
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Some Nevada Democrats aren’t satisfied with having a Democrat governor and large legislative majorities. They also want to ignore the constitution to make it easier to raise taxes.
The top priority for Nevada education is overhauling the Nevada Plan, according to Sen. Mo Denis, who will chair the Senate Education Committee.
Why would Kim Wooden, deputy superintendent of the Clark County School District, attend a disciplinary meeting for second-year teacher Jason Wright? For most teachers, she wouldn’t, but Wright is no ordinary teacher.
The months of budget problems the Clark County School District faced last year will soon look like the good ol’ days. Thank collective bargaining for that.
If you think the Clark County School District has budget problems now, imagine how bad it’ll be if Amazon selects Las Vegas as the site of its second headquarters.
The Nevada Democratic Congressional delegation, like Rep. Ruben Kihuen, claim they will fight “tooth and nail” to protect participants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. But their words are decreasing the chance of a compromise passing Congress.
3 things to watch for on Legislative Session Day 89: reflexology licensing, PLAs and donated drugs.
Sex education, voter registration and government transparency highlight the day in Nevada’s Legislature.