THE EIGHTY-EIGHTH DAY
Carson City (Thursday), May 1, 2003
Senate called to order at 11:31 a.m.
President Hunt presiding.
Roll called.
All present.
Prayer by the Chaplain, Pastor Marvin Dennis.
Heavenly Father, on this National Day of Prayer, there are many
gatherings across our land to seek You asking for Your guidance and blessings
for our great Nation and all her leaders. I join with thousands of others,
today, and ask Your richest blessings upon our President, Vice President,
members of his Cabinet, members of Congress, state and local leaders and,
especially, those who now stand in this Nevada State Senate. Please meet their
professional needs and also, most important, their personal needs and concerns.
Bless their families with happiness and prosperity that only comes from You.
Thank You for this special day and these special men and women who serve this
great State.
Amen.
Pledge of allegiance to the Flag.
Senator Raggio moved that further reading of the Journal be dispensed with, and the President and Secretary be authorized to make the necessary corrections and additions.
Motion carried.
REPORTS
OF COMMITTEES
Madam
President:
Your
Committee on Commerce and Labor, to which was referred Assembly Bill No. 262,
has had the same under consideration, and begs leave to report the same back
with the recommendation: Do pass.
Randolph J. Townsend, Chairman
Madam
President:
Your
Committee on Finance, to which were re-referred Senate Bills Nos. 58, 100, has
had the same under consideration, and begs leave to report the same back with
the recommendation: Do pass.
William J. Raggio, Chairman
Madam
President:
Your
Committee on Human Resources and Facilities, to which were referred Assembly
Bills Nos. 273, 497, has had the same under consideration, and begs leave to
report the same back with the recommendation: Do pass.
Raymond D. Rawson, Chairman
MESSAGES FROM THE ASSEMBLY
Assembly
Chamber, Carson
City, April 30, 2003
To the
Honorable the Senate:
I
have the honor to inform your honorable body that the Assembly on this day
concurred in the Senate Amendment No. 504 to Assembly Bill No. 133.
Also,
I have the honor to inform your honorable body that the Assembly on this day
respectfully refused to concur in the Senate Amendment No. 495 to Assembly Bill
No. 55.
Diane
Keetch |
Assistant Chief Clerk of
the Assembly |
MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS AND NOTICES
By Senators McGinness, Amodei, Care, Carlton, Cegavske, Coffin, Hardy, Mathews, Neal, Nolan, O'Connell, Raggio, Rawson, Rhoads, Schneider, Shaffer, Tiffany, Titus, Townsend, Washington, Wiener; Assemblymen Sherer, Anderson, Andonov, Angle, Arberry, Atkinson, Beers, Brown, Buckley, Carpenter, Chowning, Christensen, Claborn, Collins, Conklin, Geddes, Gibbons, Giunchigliani, Goicoechea, Goldwater, Grady, Griffin, Gustavson, Hardy, Hettrick, Horne, Knecht, Koivisto, Leslie, Mabey, Manendo, Marvel, McClain, McCleary, Mortenson, Oceguera, Ohrenschall, Parks, Perkins, Pierce, Weber and Williams:
Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 33—Congratulating the Mineral County High School girls’ basketball team for winning the 2002 and 2003 state championships.
Whereas, The victory
at the Lawlor Events Center on February 28, 2003, seemed familiar as the Lady
Serpents of Mineral County High School won the AA state basketball championship
for the fourth consecutive year, pushing their unprecedented total to nine
championship titles in the past 10 years; and
Whereas, The team members for this
year’s championship season, Sandhya Bhakta, Shasta Brown, Jamie Convis, Tana
Gurulé, Jami Harris, Lindsay Hurley, Delicia Jernigan, Denise Koscinski,
Jacquere Lipscomb, Sidney Orndorff and Jessica Vinson, are also academic state
champions with a team grade point average of 3.85; and
Whereas, The Lady Serpents championship
team of 2002, consisting of Sandhya Bhakta, Ciera Cammarata, Jamie Convis,
Crystal Gilbert, Tana Gurulé, Amanda Holland, Delicia Jernigan, Denise
Koscinski and Sidney Orndorff, also had the distinction of remaining undefeated
in their season of play which included wins against larger AAA and AAAA
schools; and
Whereas, The Mineral County High School
girls’ basketball team was led to victory both seasons by Head Coach David
Gelmstedt and Assistant Coaches Liane Filkowski and George Winters, with
managers Mollie Bryant and Amanda Jackson for the 2002-2003 season and manager
Jennica Trujillo for the 2001-2002 season; and
Whereas, Over the past four seasons of
play, the Lady Serpents have won 93 percent of their games with a record of 115
wins and only 9 losses, and their consistent excellence has earned the respect
and admiration of fans and players from teams throughout the State; and
Whereas, The decade of dominance in
girls’ basketball in the State can be attributed to the hard work and
dedication of the members of each succeeding team, and their determination to
be the best continues to make them the pride of Mineral County; now, therefore,
be it
Resolved by the Senate of the State of Nevada,
the Assembly Concurring, That the members of the 72nd Session of the
Nevada Legislature do hereby extend their congratulations to the Mineral County
High School girls’ basketball team for winning the AA state championship in
both 2002 and 2003; and be it further
Resolved, That the academic and
athletic achievements of the Lady Serpents will be a role model for all young
girls who strive to be their best; and be it further
Resolved, That the Secretary of the
Senate prepare and transmit a copy of this resolution to Clyde Baker, Principal
of Mineral County High School, and to Head Coach David Gelmstedt.
Senator McGinness moved the adoption of the resolution.
Remarks by Senator McGinness.
Senator McGinness requested that his remarks be entered in the Journal.
Madam President, the resolution says it all. I do
not know if there is a team, a basketball team, or athletic team anywhere in
the State that has accomplished such a record.
These
young ladies have really done it all. Two senior girls, Delicia Jernigan and
Sidney Orndorff, have been on the team for four years. They have a 115 and 8
record. They won four conference, four zone and four state titles in those four
years. It is just an amazing accomplishment.
I told Delicia Jernigan, sitting with me today, if there were
only two or three state titles in a row, you would have to say, “well, the
team, the students, the players, did it,” but when you win nine out of ten,
maybe you have to give the coaches a little bit of the credit. Coach Gelmstedt
said they give him just about as little credit as possible.
Resolution adopted.
Senator McGinness moved that all rules be suspended and that Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 33 be immediately transmitted to the Assembly.
Motion carried unanimously.
Resolution ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
MESSAGES FROM THE ASSEMBLY
Assembly
Chamber, Carson
City, May 1, 2003
To the
Honorable the Senate:
I
have the honor to inform your honorable body that the Assembly on this day
adopted Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 17.
MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS AND NOTICES
Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 17—Recognizing
April 15, 2003, as Equal Pay Day in Nevada.
Whereas, When the Equal Pay Act,
requiring employers to pay all employees equally for equal work, was signed in
1963, women who worked full-time, year-round made 59 cents, on average, for
every dollar earned by men, and 40 years later women earn only 76 cents of that
dollar as the wage gap closes at an even slower rate, resulting in a change of
less than one-half penny per year; and
Whereas, According to reports by the
Bureau of the Census of the Department of Commerce, the effects of the wage gap
on women of color is even greater, with black women earning only 69 cents for
every dollar earned by white men, and Hispanic women earning only 56 cents of
that dollar; and
Whereas, “A New Look Through the Glass
Ceiling: Where Are the Women?,” a report using data compiled by the General
Accounting Office, states that, of the 10 industries surveyed which employ 71
percent of all employed women and 73 percent of all female managers, women who
are full-time managers are paid less and advance less often than male managers
and that the wage gap between female managers and their male counterparts
widened between 1995 and 2000 in 7 of the 10 industries; and
Whereas, Many women are the sole
support of their families and wage discrimination has a huge impact on their
children and the quality of their lives, and it is estimated that America’s
working families lose $200 billion annually because of wage discrimination; and
Whereas, Over a working lifetime, this
wage disparity costs the average American woman and her family an estimated
$250,000 in lost wages, impacting social security benefits and pensions; and
Whereas, Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 prohibits wage discrimination on the basis of race, color, gender,
religion or national origin, and yet long after the Supreme Court made it clear
that Title VII prohibits wage discrimination even when the jobs are not
identical, as long as the work is comparable, wage discrimination laws are
poorly enforced and cases are extremely difficult to win; and
Whereas, Wage discrimination for any
reason is detrimental to our sense of justice and fairness and our belief in
the American way; and
Whereas, While many people claim that
the wage gap is the result of differences in education, the Bureau of the
Census reports that a white male with a master’s degree earns $67,818 per year
and a black man with the same education earns only $51,336, with the lowest
paid being a similarly educated black woman, who earns only $43,884; and
Whereas, The National Committee on Pay
Equity, founded in 1979, is a national coalition of over 80 organizations and
thousands of men and women from all walks of life who are working to eliminate
wage discrimination and to achieve pay equity that will benefit society as a
whole when all workers have jobs that pay a fair and equitable wage, enabling
them and their families to lead healthy, fulfilling and productive lives; and
Whereas, While the costs are minimal to
employers, only 3 to 4 percent of payroll costs, pay equity wage adjustments
can make a substantial difference in the lives of the persons who are being
discriminated against; and
Whereas, Every year, Equal Pay Day is
marked on a Tuesday in April because, on average, it takes women 7 workdays to
earn the same amount that men earn in 5 workdays and 15 months to match the
average man’s 12-month income; now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the Assembly of the State of
Nevada, the Senate Concurring, That April 15, 2003, be recognized as
Equal Pay Day; and be it further
Resolved, That the public and private
employers in Nevada are to be congratulated for lighting the way for other
states to follow, with the employers in our State ranking among the highest in
the nation in paying their employees equal pay for equal work; and be it
further
Resolved, That all employers in Nevada,
whether public or private, are encouraged to compensate all employees fairly,
based on an objective evaluation of their jobs, considering factors such as the
skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions required for each job; and
be it further
Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the
Assembly prepare and transmit a copy of this resolution to Governor Kenny
Guinn, to each member of the Nevada Congressional Delegation and to Linda
Chavez-Thompson, the Chair of the National Committee on Pay Equity.
Senator Carlton moved the adoption of the resolution.
Remarks by Senator Carlton.
Senator Carlton requested that her remarks be entered in the Journal.
The
resolution states that we normally acknowledge Equal Pay Day on April 15, but
because of our hectic legislative schedule, we did not get to do that. We are
attempting to recognize it today.
The
resolution speaks proudly that the State of Nevada needs to be congratulated
for lighting the way for other states to follow. The employers of our State
rank among the highest in the Nation in paying their employees equal pay for
equal work. We are here, today, to recognize a number of those entities and
companies and to recognize that these businesses have a stake in equal-pay
issues. The wage gap and the glass ceiling reflect the under valuation of an
important sector of our workforce.
As the resolution states, we are here to congratulate them, and I
am proud to recognize several Nevada employers who have instituted policies to
insure a fair and equitable system of compensation for their employees. We have
with us, today, representatives from the cities of Henderson and North Las Vegas,
Washoe County, SBC Nevada Bell, Sierra Health Services, Southwest Gas
Corporation, AAA and Sprint.
Resolution adopted.
Resolution ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
INTRODUCTION, FIRST READING AND REFERENCE
By Senators Townsend, Washington and Mathews:
Senate Bill No. 495—AN ACT relating to local improvements; authorizing under certain circumstances the acquisition of art and tourism and entertainment projects pursuant to the Consolidated Local Improvements Law; authorizing under certain circumstances the pledge of certain sales and use tax proceeds and state funding for the acquisition of projects pursuant to the Consolidated Local Improvements Law; and providing other matters properly relating thereto.
Senator Townsend moved that the bill be referred to the Committee on Taxation.
Motion carried.
WAIVERS
AND EXEMPTIONS
Waiver
of Joint Standing Rule(s)
A Waiver requested by Senator Randolph J. Townsend
For: Senate Bill No. 495.
To Waive:
Subsections 1 and 2 of Joint
Standing Rule No. 14 and Joint Standing Rule Nos. 14.2 and 14.3.
With the following
conditions:
Must be introduced within 10
days after delivery.
Has been granted effective:
May 1, 2003.
MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS AND NOTICES
Senator Titus moved that Assembly Bill No. 226 be taken from the Secretary's desk and placed on the bottom of the General File.
Remarks by Senator Titus.
Motion carried.
SECOND READING AND AMENDMENT
Senate Bill No. 406.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
Assembly Bill No. 192.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
Assembly Bill No. 208.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
Assembly Bill No. 237.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
Assembly Bill No. 346.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
Assembly Bill No. 367.
Bill read second time and ordered to third reading.
GENERAL FILE AND THIRD READING
Senate Bill No. 410.
Bill read third time.
Roll call on Senate Bill No. 410:
Yeas—21.
Nays—None.
Senate Bill No. 410 having received a constitutional majority, Madam President declared it passed, as amended.
Bill ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
Assembly Bill No. 17.
Bill read third time.
Roll call on Assembly Bill No. 17:
Yeas—21.
Nays—None.
Assembly Bill No. 17 having received a constitutional majority, Madam President declared it passed, as amended.
Bill ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
Assembly Bill No. 52.
Bill read third time.
Roll call on Assembly Bill No. 52:
Yeas—21.
Nays—None.
Assembly Bill No. 52 having received a constitutional majority, Madam President declared it passed.
Bill ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
Assembly Bill No. 82.
Bill read third time.
Remarks by Senators Neal and Rhoads.
Roll call on Assembly Bill No. 82:
Yeas—21.
Nays—None.
Assembly Bill No. 82 having received a constitutional majority, Madam President declared it passed.
Bill ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
Assembly Bill No. 119.
Bill read third time.
Roll call on Assembly Bill No. 119:
Yeas—21.
Nays—None.
Assembly Bill No. 119 having received a constitutional majority, Madam President declared it passed.
Bill ordered transmitted to the Assembly.
MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS AND NOTICES
Senator Raggio moved that Assembly Bills Nos. 126, 138, 144, 155, 226, 275, 287, 301, 407, 489 be taken from the General File and placed on the General File for the next legislative day.
Motion carried.
UNFINISHED
BUSINESS
Signing
of Bills and Resolutions
There being no objections, the President and Secretary signed Senate Bills Nos. 28, 88, 96, 110, 128, 232, 286, 300, 334; Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 30; Assembly Bills Nos. 74, 75, 77, 83, 105, 133, 193, 253, 322, 520; Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 15.
GUESTS
EXTENDED PRIVILEGE OF SENATE FLOOR
On request of Senator Amodei, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Jamie Harris and Sidney Orndorff.
On request of Senators Care and Titus, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to the following students, chaperones and faculty from the St. Viator School: Robert Burgy, Alissa Capovilla, Brian Chausmer Jr., Luke Culley, Angelina DeJulius, Zachary DeLeon, Robert Dziuba, Veronica Fumo, Alyssa Gianakoulias, Jenna Giorgione, Meghan Haines, Michael Haupt, Alicia Hoepfner, John Houser, Andrew Leonaggeo, Melissa Marinch, Phillip Miles, Kristyn O'Grady, Rosemary Peters, Sheree Porreca, Eric Reiplinger, Donn Roach, Anthony Torrella, Austin Wasserkrug, Ashley Andrews, Stephanie Annillo, Taylor Bellinghausen, Thomas Blitsch, Edward Call, Chelsey DeLeon, Lanse Delara, Timothy Dreschler, Jessica Forsythe, Ethan Freeman, Justin Galli, Janilynn Gatpayat, Andrew Gregorka, Cameron Grittini, Natasha Hedrick, Brittany Jojola, Victoria Ledon, Joseph Maglaras, Erik Manthei, Brandin McCrae, Cullen McGowan, Madeline Ocon, George Pecorar III, Jennifer Romero, Jordan Torrella, Ronald Memo; chaperones: Jeremy Derkovitz, Carol Loeffelholz, Michael Thompson, Sylvia Cobeaga, Mary Haines, Laura Culley, Joseph DeJulius, Jan DeJulius, Karen Forsythe, Dario Grittini, Sean McGowan; and teacher: Joi Davies.
On request of Senator Carlton, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Lou Emmert, Margaret McMillan, Ted Cooper, Vince Zamora, John Berkich, Joanne Ray, Sylvia Samano, Jack Kim, Debra Jacobson and Barbara Welling.
On request of Senator Cegavske, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Matt McAlman, Elaine McNamara and Carole Lambert.
On request of Senator McGinness, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Jamie Convis, Tana Gurulé, Delicia Jernigan, Denise Koscinski, Lindsay Hurley, Jacquere Lipscomb, David Gelmstedt, Liane Filkowski, Amanda Jackson, George Winters and Rick Moysh.
On request of Senator Nolan, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Tommy Rocker.
On request of Senator Raggio, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Stephanie Brezny.
On request of Senator Titus, the privilege of the floor of the Senate Chamber for this day was extended to Lisa Foster and Debra Thompson.
Senator Raggio moved that the Senate adjourn until Monday, May 5, 2003, at 11 a.m.
Motion carried.
Senate adjourned at 12:13 p.m.
Approved: Lorraine
T. Hunt
President of the Senate
Attest: Claire J. Clift
Secretary of the Senate