Las Vegas Sun

March 18, 2024

Washington:

Congressional session is finally over: So what was in it for Nevada?

Harry Reid

J. Scott Applewhite / AP

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid walks to meet with fellow Democrats on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2014, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. When the 114th Congress convenes in January, Reid and his party will be the minority.

By the skin of their teeth, congressional lawmakers passed a $1 trillion budget through next summer, OK'd all military spending and approved a series of tax breaks.

Amid sometimes high-stakes drama, Congress got it all done in a flurry of last-minute legislating and back-room deals during the lame-duck session.

It was also Sen. Harry Reid's final few weeks as Senate majority leader. The Nevada Democrat will hand over power to Republicans when the new Congress takes over in January.

But Reid and the rest of the Nevada delegation made sure that plenty affecting Nevada made it into the final pieces of legislation of the 113th Congress — with at least one major caveat. Here's what lawmakers agreed to that could affect you:

Extended tax breaks

When Nevadans file their federal income taxes in April, they'll still be able to deduct state and local sales tax they paid. A tax break package Congress passed retroactively extended this rule for tax year 2014, benefiting taxpayers in Nevada who can't deduct state income tax because they don't pay it.

Nevadans who refinanced their homes or were underwater on their mortgages will also be able to deduct the difference on their debt for tax year 2014. Reid had wanted both these tax breaks to be permanent, but they'll have to be renewed next year, too.

Mostly rural counties in Nevada with lots of federal land will receive roughly $20-$25 million total to take the place of tax revenue they would stand to earn if they owned the land and could collect property taxes on it. These payments in lieu of taxes have become a key budget filler for many rural counties in Nevada.

Opened federal land for development

Thousands of acres of federally owned land in Nevada will open up to commercial development in exchange for closing about 75,000 acres of land for wilderness protection.

Reid negotiated eight Nevada lands bills, some of which affect Las Vegas, into an unrelated, must-pass defense spending bill. It's the most significant lands package to pass Congress since 2009, but it was a controversial move that earned the scorn of budget hawks like retiring Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, who called the defense bill, filled with unrelated federal lands bills, "the worst of Washington."

Gov. Brian Sandoval and Nevada's entire delegation celebrated the bill's passage as a win for the state: Nevada will have a national monument protecting ancient mammoth fossils in the North Las Vegas valley, the downtrodden city of Yerington will more easily be able to expand a copper mine and many more development projects in the state can get underway.

"This bill will open the door to economic development, job creation, mining, ranching and protect some of Nevada’s treasured lands," Sandoval said in a statement.

Stopped Yucca. Again

Once again, the government will have no substantial funding to create a nuclear waste repository in Nevada's Yucca Mountain. The House of Representatives passed a spending bill for the Department of Energy earlier this fall that contained about $200 million to restart the program about 90 miles north of Las Vegas. But Reid made sure the final spending bill Congress passed this week stripped the Yucca Mountain project of all new funding. With just a small pot of money left from the $15 billion the government's spent so far on Yucca, it will stay untouched for at least another year.

Stopped a decision on sage grouse

The spending bill also put the brakes on another impending government decision that will affect Nevada: whether to list the sage grouse as an endangered species. The Fish and Wildlife Service is under a court-mandated deadline to make that decision by September 2015, but language Rep. Mark Amodei, the Northern Nevada Republican, inserted into the spending bill prohibits the government from using money next year to make that decision. Listing the bird could put a dent in Northern Nevada's economy by closing off land for recreation and grazing.

But the sage grouse is threatened in Nevada and nine other states by wildfires and commercial development. It's likely states and the Bureau of Land Management will still work on plans to preserve the sage grouse.

Conservationists and the Obama administration decried Amodei's delay on the decision.

"We don't like seeing politics trump science around Endangered Species Act issues," said Ken Rait, the director of the Western Lands Initiative with Pew Charitable Trusts. "And that's precisely what's happening with this."

Promoted international tourism

Lawmakers also renewed the Travel Promotion Act, a partnership between the federal government and the private sector to promote U.S. cities abroad. Known as "Brand USA," Reid and Rep. Dina Titus, a Las Vegas Democrat, co-sponsored the measure and the original bill in 2010 because Titus said it's "yielded significant benefits to Southern Nevada and our nation’s economy by fostering tourism." Reid's staff said in 2013 it helped bring more than 1 million visitors to Las Vegas and create 53,000 jobs.

Gave Las Vegas more terrorism protection — with a major caveat

Congress had every intention of passing a law that would require the federal government to step in to help cover insurance companies in cases of certain major terrorist attacks. The terrorism risk insurance law was up for renewal, and lawmakers and the business community on both sides considered it a major priority. (The bill would help Las Vegas casinos and other major projects keep their insurance premiums stable.)

But despite both chambers passing the bill overwhelmingly at separate times, Congress left town without an agreement. Add it to the long list of things the Republican Congress must address next year.

The measure was a priority for Republican Sen. Dean Heller and Titus, who both would like to see the law become permanent.

"“It’s very frustrating the Senate could not address such an important issue affecting Nevada’s recovery," said Heller's spokesperson, Neal Patel.

Titus said in a statement getting the insurance renewed next year "must be Congress' top priority when we return in January."

One bright spot: Nestled deep in the spending bill is language that allows Las Vegas to compete for federal funding to prepare for a terrorist attack. The original law only considered giving money to cities like New York, with a high population. But Reid and others argued cities with high tourist populations, like Las Vegas, should also be able to apply for the grants. Last year Las Vegas got $1 million from the Urban Area Security Initiative, which Reid said was better than nothing.

Protected Lake Mead

Congress authorized $50 million for the drought-stricken West, most of which will go to conservation programs aimed at getting more water flowing into the Colorado River system, which feeds into the drying Lake Mead. The federal Bureau of Reclamation, the nation's primary water agency, will participate in pilot projects to figure out the best way to do that. Reid also made sure the Senate approved Obama's nominee to head the bureau, New Mexico water expert Estevan Lopez.

The spending bill also gives $2 million to programs that aim to stop the spread of invasive quagga mussels, which hitch a ride on the bottom of boats and spread from lake to lake.

And on the environmental side, there's $55 million for geothermal energy research in the new budget, some of which will surely go to Northern Nevada. Both Reid and Sandoval have said expanding the state's renewable energy industry is a priority.

There's also $3.5 billion for routine wildfire prevention, some of which will go to Nevada.

And a few other things …

The defense spending bill includes $110 million for routine upgrades to Nellis Air Force Base and Naval Air Station in Fallon.

The nuclear security center at the Nevada National Security Site is also receiving $67 million to stay up and running.

And the general spending bill gives almost $8 million to the Environmental Protection Agency to relocate its research offices from UNLV to the Harry Reid UNLV Research and Technology Park outside the city. The move will allow UNLV to expand — after all, the defense bill handed the campus hundreds of acres of federal land in North Las Vegas.

What didn't get done

In addition to failing to pass terrorism risk insurance, there are other Nevada bills that didn't make it into any of the final three pieces of legislation: most notably, any legislation on Internet gaming; but also two lands bills that expand land for as many as seven of Nevada's Native American tribes; plus a bill sponsored by Republican Rep. Joe Heck and Heller to allow for nonprofits to quickly search for missing people on federal land.

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