
7 minute read
News
from March 23, 2017
Casinos: aCa yes, yuCCa no
Gambling industry lobby groups have called on Congress to leave intact provisions in the Affordable Care Act dealing with treatment of addicted gambling.
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“We would be concerned with any paring back of essential health benefits that eliminates ‘gambling disorders,’” said a letter from the groups to congressional leaders and the secretary of Health and Human Services. “Inclusion of behavioral health is critical to ensuring integrated and comprehensive health care in the United States, and this approach has increased access to treatment for gambling disorders. While research shows that the majority of patrons set a budget of under $200 when they visit a casino, those who struggle with a gambling disorder deserve access to treatment.”
The letter was signed by representatives of the National Indian Gaming Association, National Council on Problem Gambling, Association of Gaming Equipment Manufacture, and the American Gaming Association. A few days later, the American Gaming Association came out against any revival of plans for a dump for high level nuclear wastes at Yucca Mountain in Nye County.
“AGA opposes any effort to revive Yucca Mountain as a repository and will work tirelessly with the many concerned citizens, small-business operators and members of Congress to ensure that radioactive waste is never stored anywhere near the world’s premier tourist, convention and entertainment destination,” a statement by the group said.
YUCCA MOUNTAIN

Then why The Candy danCe?
A website called gobankingrates.com says 89411 is the most expensive zip code in Nevada. As usual, the information’s not original, it’s recycled from at least one other website (Zillow Real Estate), but we’re not going to track it back. “Genoa lies south of Carson City and near the tourist hot spot of Lake Tahoe,” the site describes the western Nevada zip. “According to Zillow, home values in this zip code increased 15.3 percent over the last year. With housing costs that are more than three times the national average—and a higher than average overall cost of living—you’ll need to make sure you have enough savings to buy a house in this zip code.”
According to Zillow, the median home value in Genoa is $732,600.
Minus one
Even before the internet started the decline of newspapers, a two-newspaper community was a rarity. It was especially rare in small towns.
On March 3, the Comstock Chronicle and the Virginia City News began appearing as one newspaper bearing both names. The design of the Chronicle will reportedly dominate in the new publication.
–Dennis Myers
Former Nevada lieutenant governor and state legislator Sue Wagner, who broke her pick trying to get the Equal Rights Amendment approved in the 1970s, watched this week as the ERA finally passed.
PHOTO/ERIC MARKS
Equality
How the failed Equal Rights Amendment changed Nevada
in 1973, the nevada Legislature rejected the proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that would have guaranteed equality of rights under the law no matter a person’s gender.
After languishing in Congress since 1923, the amendment—known as the Equal Rights Amendment— was finally approved and sent to the states for ratification in 1972. Twenty-two states ratified that year. When more state legislatures went into session in 1973, small Western states—Wyoming, South Dakota, Oregon and New Mexico—were among the first to approve it.
But a backfire had been building. Right-wing women, evangelicals and other groups that would become more influential in the years ahead got organized and slowed the ratifications to a trickle. After the Nevada Assembly approved it and the Nevada Senate rejected it in 1973 and 1975, the Nevada Senate approved it in 1977 only to see the Assembly reject it. A 1978 advisory ballot measure put an end to the ERA in Nevada when it lost in a massive landslide, 67 to 33 percent.
Meanwhile, at the national level, by the end of the seven-year ratification period, the Amendment stopped three states short of ratification, 35 of 38. A three-year extension by Congress—opposed by some women’s rights organizations—did not result in any more ratifications.
There was an occasion during the ratification fight when the U.S. Supreme Court came close to ruling that the intent of the Equal Rights Amendment was already in the law. In their book, The Brethren, Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong revealed that the justices nearly ruled that the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution—which says no state can “abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”—applied to women. But the justices were unable to agree on a pace at which to apply the change, and it never happened. Years later, it did happen.
In Nevada, on March 1, one Republican, 11 Democrats and one Independent voted for the ERA in the Senate by a 13-8 vote. On March 20, the Nevada Assembly approved Senate Joint Resolution 2 as well, on a 28-14 vote. The two votes have no legal effect, but were seen as a gesture toward equality 35 years after the ERA expired.
“If it is only a symbol, it is a good one,” said former Nevada lieutenant governor Sue Wagner, who as an assemblymember fought hard to pass the ERA. She was on hand for the Assembly vote this week.
What few of the younger legislators supporting the ERA knew is that Nevada did benefit from the impact of the ERA. Because of it, numerous sexually discriminatory laws were cleaned up and corrected.
They included, for instance, a law that treated widows and widowers differently in state pension matters, prompting one legislator—Carl Dodge of Churchill County—to refuse to support the ERA for fear he would be cutting widows off from their support, though other legislators pointed out that the same treatment could be accorded both widow and widower.
Another measure dealt with a bar on women being bartenders. As late as 1973, Republican Assm. Randy Capurro said he had supported the measure on grounds that it would subject women to “moral” difficulties. He did not explain why men were not similarly challenged by barroom climates.
In the early Nevada battles, opponents said that the states could do the job better than a federal amendment. After a couple of ERA defeats, by some accounts, Republican U.S. Sen. Paul Laxalt—who had run for Senate as an ERA supporter, then switched to an opponent after taking office— advised opponents to get to work and start reforming state laws.
A legislative staffer, Audys Dodge, was assigned to identify the discriminatory laws in Nevada Revised Statutes, the state’s body of statutory law, from agriculture to zoning. She produced a report naming many laws that needed correcting.
The initial corrective measure was sponsored by Assm. Karen Hayes, a right wing Democrat from Clark County who served from 1974 to 1982 and who opposed the ERA.
But it didn’t happen quickly, or in a single legislature. There were numerous bills over the years. Steadily, methodically, the legislators cleaned up one statute after another. Within about a decade every statute but one had been corrected. It’s not clear what that last one was, but some remember it as applying to firefighters. Wagner does remember complaints from spouses of firefighters—“Those damn women are going to become firefighters and sleep in the station house with my husband.” Whatever that last law was, it may finally have been corrected.
It was a major sea-change, a sweeping corrective in one state’s laws. Today Wagner says while she was pleased the project got done, it did not redeem the claim that the ERA was unneeded. Other states did not undertake similar projects, she said, and Nevada has had many laws written since the 1970s that may not have been written with the same sensibility. “Every state has not cleaned up their statutes,”
“If it is only she said. “There are things now that are not a symbol, it is a equal and that need to be changed. You good one.” really need a national standard. You can’t
Sue Wagner Former lieutenant governor have pay equity in Nevada and not in New Mexico.” It is reminiscent of an encounter between Nevada suffrage leader Anne Martin and President Woodrow Wilson in 1914. A month after Nevada voted for women’s suffrage, Wilson told Martin, “That is the way suffrage should be won, by the states.” She told him that doing it state by state is burdensome. Even more burdensome is correcting every state’s whole body of laws. Ω

Paws that refresh

the paltenghi collections
JANUARY 21 - JULY 16
Take an intimate look at Maynard Dixon’s life in the American West through more than sixty works drawn from the collections of brothers Bruce Paltenghi and Dr. Richard Paltenghi. Included are many never-before-seen drawings of mountain and desert landscapes, portraits, and figure studies.
MAJOR SPONSORS The Thelma B. and Thomas P. Hart Foundation Brian and Nancy Kennedy The Satre Family Fund at the Community Foundation of Western Nevada Whittier Trust, Investment & Wealth Management
Arriving or departing passengers pet a couple of Corgis in the north concourse at the Reno-Tahoe International Airport. The dogs wear “PET ME” vests. Other breeds of dogs are also in the program, called Paws 4 Passengers. An online description says the program gives “passengers (especially children) something else to think about besides a slow moving line, delays, cancellations or a basic fear of flying.”