Dec. 24, 2015

Page 8

PHOTO/DENNIS MYERS

Should newly arrived families be entitled to privileges in state education that already resident families are not?

A pardon for Jack Johnson Once again, a pardon for boxer Jack Johnson may be in the pipeline. Congress has approved legislation urging President Obama to grant a posthumous pardon for Johnson, who was convicted of transporting women over state lines for immoral purposes under an abuse of the Mann Act. That act was approved by Congress nine days before Johnson successfully defended his heavyweight championship in Reno against the latest “great white hope,” former champ James Jeffries, on July 4, 1910—an event that has been called the fight of the century. The Mann Act was also known as the White-Slave Traffic Act, was designed to prevent transport of women for purposes of prostitution. Johnson’s affluent lifestyle of fast cars, white women and triumph over white champions so offended the white community that riots broke out across the nation after the Reno fight, and again after JACK JOHNSON release of films of the Reno fight, resulting in lynching sprees of blacks by whites. Federal prosecutors brought charges that were never envisioned under the Mann Act against Johnson because of his travel with consenting companions. They won in the courtroom the victory white fighters had been unable to win. Johnson was convicted and left the country to avoid being imprisoned. Like Muhammad Ali, he lost his best fighting years at the hands of whites (“The great black hope,” RN&R, Aug. 6, 2009). The latest resolution from Congress, sponsored by Sens. John McCain and Harry Reid, was buried inside a reauthorization of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act. It can be read here: http://tinyurl.com/pz5oh57. New York Times sportswriter William Rhoden noted that presidents Clinton and Bush have ignored previous such resolutions. So has President Obama, though Rhoden speculated that Obama may be saving the pardon for one of his last acts in office. “Why is the United States still afraid of Jack Johnson?” Rhoden asked.

Republicans avoiding Nevada? A Boston Globe reporter named James Pindell last week wrote an article headlined, “For GOP, Nevada hasn’t been the place to be.” Nevada’s presidential caucuses is the third nominating convention delegate selection event in the nation, after the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary. South Carolina follows Nevada with a primary. Pindell found that the National Journal candidate tracker showed that candidates in the two major political parties have made 315 separate trips to New Hampshire this year, 302 trips to Iowa, 165 to South Carolina, and 51 to Nevada. From this, he concluded that “the Nevada caucuses remain an afterthought, especially for Republicans.” Pindell did not allow for the mobility factor and how to make best use of some candidates’ time. Of the major GOP candidates, the movements from the East Coast of five—Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham, Rand Paul, Marco Rubio—are limited by their jobs as members of Congress or governor. Nevada is 2,500 miles from the District of Columbia, South Carolina is 490 miles. Gov. John Kasich of Ohio is a little better off—Ohio is only 2,120 miles from Nevada. Kasich’s most frequently visited state is Iowa, two states away from Ohio. —Dennis

8 | RN&R |

DECEMBER 24, 2015

Myers

Legislators get an education Then they try to shake the Etch-a-Sketch Without fanfare, the special session of the Nevada Legislature ran an end-run around the law to try to solve a by prickly political problem left over Dennis Myers from this year’s regular session. The lawmakers approved Senate Concurrent Resolution 1, which attempts to do what their May legislation paying parents to take their children out of public school did not—exempt military and other newly arrived families from a 100-schoolday threshold.

Legislators are trying to use a lesser resolution to amend a statute. In May, during the closing days of the regular February-May 2015 legislative session, lawmakers revived Senate Bill 302—which had previously fallen dormant—and rushed it through the process to enactment and approval by the governor. It created state grants for parents to use for private school tuition or home schooling expenses if they first pulled their children out of public school after 100 days of attendance. The grants are in the $5,000 range. Though advocates of the program said the grants were intended for families of all incomes, they are not large enough for tuition at most

private schools in the state, and nearly all the applications for grants have come from the state’s five most affluent zip codes, according to reporting by the Reno Gazette-Journal’s Trevon Milliard. The 100-day threshold quickly became a source of dispute, since entering students, students already in private or home schooling, and arriving military families are ineligible. State Treasurer Dan Schwartz, who is designated by SB 302 to administer the program, said he will give grants to military families anyway, based on the legislature’s 2009 approval of a document called the Interstate Compact on Educational Opportunity for Military Children. That compact was designed to ease the way for students whose families jump from duty station to duty station. It deals with “enrollment and education of certain children of military families in public schools” (italics added) but does not authorize services or privileges not available to resident families. Actually, it’s devoted mostly to mundane matters like immunizations. Now, the special session’s concurrent resolution claims that “the original purpose and intent” of the legislature was to allow “education savings accounts to be established for pupils younger than 7 years of age who are not required by statute to attend school but who are eligible

to be enrolled in a public school, regardless of whether such pupils have been enrolled in a public school in this State for at least 100 school days without interruption during the period immediately preceding the establishment of the education savings account; and ... Have S.B. 302 interpreted in harmony with the Interstate Compact on Educational Opportunity for Military Children ... to remove any barriers to educational success in educational programs like the education savings account program for pupils of active duty members of the military who are stationed at military installations in Nevada.” That would, if it were treated as a law, allow children newly arrived in school and children in military families newly arrived in Nevada to receive grants, called educational savings accounts (ESAs). But that raises the question, if that is what the legislators meant to say in May, why didn’t they say it? Why didn’t they include the December language in the May enactment? Last month, Las Vegas columnist Steve Sebelius wrote, “Unfortunately, no matter how much we may dislike it, the black letters of SB302 don’t yield to the wishes of the treasurer, ESA parents, the governor or anyone else.” Nor to the ex post enactment of a concurrent resolution. Not all acts of the legislature are created equal. According to the Nevada Legislative Manual, “A one-house resolution expresses facts, principles, opinions and purposes of one house. A concurrent resolution expresses facts, principles, opinions and purposes of the two houses and may authorize the creation of joint committees. A joint resolution memorializes federal officials to engage in an action, proposes amendments to the Nevada Constitution, or ratifies amendments to the U.S. Constitution.” Thus, of these types of resolutions, only one has the force of law—the joint resolutions, when they are used for amending purposes. The concurrent resolution is merely an expression of legislative sentiment. In this case, it is effectively saying, “This is what we meant to say in May, if we had not been hurrying this bill through the process before we realized all its implications.” But a concurrent resolution cannot amend a statute. (Concurrent resolutions are not signed by governors, either.) It is true that courts sometimes look to other indicators of legislative intent such as floor debates when there is doubt about the language of


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