Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Three views on power

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Don’t quit, Sen. Gansert! Your state needs you! The Nevada Policy Research Institute sued state Sen. Heidi Gansert, R-Reno, last week, claiming her service in the Senate and her full-time job as assistant to the president of UNR are incompatib­le under the separation-of-powers clause.

That’s the part of the Nevada Constituti­on which reads, “The powers of the government of the state of Nevada shall be divided into three separate department­s — the Legislativ­e — the Executive and the Judicial; and no persons charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these department­s shall exercise any functions appertaini­ng to either of the others, except in the cases expressly directed or permitted in this Constituti­on.”

Because Gansert purportedl­y exercises the functions of the executive in her full-time job, she can’t exercise the powers of the legislativ­e, NPRI says.

Gansert (and Democratic state Sen. Aaron Ford, D-Las Vegas) both called the NPRI lawsuit meritless, but it raises compelling constituti­onal questions. The last time NPRI sued — in 2011 — the target of that action resigned. That’s why it’s so important for Gansert to fight — so Nevadans can finally get the courts to confront the issue.

In the meantime, here are the three leading schools of thought on separation of powers in Nevada.

The non-partisan staff of the Legislatur­e opined that the separation-of-powers clause prevents only constituti­onal officers or top officials from serving in the Legislatur­e. Only people with supervisor­y power “exercise any functions” of the executive. So while the director of the Department of Public Safety might be banned, a regular Highway Patrol trooper would not.

Gov. Brian Sandoval, when he was serving as attorney general in 2004, wrote a lengthy opinion that concluded

state employees — regardless of position — were banned from serving in the Legislatur­e. His opinion relied on case law from other states, and Nevada’s own precedents. Sandoval specifical­ly rejected the LCB view.

However, the Nevada Supreme Court spurned Sandoval’s logic in a 2004 court case brought by thenSecret­ary of State Dean Heller, who sought to remove several state workers from their legislativ­e jobs. The court held only the Legislatur­e (not the courts) had the right to decide the “elections, qualificat­ions and returns of its members,” although it allowed for individual lawsuits to argue that specific state lawmakers were holding their dual jobs illegally. Notably, Sandoval also concluded

government employees (city or county workers, school teachers, police officers, etc.) were

banned from serving in the Legislatur­e, since the prohibitio­n applies only to the state executive branch. That conclusion was never tested in court.

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