Nevada Senate – NVBEX https://nevbex.com Serving The A/E/C Industry Mon, 02 Jun 2025 20:56:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://nevbex.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/cropped-Website-Icon-01-1-32x32.png Nevada Senate – NVBEX https://nevbex.com 32 32 AB238 Moves Through House, Senate Proposes Merger with SB220 https://nevbex.com/2025/06/05/nevada-film-tax-credit-legislation-2/ https://nevbex.com/2025/06/05/nevada-film-tax-credit-legislation-2/#respond Thu, 05 Jun 2025 16:00:00 +0000 https://nevbex.com/?p=82672 The Nevada Assembly advanced Assembly Bill 238 to the Senate during its Friday, May 30 meeting on a 22-20 vote. The bill is a crucial part of the proposed Summerlin Studios, a joint effort between Sony Pictures Entertainment, Warner Bros. Discovery and Howard Hughes Corp. Summerlin Studios is to be comprised of 10 buildings, including a 500KSF studio/production facility; 100KSF of retail, restaurant and office space; an emergency room, and a satellite office for Clark County. Gensler is the architect attached to the project. (NVBEX; Feb. 15) Supporters of the project say it carries a $3B economic impact upon its completion. The proposed legislation would set aside $95M in annual film tax credits for 15 years beginning in 2028. Approval comes shortly after a report was released detailing uncertainties surrounding its economic impact. (NVBEX; May 31) Amendments were added on May 24 that created financial safeguards and established a special assessment district to support pre-K expansion throughout Clark County. The bill moves to the Senate with only three days left in the legislative session. If it makes it through the Senate, the bill will then go to Gov. Joe Lombardo for final approval. Potential Merger with Senate Bill 220 AB238 has a sister bill that has been stuck in the Senate Finance Committee. Sen. Roberta Lange is proposing to merge the two bills to get both passed. This would result in a $2.2B price tag. If the bills were to merge, this would result in two distinct studio sites that have lower individual film tax credit allocations than originally proposed. Lange claimed other lawmakers have requested a merged bill and that the State does not have enough to fund both bills individually. Lange’s SB220 is currently backed by MBS Group. The merger details each film studio would receive $60M in annual tax credits starting in Fiscal Year 2028. This is a roughly $30M decrease from each of the original proposals. The state would also be required to provide $25M in non-infrastructure tax credits to be used for anything but film production. This $25M would be shared between the two studios. In total, the state would be obligated for $145M every year. Lange’s three-year ramp-up period would be included in the merger, which would provide $73M in tax credits throughout the next Fiscal Year. This would bring the grand total of tax credits to $2.2B across the next 18 years.

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The Nevada Assembly advanced Assembly Bill 238 to the Senate during its Friday, May 30 meeting on a 22-20 vote.

The bill is a crucial part of the proposed Summerlin Studios, a joint effort between Sony Pictures Entertainment, Warner Bros. Discovery and Howard Hughes Corp. Summerlin Studios is to be comprised of 10 buildings, including a 500KSF studio/production facility; 100KSF of retail, restaurant and office space; an emergency room, and a satellite office for Clark County. Gensler is the architect attached to the project. (NVBEX; Feb. 15)

Supporters of the project say it carries a $3B economic impact upon its completion. The proposed legislation would set aside $95M in annual film tax credits for 15 years beginning in 2028. Approval comes shortly after a report was released detailing uncertainties surrounding its economic impact. (NVBEX; May 31)

Amendments were added on May 24 that created financial safeguards and established a special assessment district to support pre-K expansion throughout Clark County.

The bill moves to the Senate with only three days left in the legislative session. If it makes it through the Senate, the bill will then go to Gov. Joe Lombardo for final approval.

Potential Merger with Senate Bill 220

AB238 has a sister bill that has been stuck in the Senate Finance Committee. Sen. Roberta Lange is proposing to merge the two bills to get both passed. This would result in a $2.2B price tag.

If the bills were to merge, this would result in two distinct studio sites that have lower individual film tax credit allocations than originally proposed. Lange claimed other lawmakers have requested a merged bill and that the State does not have enough to fund both bills individually.

Credit: Gensler/Clark County

Lange’s SB220 is currently backed by MBS Group. The merger details each film studio would receive $60M in annual tax credits starting in Fiscal Year 2028. This is a roughly $30M decrease from each of the original proposals.

The state would also be required to provide $25M in non-infrastructure tax credits to be used for anything but film production. This $25M would be shared between the two studios. In total, the state would be obligated for $145M every year.

Lange’s three-year ramp-up period would be included in the merger, which would provide $73M in tax credits throughout the next Fiscal Year. This would bring the grand total of tax credits to $2.2B across the next 18 years.

The post AB238 Moves Through House, Senate Proposes Merger with SB220 appeared first on NVBEX.

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Proposed Legislation Could Fund Hoover Dam Upgrades https://nevbex.com/2025/05/07/proposed-legislation-could-fund-hoover-dam-upgrades/ https://nevbex.com/2025/05/07/proposed-legislation-could-fund-hoover-dam-upgrades/#respond Wed, 07 May 2025 13:00:00 +0000 https://nevbex.com/?p=82412 Nevada Rep. Susie Lee recently introduced the Help Hoover Dam Act to the Nevada House of Representatives. The bill, if approved, would allocate $50M in funding to proceed with maintenance on the Hoover Dam. The dam is a necessary piece of water infrastructure for Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Phoenix. The bill was introduced during the last congressional session and failed to secure approval. Rep. Lee argued the bill will prevent energy prices from rising. She also stated it would protect natural resources and save taxpayers money. The bill is also a bipartisan effort, as Republican Mark Amodei co-sponsored the bill. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reported the dam was last inspected in February 2023. Notably, the dam is considered to be a high hazard—essentially, if the dam were to fail, it could cause catastrophic damage to the surrounding area. The Department of Energy’s Western Area Power Administration has been collecting approximately $2M/year from hydropower users since 2000. The money was initially intended to be used to fund retirement benefits for dam employees. Over time, the benefits have been funded through other sources, which leaves behind a large sum. The unused money would be activated to fund maintenance efforts. A companion bill is currently making its way through the Nevada Senate. (Source)

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Nevada Rep. Susie Lee recently introduced the Help Hoover Dam Act to the Nevada House of Representatives.

The bill, if approved, would allocate $50M in funding to proceed with maintenance on the Hoover Dam. The dam is a necessary piece of water infrastructure for Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Phoenix.

The bill was introduced during the last congressional session and failed to secure approval. Rep. Lee argued the bill will prevent energy prices from rising. She also stated it would protect natural resources and save taxpayers money. The bill is also a bipartisan effort, as Republican Mark Amodei co-sponsored the bill.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reported the dam was last inspected in February 2023. Notably, the dam is considered to be a high hazard—essentially, if the dam were to fail, it could cause catastrophic damage to the surrounding area.

The Department of Energy’s Western Area Power Administration has been collecting approximately $2M/year from hydropower users since 2000. The money was initially intended to be used to fund retirement benefits for dam employees. Over time, the benefits have been funded through other sources, which leaves behind a large sum. The unused money would be activated to fund maintenance efforts.

A companion bill is currently making its way through the Nevada Senate. (Source)

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