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June 4, 2012

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Speaker Buckley’s earnestness

Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2008 | 2:01 a.m.

Only 100 or so people showed up, and at least a fifth were lobbyists or Democratic legislators hoping to curry favor with the speaker.

Most of the two dozen folks who approached the microphone to tell Barbara Buckley how to fix the state’s finances proffered shopworn solutions: a state lottery or a much higher tax on gaming.

And yet as I sat in the Spring Valley High School auditorium Monday evening, listening to Buckley’s presentation about the state’s financial structure and watching the Assembly speaker be so solicitous with the parade of concerned citizens and clueless gadflies, I imagined this could be the beginning of something special.

Don’t misunderstand — it takes no effort to be cynical about Buckley’s series of town hall meetings that began this week. I hear the whispers: This is the kickoff of Buckley’s gubernatorial run, and she is laying the groundwork to raise taxes.

Maybe, and maybe. But ... so what?

The reason I can suspend the reflexive cynicism most political observers have about this endeavor is twofold. First, Buckley has done her homework — her PowerPoint presentation Monday was replete with detail, yet it was cogent and easy to understand. (Read it at www.nv2020.com.) Second, even if you think this listening tour is a Hillarylike stunt, a dialogue is better than a monologue — especially when the monologue is simply repeating three words, “no new taxes,” whenever a question is asked about the budget crisis.

Unlike Gov. Jim Gibbons, who sits in his office with a calculator and a broadsword as his tools in his thoughtless, myopic effort to deal with financial distress, Buckley has decided the solution might not be so simple — substantively or politically. Instead of pandering to the lowest common denominator, as Gibbons continues to do, Buckley is trying to expand the discussion from liberal to conservative, from South to North, and all points in between.

She may not succeed. But, unlike the governor or anyone else out there, at least she is trying.

Indeed, I did not see a representative of the governor at the Buckley event, nor were any Republican legislators present. Heaven forfend that they should listen to another perspective.

Amid the amen chorus Buckley had in the auditorium were some interesting faces, including ex-Boyd Gaming executive and community leader Don Snyder, prominent developer Richard Plaster and state Senate Minority Leader Steven Horsford, who is holding his own set of community discussions and who graciously praised the speaker for her leadership.

Buckley’s message was simple: The state is in dire financial straits, the governor is about to make cataclysmic cuts and it’s time to find a third way. She deliberately laid out what had been lopped off the various budgets with the governor’s mindless across-the-board hacking — too much of it as lawmakers stood by or ratified. And then she laid out what the consequences will be if Gibbons slices 14 percent to 18 percent from critical budgets.

“We can do better,” Page 28 blared, in all caps as if to emphasize the obvious. And Page 30: “This is about what kind of state we want to be. And we must decide this together.”

Some will say she has opted for sophomoric over soporific — not much improvement there. But Buckley backs up the sound bites with pages and pages of ways to measure effectiveness and hold government accountable — phrases that Democrats do not often use and when they do, it’s mostly lip service. So she has a lot to prove there.

Buckley also detailed plans to review tax abatements and exemptions, which lawmakers have avoided for years because of pressure from special interests that obtained the breaks. And she also wants to be more aggressive in collecting existing taxes, revamp the rainy day fund and find “innovative public/private partnerships.” Ugh — where have I heard that before? (Cynicism in this business, alas, can never be fully suspended, like a John McCain campaign.)

I hope in the coming sessions Buckley receives better ideas. The only one she should seriously consider was brought up by several audience members — and received rousing applause: finding a way to tax mining, which hasn’t been done for 20 years.

“Thank you for taking the first step,” Buckley concluded as the crowd, which had thinned out considerably after a couple of hours, applauded. The speaker will need plenty of patience to see this through, and she surely understands that many difficult steps will be necessary. I am sure Buckley knows that you have to crawl before you walk, and you have to walk before you can run.

And I don’t mean just for governor.

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