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May 18, 2013

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J. Patrick Coolican

Columnist

J. Patrick Coolican was born in Connecticut to a large, Irish Catholic family and then studied dead white male authors at the University of Notre Dame. He started his career during the 2000 presidential campaign, writing for a Web site he created with two friends. He's written for The Seattle Times, The Nation, LA Weekly and, since early 2006, for the Sun.

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Story Archive

Why Nevada Democrats' Fun Tax is the New Coke of politics
Friday, May 10, 2013
The Mini-Golf Tax. The “Iron Man” Tax. The Burning Man Tax. I’m pretty sure most Nevadans enjoy one or more of those activities, which means if Democrats in the Legislature pass their new Nevada Entertainment and Admissions Tax, every Nevadan will curse them when they try to enjoy themselves on the weekend after a long workweek.
Why Nevada needs to look at Dotty's one way, sports book kiosks another
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
With the Nevada Legislature seriously discussing gaming policy, I've got some thoughts about Dotty's, and about sports betting kiosks in neighborhood taverns.
To citizen legislator Mo Denis: Don't forget about the rest of us citizens
Friday, May 3, 2013
Catching up on the news after a little vacation, and, oh, look, it’s like I never left -- a state senator has offered up some cheesy legislation that would help his old boss.
Ever get the feeling the Las Vegas cab industry is long-hauling regulators?
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Welcome to Las Vegas. Now I’m going to steal $10 from you. That’s the message we’re sending to thousands of tourists every year who get in a cab at McCarran International Airport and are taken to their hotel the long way. At least when the hotels take the tourists’ money, it’s based on a bet whose odds are well known. But the cabbies are just flat-out stealing, and our political system is so inept that it refuses or is unable to act.
St. Rose hospitals drop ER doctors group as state probes patient shuffling
Thursday, April 18, 2013
The medical group that staffs emergency departments at St. Rose Dominican Hospitals and has been criticized for shuttling patients among facilities for purely financial reasons is being dropped by the hospitals.
Why legal pot is coming to Nevada, and why we need to prepare
Friday, April 12, 2013
It was no great feat, but as I predicted last October, Colorado and Washington have legalized pot, and Nevada is now in danger of losing our rightful place as the capital of forbidden fun. Thursday, a Nevada legislative committee approved the creation of medical marijuana dispensaries. And last week, the Nevada Legislature took up a bill to legalize recreational marijuana. It’s not going anywhere, but I applaud the Assembly Judiciary Committee for giving it a hearing.
The Nevada way: A lawyer leads the transportation board
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
The next time you need heart surgery, we’ll send over a lawyer to open you up. How would that strike you? Ridiculous, right? So why is the attorney general on the board of the Nevada Department of Transportation?
After stadium boondoggle, what's next for Henderson after Andy Hafen's re-election?
Friday, April 5, 2013
With Henderson voters -- or the 12 percent of them who bothered to turn out -- giving Mayor Andy Hafen a second term, can a marching band of 76 trombones be far behind?
The Steven Brooks saga points to much bigger problems
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
The unfortunate truth is that story of expelled Assemblyman Steven Brooks, sad as it is, could have been even more tragic.
Doctors allege shuttling patients among hospitals put profit ahead of safety
Two former St. Rose emergency room doctors say their boss co-owned ambulances that moved patients to sister hospitals
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Two former St. Rose Dominican Hospital emergency room doctors say they were forced to transfer patients from one St. Rose hospital to another so its owners and their boss could profit — at the expense of patient safety.
Photographer documenting homeless families finds no place like Las Vegas
Monday, April 1, 2013
Craig Blankenhorn has spent most of his professional life on film and TV sets — “Sex in the City” and “The Sopranos” among them — shooting photos for the big advertising displays you see in newspapers and magazines. But now he’s also traveling the country, documenting the lives of homeless families. In Las Vegas he met Tom, Angela and little Kaleb, who is one of 1.6 million homeless kids in the United States, and he won't soon forget them.
Why the construction defect fight is likely to get nasty this session
Thursday, March 21, 2013
As my colleague Anjeanette Damon reports this week, the Groundhog Day legislative battle over construction defect litigation has broken into the open, with state Sen. Michael Roberson using some legislative legerdemain to move his bill from a hostile committee to a friendly one.
Why lobbyists are confused by what one Nevada lawmaker is up to
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Here’s the question everyone here at the Legislature is asking: What’s Michael Roberson’s game? The question arises because twice in just the past two weeks the Republican Senate leader has taken on powerful interests.
Why I'm bothered that the chancellor has silenced college bosses
Friday, March 15, 2013
Dan Klaich, chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education, has told college and university presidents to be publicly silent about their misgivings with the proposed funding formula to divide up state money for schools.
In search of mysterious Downtown sign artist King Richard
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
King Richard’s realm is not a conventional one. It is the weathered sides of Downtown cinder block.
Where are the Democrats in extracting more taxes from the mining industry?
Friday, March 8, 2013
The surprise move this week by Nevada Senate Republicans to offer up a mining tax increase as an alternative to the business margins tax offered up some fascinating political theater and intriguing questions.
The tragedy of Stanley Gibson's death began days before he was shot by police
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Reading accounts and watching the video of last week’s public fact-finding panel on the Metro shooting of Stanley Gibson was like watching a brutal car accident while being helpless to do anything about it.
Hey governor, please allow us 15 miles of toll-free interstate down here
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013
A free road for the north, a toll road for the south. Someone with a sharper wit than I came up with it, but the metaphor neatly encapsulates Southern Nevada’s raw deal compared with the rest of the state.
California, Nevada take opposite stances when disciplining the same doctor
Nevada doesn't disclose its response to a doctor who admitted to battery on a woman, California pulled his license
Friday, Feb. 22, 2013
Dr. Sean S. Steele was able to practice medicine in both California and Nevada until last year. That’s when the California Medical Board publicly revoked his license, based on evidence and testimony from a woman who said he sexually assaulted her in the back of a Mercedes during an evening of drinking. In Nevada, however, Steele, an internist, is still licensed and maintains privileges at several Las Vegas Valley hospitals, including UMC.
Harry Reid to get in NV Energy's face during remarks to Legislature
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013
Sen. Harry Reid, who has a long history of taking on the the state’s electric monopoly NV Energy, will do so again today in his biannual speech to the Legislature in Carson City. According to sources familiar with the speech, Reid will talk broadly about diversifying Nevada’s economy and specifically press legislators to strengthen the state’s renewable energy mandate. A law known as the renewable energy portfolio sets out the percentage of energy delivered to Nevadans that must come from renewable sources such as solar, wind, geothermal and hydroelectric.
Of course we need more cops, and yes we have to pay for them
Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013
I’m sure I’m not the only one concerned by the news that crime was up 9 percent last year in the area patrolled by Las Vegas Metro Police. Crime is still down 20 percent from five years ago, so we needn’t panic, but this should get our attention.
Las Vegas' political outsiders learn to play the inside game up in Carson City
Friday, Feb. 15, 2013
Before the Paulsens embark on their journey to influence the Nevada Legislature, David Paulsen says he needs to pick up a couple of quarts of oil for the 1994 Ford Econoline van.
If goal is recovery, why stop drug testing at welfare recipients?
Friday, Feb. 8, 2013
When Florida started drug testing its welfare applicants, a study found welfare applicants were far less likely to use drugs than the rest of the population. But ideas can be zombies, especially in Nevada.
Why is a Henderson councilman sidling up to an attorney being sued by the city?
Monday, Feb. 4, 2013
Does it seem appropriate that a Henderson City Council member is seeking the help of an attorney in raising money for his election campaign, even as the attorney is being sued by the city for his role in an alleged fraudulent proposal to build a sports complex in the city?

When it comes to special interests, beat them at their own game
Sunday, Feb. 3, 2013
Nevada legislators are inundated with information and limited time and staff to sort through it all. With term limits, the ability to develop expertise about complicated issues such as electric utility law, which can take years of close study, is gone. This is where special interests come in.
Brooks case can be impetus for improving mental health services in Nevada
Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013
For thousands of Southern Nevadans who have dealt with a family member in crisis, watching the Steven Brooks story unfold must feel surreal and all too familiar. Brooks, a Democratic assemblyman, was hospitalized Friday after his family called Metro police because of his increasingly erratic behavior, which indicates he is unwell and needs help.
In a sobering effort to count our homeless, this man knows where to look
Friday, Jan. 25, 2013
It’s 3 a.m. Thursday, we’re searching for and counting the homeless, and Neil Jurgensen is our guide. Jurgensen, 49, spent 20 years living as an alcoholic on the ragged edge of the community, alternating among overfilled shelters, weekly motels, and the sidewalks of Owens and Sahara. Now sober two years and living at Salvation Army Safe Haven, Jurgensen volunteered as a guide on the valley’s every-other-year homeless census, in which nonprofit groups and government agencies, including police, come together to count the homeless.
The cost and benefits of growing old if Caesars' Gary Loveman ran the world
Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013
I suppose it’s fitting that a guy who is the chief executive of a company with nearly $20 billion in long term debt would be lecturing us on fiscal probity and what entitlements should be protected for the elderly.
What happens when a decision by regents to save money undermines Nevada's quality of life
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2013
People like Rachelle Reynolds, who has two autistic boys, are the victims in a decision by the Board of Regents to kill the occupational therapy program at CSN.
Learning to be more understanding toward people getting cut, pricked and needled for beauty
Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013
It would be easy, far too easy, to go all high dudgeon on the cosmetic surgery convention. So let’s go with an open mind and try to see the world through the eyes of the patients.
Back to normal is good, but maybe it shouldn't be good enough
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013
Whew! Back to normal. That’s the best thing we can say about Gov. Brian Sandoval’s State of the State address Wednesday.
Why the gun control debate is a boon to the firearms industry
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013
President Barack Obama laid out his agenda today to reduce gun violence, but here’s the reality: Obama’s re-election and the Sandy Hook massacre have been a gift to the gun industry and the gun rights lobby.
How we can get in concert to enrich our children
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013
When you go to the Las Vegas Philharmonic’s Youth Concert Series and the music starts, you don’t want to watch the stage. The real action is in the audience, where many of the 1,600 fourth- and fifth-graders fancy themselves amateur conductors, waving their imaginary batons and urging on the musicians. This year, about 13,000 students will enjoy one of eight concerts at the Smith Center for the Performing Arts.
Let's reform the state's tax policy that sticks it to the poor
Friday, Jan. 11, 2013
We often hear critiques of Nevada’s tax system — that it is unstable and at the mercy of boom-and-bust cycles. But we rarely hear about the system’s biggest problem: It’s regressive.
Jack Nicholson, a murder and water rights
Monday, Jan. 7, 2013
A couple of days after Christmas, the federal Bureau of Land Management approved a plan to carry billions of gallons of water from rural Nevada counties near the Utah border to Las Vegas by way of a 263-mile pipeline.
On this, anyway, father and son agree: Turning schools into armed fortresses a bad idea
Friday, Dec. 21, 2012
My father and I don’t agree on much. One thing we do agree on, however, is that America’s obsession with security is destructive to our way of life.
Taking a real liking to a bunch of guys under the lights on Friday nights
My confession: Getting attached to a high school football team, but maybe we all should
Saturday, Dec. 15, 2012
On Friday, we posted a long piece that I wrote tracking Canyon Springs High School’s football season. Now comes this addendum, because I must share with you my personal feelings after having found myself becoming attached to the team.
Canyon Springs players find shelter from life's troubles in the shadow of a goal post
Over the course of a season, football players experience joy and defeat together, on and off the field, while learning life's lessons
Friday, Dec. 14, 2012
Their school, Canyon Springs High School on Alexander Road in North Las Vegas, near a pig farm whose stench lingers over the campus at times, is one of the poorest in the valley. More than 75 percent of the students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch.
Culinary head D. Taylor poised for new challenge as national leader
His task: to addess labor unions' failure to reach young people, Hispanics and blacks.
Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012
After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, Las Vegas became gripped in economic crisis. The tourism and convention business collapsed, and workers were laid off or had their hours reduced. For many in Las Vegas, this is when D. Taylor stepped up big time.
Steve Wynn much better suited to casinos than politics
Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012
For years now, we’ve been hearing the rich baritone carnival bark of Steve Wynn, who never misses an opportunity to attack President Barack Obama for his economic policies. His passion on the subject is a little obscure.
Republicans nationally can learn from Nevada GOP ... at least in some respects
Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012
Tuesday was a disaster for the national Republican Party, as President Barack Obama won an election that secured a new governing majority and the Senate remained in Harry Reid’s hands. Elizabeth Warren, pot and gay marriage were just salt in the wounds. In Nevada, however, it wasn’t so bad.
Election results don't bode well for GOP, future local TV revenue
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012
Coolican offers his take on the election results.
Canyon Springs takes down Las Vegas to secure home playoff game
Friday, Nov. 2, 2012
The Canyon Springs Pioneers finished off their regular season with a dominant 33-12 victory on senior night against the Las Vegas High School Wildcats.
Dirty politics — in a race for justice of the peace
Friday, Nov. 2, 2012
I recently railed against the election of judges as farcical. The timing was perfect, as District Judge Steven Jones faces federal charges this week in an alleged investment scam. A reader sent me another good example of how dumb judicial elections can be.

Who's qualified to vote for judges?
Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012
The election of judges is an utter farce.
Perhaps my favorite piece of data in support of this assertion is that in the 2010 election, 466,000 voters in Clark County cast their vote for a candidate in the U.S. Senate race, while about 360,000 voters made a choice in the countywide judicial races. So, 100,000 people took a pass in the judicial races.
It's time for Nevada to legalize marijuana
More people are in favor of legalization, and like voters in Washington and Colorado may do this election, the state should end the prohibition
Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Let’s talk pot. Perhaps the most consequential decision faced by voters in three Western states, other than control of the White House, are voter initiatives that would legalize marijuana.
Should we turn the old Ambassador Hotel site into a Middle Eastern market?
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012
The possibilities seem endless for the seven acre space.
Sorry, Romney — Nevada won't see 6 percent unemployment by 2016
Nevada's future depends on residents taking matters into their own hands
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012
Mitt Romney should have learned his lesson from President Barack Obama and not made any promises about unemployment. During a visit to Henderson on Tuesday, Romney said, “How about four years where at the end we get Nevada unemployment down to 6 percent or lower?” Republicans have been hammering Obama for years because his economists forecast that unemployment would peak nationally at 8 percent even though it eventually reached 10 percent.
Balanced attack helps Canyon Springs to homecoming win against Valley
Friday, Oct. 19, 2012
Canyon Springs extended their winning streak to three games with a crushing 46-0 victory over Valley High School, improving to 5-2 overall.
High-interest lenders need more, not less, supervision
To prevent payday loan abuse, House bill promoting deregulation must be stopped
Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012
According to the results of a recent survey by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Nevada leads the nation in the percentage of residents who are “underbanked” — meaning they have some sort of bank account but also resort to high-interest loans from nontraditional lenders to make ends meet.

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