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AB 419

Relating to: a sales and use tax exemption for ski lifts. (FE)

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Barbara Dittrich and 7 co-sponsors

Establishes a pre-application review, new hearing rules with limited evidence and qualified experts, a biennial backlog report, and brings the State Engineer under the APA for regu

Referred to committee on Rules
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Bill Summary · AB 419

AB 419 — Summary (2025 Session, BDR 48-736)

Status: Enacted — Approved by the Governor (10/12/2025); Chapter 663, Statutes of 2025.

Purpose
- Modernize and increase transparency in Nevada’s water permitting and adjudicative processes by (1) creating a formal pre‑application engagement process with the State Engineer, (2) requiring procedural regulations for hearings before the Office of the State Engineer, (3) mandating a biennial public report on long‑pending applications, and (4) subjecting the State Engineer to portions of the Nevada Administrative Procedure Act (NRS Chapter 233B) for regulation‑making and contested‑case procedures.

Key provisions (final reprint / as enacted)
- Biennial report (new NRS addition)
- The State Engineer must prepare and submit, on or before September 15 of each even‑numbered year, a report to the Legislative Counsel Bureau for transmittal to the Legislative Commission listing applications under chapters 533 and 534 of NRS that are pending a final decision.
- The report must include, for applications pending 2+ years: the applicant’s name, the primary reason the application remains pending, and the anticipated decision date (if any).

  • Regulations on hearings and expert evidence (amendment to NRS 532.120)

    • The State Engineer must adopt regulations governing practice and procedure in Office hearings.
    • Required rules must, at minimum:
    • Limit evidence presented in a hearing to subject matter contained in the application or protest; and
    • Require expert testimony to comply with Nevada statutes on expert qualifications and the facts/data experts may rely on (NRS 50.275 and 50.285).
  • Pre‑application review process

    • The State Engineer must adopt regulations establishing a pre‑application process for Chapters 533 and 534 (surface and groundwater appropriation / adjudication matters).
    • The process must permit a prospective applicant, upon request, to meet with the State Engineer or designee; the State Engineer (or designee) must meet with the requester within 15 days of the request to review the prospective application and identify potential barriers to approval.
  • Application of the Nevada Administrative Procedure Act (NRS 233B)

    • The bill removes the State Engineer’s blanket exemption from the APA for purposes of adopting regulations and certain provisions governing adjudication of contested cases, bringing the Office more fully under the APA framework (subject to specified exceptions retained in statute).

What was changed from earlier versions
- Earlier drafts of AB 419 included more prescriptive deadlines and processes (e.g., required “preliminary determinations,” fixed timelines to issue those determinations and final decisions, changes to judicial review standards). Those provisions were largely deleted or scaled back in committee amendments and the first reprint. The enacted bill focuses on pre‑application review, hearing rules (especially expert testimony), the biennial report, and subjecting the State Engineer to the APA for rulemaking and contested cases.

Who is affected
- Prospective applicants for water permits or changes (chapters 533 & 534), water rights holders, protestants and other stakeholders who participate in State Engineer hearings, the Division of Water Resources / Office of the State Engineer (administrative workload and rulemaking), and the Legislature (receives biennial reporting). The bill was scored as having an effect on the State (fiscal impact) but not on local government.

Procedural/timeline notes
- Pre‑application meeting: State Engineer or designee must meet within 15 days of a prospective applicant’s request (regulatory detail to be adopted).
- Biennial report due September 15 of even‑numbered years.
- Implementation relies on the State Engineer issuing the required regulations under NRS 532.120 as amended; details and procedures (for hearings and the pre‑application process) will be set in those forthcoming regulations.

Implications
- Seeks to improve predictability and early problem‑spotting for applicants (identify barriers before filing), increase consistency in hearings (limits on evidence scope and clarified expert standards), and improve transparency about backlog causes via legislative reporting. The Office of the State Engineer will have new rulemaking obligations and may face implementation costs and administrative workload associated with the new processes and APA compliance.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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