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Bill

AB 462

Relating to: employee misclassification; construction contractor registration; reporting state tax law violations committed by construction industry employers; and granting rule-making authority, making an appropriation, and providing a penalty. (FE)

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Clint Anderson and 44 co-sponsors

AB 462 broadens Nevada's economic development by authorizing inland ports and industrial parks with tax-increment financing for infrastructure, plus strengthens teacher pathway and

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Bill Summary · AB 462

AB 462 (BDR 22-823) — Summary

Status: Approved by the Governor; chaptered into law in 2025.
Introduced: February 6, 2025.
Primary sponsor: Assemblymember Shea Backus.

Main purpose

AB 462 (2025) expands Nevada’s economic development tools by (1) adding “industrial parks” to the existing Inland Port Authority Act (now the Inland Port and Industrial Park Authority Act) and authorizing related tax-increment financing for infrastructure, and (2) revising and strengthening the Teacher Academy College Pathway Program and related teacher tuition reimbursement rules and oversight.

Key provisions

  • Inland ports and industrial parks

    • Authorizes creation, operation and maintenance of industrial parks and industrial park authorities in contiguous, nonresidential areas (must include or be adjacent to an inland port).
    • Permits a participating entity (county/city/authority) to adopt an ordinance creating a tax increment area (TIA) covering all or part of an inland port or industrial park.
    • Taxes levied on property in the TIA: a portion equal to growth above the base assessed value may be deposited into a special tax increment account to repay bonds, loans or other indebtedness used to finance approved “undertakings” (infrastructure projects).
    • Enumerated “undertakings” include drainage/flood control, roads/overpasses/underpasses, sewerage, water, rail, airport, utilities and similar infrastructure.
    • Authorizes counties/cities to issue bonds or other securities to finance undertakings.
    • Prevailing wage requirement: projects paid, in whole or in part, from TIA proceeds must comply with Nevada prevailing wage laws (added by amendment).
    • If no participating entity is a city, an additional board director is added and appointed by the Governor.
    • The Office of Economic Development may initiate the creation of an inland port or industrial park with Board of Economic Development approval.
    • Provisions for multi‑jurisdiction TIAs: interlocal/cooperative agreements, joint administration, and requirements for public hearings and findings of benefit.
  • Teacher Academy College Pathway Program (TACPP) and teacher reimbursements

    • Refines TACPP program requirements: excludes specialty schools, requires dual‑credit opportunities aligned with teacher-prep coursework (sufficient to allow at least 12 college units), requires at least 15 hours of relevant work‑based learning, and requires assignment of a licensed teacher or other licensed educational personnel to coordinate programs at each participating high school (staffing adjusted depending on course offerings).
    • Creates a Career Pathways Oversight Committee and a Career Pathways Oversight Coordinator to set goals, evaluate programs and report annually.
    • Revises eligibility for State Treasurer tuition/fee reimbursements for program graduates (teacher tuition reimbursement): requires that applicants complete the FAFSA (federal student aid application) and successfully complete a teacher‑preparation program at an NSHE institution; allows reimbursements for persons who could not complete TACPP due to circumstances beyond their control (specifics clarified in statute).
    • Other technical changes to dual-credit, internship, and grievance/reconsideration processes for students.

Who is affected

  • Local governments (counties and cities): may create inland ports/industrial parks, adopt TIAs, issue bonds, and administer undertakings — with potential fiscal impacts and procedural obligations.
  • Taxing agencies and local taxpayers: portions of future property tax growth within a TIA can be redirected to repay infrastructure financing rather than flow to usual taxing entities.
  • Contractors and labor: projects funded by TIA proceeds must comply with prevailing wage laws.
  • School districts (notably large districts such as CCSD), high schools, students and prospective teachers: program design, staffing and dual-credit offerings are modified; eligibility for tuition reimbursement is revised.
  • Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE): roles in dual‑credit alignment and teacher preparation; tuition/fee reimbursement interactions.

Fiscal and procedural notes

  • Fiscal analysis: bill may have state and local fiscal impacts; contains at least one identified unfunded mandate relating to school-district program requirements.
  • Implementation: authorizes multiple administrative steps (ordinances, interlocal agreements, bond issuances, Board/Office approvals) and establishes oversight structures for the career-pathway components.
  • Labor compliance: prevailing wage requirement added by amendment applies to TIA-funded undertakings.

Effective/Timing

  • Enacted during the 2025 legislative session and approved by the Governor in 2025; contains implementation timelines implicit in the statute for ordinances, Board approvals, and school‑district program duties. Local entities choosing to use the new authorities will follow the statutory and procedural requirements set forth in the Act.

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

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