![]() In his veto message, Lombardo said the bill would create “onerous burdens in Nevada’s residential renting market by requiring even more hurdles for a landlord to evict a non-compliant tenant.” SB 335: would have halted evictions for up to 60 days for renters with a pending application for rental assistance. “For years, families like my own have been denied access to health services simply due to their immigration and citizenship status, and today, we are farther along in solving that injustice than ever before,” he wrote. Fabian Doñate, D-Las Vegas, who sponsored the bill, known as the Nevada HOPE Act, said in a statement that although it fell short at the governor’s office, the bill was a historic bipartisan campaign that put working immigrant families at the forefront. Lombardo said there are insufficient resources to implement this new service, and that at least six other bills from the legislative session expanded Medicaid services without needing an appropriation to cover administrative costs. SB 419: would have expanded health care coverage for prenatal, labor and delivery care for people not eligible for Medicaid because of their immigration status. This is the list of Lombardo’s most prominent vetoes: Overall, Lombardo signed 536 of the 611 bills brought to his desk. ![]() Brian Sandoval with 97 vetoes, spanning four sessions, according to the Legislative Counsel Bureau’s Research Division. ![]() The governor with the most overall vetoes is Gov. Jim Gibbons with 48 vetoes in the 2009 session. The Nevada governor who had the most vetoes in a single session is former Gov. (Benjamin Hager/Las Vegas Review-Journal) Joe Lombardo vetoed 75 bills during the 2023 legislative session, beating a new record of the most bills vetoed by a governor in a single legislative session. The Nevada State Legislature Building at the state Capitol complex on Sunday, Jan.
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