striking package - Best of the West
Transcription
striking package - Best of the West
2009 PULITZER PRIZE WINNER FOR PUBLIC SERVICE LASVEGASSUN.COM 2 LOCA LLY OW N ED A N D IN DEPEN DENT | TU ESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2010 KATS REPORT Playboy exposure produces a Strip headliner and boosts Las Vegas native’s entertainment career. PAGE 8 Yes, pundits have called Angle’s anti-illegal immigration ad ... inflammatory, fear-mongering, race-baiting, implausible, xenophobic, outrageous, insensitive, egregious, offensive, and ugly. JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS POLITICS Palin delivers message to GOP: ‘Man up’ BY ANJEANETTE DAMON WHO HAS THE RIGHT RENO — Midway through her STUFF? Las Vegas Sun speech at a Tea Party Express rally here Monday, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said her goal, and that of the conservative group hosting the event, is not to see Republicans in general win this crucial midterm election. No, she is backing a specific brand of conservative. “These are constitutional conservatives,” she said, running through a list of her approved candidates for Congress nationwide before the crowd in the parking lot of a vacant shopping mall. The list included Nevada GOP Senate candidate Sharron Angle. “Politicians, some of you who are in office today, need to man up and spend some political capital supporting these Tea Party candidates,” she said. Palin and her enthusiastic supporters present a particular challenge to Republican candidates in Nevada — be seen alongside them and risk alienating independent voters who may see the Tea Party Speaking at a Tea Party Express rally Monday in Reno, former Alaska Gov. and Republican Party vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin implored her audience and GOP leaders to support Tea Party-backed candidates such as Sharron Angle, who is running for a U.S. Senate seat. She did not, however, list Brian Sandoval’s name among those she supports in gubernatorial races. [See Palin, Page 2] But such strategies have worked in the past. And now another group is urging Hispanics not to vote. CATHLEEN ALLISON / SPECIAL TO THE SUN BY KAROUN DEMIRJIAN THE GOVERNOR’S RACE Las Vegas Sun I n the waning weeks of the election, all eyes are focusing on one ethnic voting bloc — Hispanics, who have emerged as the make it or break it constituency in Nevada’s tight Senate race. The common wisdom is clear-cut: If Hispanics make it to the polls in large numbers, Democrats can win. If they don’t, Republicans stand a better chance of victory. As politicians and activists scramble to turn out the Hispanic vote, as the Democrats are pushing, or to overwhelm or suppress the Latino vote, as some conservatives are trying, the 2010 Senate contest is turning into a race about race. In Nevada, accusations about racially reprehensible practices started flying a few weeks ago. That’s when Tea Party-backed Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle aired an TV advertisement about Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s immigra- [See Commercial, Page 3] Sandoval: Let local officials raise taxes BY DAVID MCGRATH SCHWARTZ Las Vegas Sun HARDLY ILLEGAL HEADED FOR INFAMY? At issue is the use by Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle’s campaign of this photo, taken in Mexico and purchased from Getty Images, a photo service. The photo was included in a TV commercial to drum up fear about illegal immigrants crossing the border. The ad is no longer airing after a copyright infringement complaint over the photo. Political commentators have criticized Angle’s use of the photo and her TV commercial . Hispanic advocates have likened the ad to the infamous Willie Horton ad of 1988, and Jesse Helms’ 1990 Senate campaign, which featured a pair of white hands crumpling up a letter as a narrator said: “You needed that job, but they had to give it to a minority.” Brian Sandoval has promised that if he is elected governor he won’t raise taxes. But that doesn’t mean he won’t let others do it. The Republican candidate said Monday that he would support giving local governments the authority to raise taxes, if the state turns over responsibility for some services to cities and counties. Sandoval has not released a plan for how he will balance the state budget. Experts say revenue for the biennium will come in about $3 billion below current spending levels. On a tour of Galena High School in Reno on Monday, Sandoval was asked whether he saw waste or duplication as he has toured almost 80 schools statewide. The candidate didn’t answer [See Sandoval, Page 2] LOCAL LEVEL Home rule gives local governments more say in the way they operate. In Nevada, those governments must get the Legislature’s OK on budget and other matters. The Legislature meets every other year, which means quick reaction to a crisis is almost impossible. 2 | NEWS LAS VEGAS SUN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2010 SANDOVAL, FROM PAGE 1: FALLEN U.S. TROOPS Since the war in Iraq began in 2003, 4,408 American troops have died, according to the Defense Department. The latest identification reported by the military: Army Pfc. Dylan T. Reid, 24, of Springfield, Mo., died Saturday in Amarah, Iraq, in a noncombat-related incident. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colo. Since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, 1,331 American troops have died supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. The latest identifications reported by the military: Marine Sgt. Ian M. Tawney, 25, of Dallas, Ore., died Saturday in combat in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif. Marine Cpl. Jorge Villarreal Jr., 22, of San Antonio died Sunday in combat in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif. Face to Face W IT H J O N R A L STO N FLASH POINT Now that’s a depressing thought Want a definition of depressing? Here you go: “Gov. Jim Gibbons and his staff continue working on a new state budget that will incorporate the essential services required by the citizens of Nevada. While there are periodic signs Nevada is poised to pull out of its economic doldrums, Gov. Gibbons is required by the Nevada Constitution to create a balanced budget.” I am not depressed because of the economy — we know it will be awhile. But what depresses me is that Gibbons felt the need Monday to let us know he is forming the next state budget — a budget Brian Sandoval or Rory Reid probably will adopt. Or will they? ON TODAY’S ‘FACE TO FACE’ Three-way debate for attorney general Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto is defending her office against two challengers. We’ll meet them all in a three-way debate among Cortez Masto, Republican Travis Barrick and Independent American candidate Joel Hansen. REID’S CAMPAIGN SAYS SANDOVAL IS PASSING THE BUCK the question. But he said the budget problems are so large all sources of state funding are going to have to take a hit. He said he hoped that teachers would take a salary cut. And he criticized his Democratic opponent, Rory Reid, for promising to spare K-12 and higher education, which make up 55 percent of the budget. Pressed for details on how he will balance the budget, Sandoval pointed to giving “home rule,” which allows local governments to make more decisions without the Legislature’s approval. Asked if that would include giving counties the ability to raise taxes, Sandoval said, “Yes. But it would come with responsibilities.” Reid’s campaign said Sandoval’s position amounts to “passing the buck.” “Brian Sandoval doesn’t want to make any decision,” spokesman Mike Trask said. “Brian Sandoval has promised for months to provide a budget plan for Nevada. He has refused to do so.” Later, Sandoval’s campaign clarified his comments to say that home rule would not extend to school districts, which don’t have individual taxing authority. Funding levels for school districts throughout the state must be equal. In explaining his support for more local government control, Sandoval said local elected leaders meet year-round, the Legislature meets every two years. “There’s a disconnect,” he said. State Sen. John Lee, D-North Las Vegas, last week raised the possibility of the state shifting some of its responsibilities to local governments, such as parole and probation and community colleges. Although local elected officials had a mix of reactions to the idea, they uniformly expressed concern that state officials were avoiding making a tough choice between cutting or raising taxes. Sandoval told high school students that he could improve education by giving schools more control, creating competition among campuses by using vouchers and giving merit pay to teachers whose students perform well. He also said it wouldn’t require any more money. But some improvements do require money. At Galena High, Assistant Principal Silvia Marin told Sandoval about some of the struggles and improvements the school had made. Hispanic English-language learners don’t make up a proportionate number of the advanced placement students. She said early last year the school had no after-school bus, meaning students without other transportation had to leave at 2:30 p.m. They couldn’t stay for afterschool tutoring, to use computers or participate in programs such as ROTC. That changed when a new school superintendent came in and asked what the school needed. Marin said they got the extra late bus, at a cost of $9,000 per semester. david.schwartz@lasvegas sun.com / 775-687-4597 WHEN TO WATCH Broadcast times “Face to Face” airs live at 6:30 p.m. on NBC affiliates throughout the state — KSNV Channel 3 in Las Vegas, KRNV Channel 4 in Reno and KENV Channel 10 in Elko. We are the Las Vegas Sun... Las Vegas’ independent newspaper voice Because we are a newspaper delivered with the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the perception could be that we are all the same newspaper. Nothing could be further from the truth. The editorial material in our newspaper is prepared independently from the R-J. The Sun’s news staff and the news staff of the R-J compete. The two papers have very different editorial philosophies. The Sun is locally owned by the Greenspun family of Las Vegas and has been a separate voice in the community since 1950. The business functions of the two papers are combined and operated under a JOA (Joint Operating Agreement), which is a U.S. Justice Department-approved method of maintaining competitive, distinct voices in newspaper markets. Main telephone: 702-385-3111 Fax: 702-383-7264 Subscription & Delivery Questions: 702-383-0400 © 2010 Las Vegas Sun, Inc. Brian Greenspun, President Daniel Greenspun, Treasurer Su Haven, Secretary The Las Vegas Sun (USPS 305-280) is published each morning by Las Vegas Sun, Inc. The editorial office is at 2360 Corporate Circle, Suite 300, Henderson, NV 89074. THE LAS VEGAS SUN SUMMER CAMP FUND Every child deserves a camping experience and the Sun Camp Fund is committed to providing camping opportunities for disadvantaged children ages 8-14. Approximately 1,100 kids benefit from a camping experience every year. Help us bring the joy of the outdoors to more Las Vegas area children. YES! I would like to support the Sun Camp Fund. Enclosed is my contribution of $ NAME ADDRESS CITY S TAT E ZIP Send to: Las Vegas Sun Camp Fund, 2360 Corporate Circle, Third Floor, Henderson, NV 89074 Donate online (via PayPal): www.suncampfund.com Tax deductible. 100% of your donation goes to kids. The Las Vegas Sun pays all administrative costs. JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Sarah Palin waves to a crowd at a rally to kick off the Tea Party Express bus tour Monday in Reno. The tour will make 29 stops across 20 states until it ends in Concord, N.H., on Nov. 1. PALIN, FROM PAGE 1: KEY GOP CANDIDATES STAY AWAY FROM TEA PARTY EXPRESS RALLY as a circus act; don’t and risk being branded as unworthy of the conservative stamp. That conundrum might explain why many Republican candidates were noticeably absent from the rally stage. GOP gubernatorial candidate Brian Sandoval was touring a Reno high school as the Tea Party Express rallied across town. “We’re focused on visiting schools, visiting nonprofits,” he told a reporter who asked why he wasn’t at the rally. He wasn’t willing to be drawn into a debate over the Tea Party’s primary message — that government’s role in individuals’ lives should be significantly curtailed. “That’s a broad question. I’m just focused on my race,” he said. Sandoval hasn’t spent the entire campaign dodging such rallies. He attended the largest, most publicized one in Searchlight this spring. Still, Sandoval’s name didn’t make the list of gubernatorial candidates Palin implored the Reno crowd to support because of their conservative bona fides. To the surprise of some, Angle, who has cultivated the Tea Party vote since the earliest days of her primary campaign, did not share the stage with Palin, one of the most popular figures in the conservative movement. In fact, Angle hasn’t headlined a Tea Party Express rally since the group endorsed her in April and began spending more than $1 million in the form of an independent expenditure to see her elected. But the reason was likely more legal than political: Strict federal laws prohibit candidates from coordinating political speech with organizations operating independent expenditures, and Angle’s campaign didn’t want to be accused of coordination. But Angle wasn’t the only GOP candidate not to show. Even some of the Republicans in attendance didn’t appear to want to make a highprofile appearance. One longtime Northern Nevada Republican activist wore a bulky coat and baseball cap pulled low on her forehead. “I’m just here to help the party out,” she said, tugging her hat a little lower. The voters at the Reno rally shared a deep skepticism of politicians, even those who appear to carry the conservative standard. Even Angle, who has been among the most philosophically pure conservatives in Nevada politics, didn’t earn unconditional support. “We’re going to give her a try,” said Michelle Schneider, a Reno Republican. “I’m not completely sold on any of them.” Rep. Dean Heller, R-Nev., who doesn’t have a competitive race in his heavily Republican 2nd Congressional District, was the only Republican candidate to jump onstage at the Reno rally. He didn’t speak and simply waved to the crowd. Heller’s spokesman Stewart Bybee said he couldn’t speak for why some Republican candidates didn’t show for the event. But he said Heller has long enjoyed a strong relationship with Tea Party activists. “Fundamentally the Tea Party’s goals are about government intrusion in everyday lives,” he said. “That is where the congressman and the Tea Party share a common value.” Some said it’s not necessarily the Tea Party brand that Republican candidates are worried about associating themselves with. It’s their strategy to avoid any situations they don’t completely control during the final days of the campaign. “There’s enough risk when coming down the final stretch of campaign even with their own events,” Republican strategist Robert Uithoven said. “When you start attending events of other groups that could cause even more problems — especially when you can turn an ad around in 24 hours or less. Those images could cause a distraction for a campaign.” Sun reporter David McGrath Schwartz contributed to this story. anjeanette.damon@lasveg assun.com / 775-336-6225 LAS VEGAS SUN NEWS | 3 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2010 SOCIOLOGY THE RUNDOWN ‘Culture of poverty,’ once an academic slur, makes a comeback More local news from lasvegassun.com BY PATRICIA COHEN New York Times News Service F or more than 40 years, social scientists investigating the causes of poverty have tended to treat cultural explanations like Lord Voldemort: That Which Must Not Be Named. The reticence was a legacy of the ugly battles that erupted after Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then an assistant labor secretary in the Johnson administration, introduced the idea of a “culture of poverty” to the public in a startling 1965 report. Although Moynihan didn’t coin the phrase (that distinction belongs to the anthropologist Oscar Lewis), his description of the urban black family as caught in an inescapable “tangle of pathology” of unmarried mothers and welfare dependency was seen as attributing self-perpetuating moral deficiencies to black people, as if blaming them for their own misfortune. Moynihan’s analysis never lost its appeal to conservative thinkers, whose arguments ultimately succeeded when President Bill Clinton signed a bill in 1996 “ending welfare as we know it.” But in the overwhelmingly liberal ranks of academic sociology and anthropology the word “culture” became a live grenade, and the idea that attitudes and behavior patterns kept people poor was shunned. Now, after decades of silence, these scholars are speaking openly about you-know-what, conceding that culture and persistent poverty are enmeshed. “We’ve finally reached the stage where people aren’t afraid of being politically incorrect,” said Douglas Massey, a sociologist at Princeton who has argued that Moynihan was unfairly maligned. The old debate has shaped the new. Last month Princeton and the Brookings Institution released a collection of papers on unmarried parents, a subject, it noted, that became off-limits after the Moynihan report. The topic has generated interest on Capitol Hill because so much of the research intersects with policy debates. Views of the cultural roots of poverty “play important roles in shap- THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE A mother and child stand near the site of a Chicago housing project that was demolished in 1997. Scholars are conceding that culture and persistent poverty may be linked. ing how lawmakers choose to address poverty issues,” Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif., noted at the briefing. Today, social scientists are rejecting the notion of a monolithic and unchanging culture of poverty. And they attribute destructive attitudes and behavior not to inherent moral character but to sustained racism and isolation. To Robert Sampson, a sociologist at Harvard, culture is best understood as “shared understandings.” “I study inequality, and the dominant focus is on structures of poverty,” he said. But he added that the reason a neighborhood turns into a “poverty trap” is also related to a common perception of the way people in a community act and think. When people see graffiti and garbage, do they find it acceptable or see serious disorder? Do they respect the legal system or have a high level of “moral cynicism,” believing that “laws were made to be broken”? The shared perception of a neighborhood — is it on the rise or stagnant? — does a better job of predicting a community’s future than the actual level of poverty, he said. William Julius Wilson, whose pioneering work boldly con- fronted ghetto life while focusing on economic explanations for persistent poverty, defines culture as the way “individuals in a community develop an understanding of how the world works and make decisions based on that understanding.” For some young black men, Wilson, a Harvard sociologist, said, the world works like this: “If you don’t develop a tough demeanor, you won’t survive. If you have access to weapons, you get them, and if you get into a fight, you have to use them.” Seeking to recapture the topic from economists, sociologists have ventured into poor neighborhoods to delve deeper into the attitudes of residents. Their results have challenged some common assumptions, like the belief that poor mothers remain single because they don’t value marriage. In Philadelphia, for example, low-income mothers told the sociologists Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas that they thought marriage was profoundly important, even sacred, but doubted that their partners were “marriage material.” Their results have prompted some lawmakers and poverty experts to conclude that programs that promote marriage without changing economic and social conditions are unlikely to work. Conservatives also deserve credit, said Kay Hymowitz, a fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute, for their sustained focus on family values and marriage even when cultural explanations were disparaged. Still, worries about blaming the victim persist. So even now some sociologists avoid words such as “values” and “morals” or reject the idea that, as The Annals put it, “a group’s culture is more or less coherent.” Watered-down definitions of culture, Hymowitz complained, reduce some of the new work to “sociological pablum.” “If anthropologists had come away from doing field work in New Guinea concluding ‘everyone’s different,’ but sometimes people help each other out,” she wrote in an e-mail, “there would be no field of anthropology — and no word culture for cultural sociologists to bend to their will.” Fuzzy definitions or not, culture is back. This prompted mock surprise from Woolsey at last spring’s congressional briefing: “What a concept. Values, norms, beliefs play very important roles in the way people meet the challenges of poverty.” COMMERCIAL, FROM PAGE 1: CONSERVATIVE GROUP TELLS HISPANICS TO SIT THIS ONE OUT tion record, featuring images of menacing-looking Mexican men with the words “Illegal Aliens” superimposed at the bottom of the screen. Hispanic activists decried the advertisement as “racebaiting” — a charge the Angle campaign denied repeatedly, even up through this weekend, when she told an assembly of Hispanic high school students at Rancho High School that she wasn’t sure the images featured were of Latinos at all. “You know, I don’t know that all of you are Latino. Some of you look a little more Asian to me,” she said, in an effort to defuse a situation that, judging by the renewed backlash, only reinforced the argument of those who have charged her with racial insensitivity, and other more serious labels. But racial consciousness permeates every election cycle, and racially tinged tactics aren’t a new practice in American politics. Because say what you will about them — they often work. Racial politics aren’t always, or only, about racism. Get-outthe-vote efforts that targeted black and Hispanic communities are credited in large part for turning the tide in certain swing states toward President Barack Obama in 2008. Across Nevada, Hispanic activists are trying to reactivate that momentum for the 2010 cycle. Efforts to suppress the vote can also come from within a community — as is taking place in Nevada. On Monday, a group called “Latinos for Reform” — an independent political organization that is not subject to disclosure rules — joined the electoral fray, with two commercials urging Hispanics to sit out the election. The group made a name for itself during the 2008 election cycle campaigning against Obama, on the grounds that he favored blacks over Hispanics. The leader of that group, Robert Deposada, a conservative pundit on Spanish-language Univision who once ran President George W. Bush’s commission to advance privatization of Social Security, said Hispanics should boycott the polls because Obama has not yet delivered on his campaign promise to tackle immigration reform. Other Hispanic activists immediately decried the advertisements. “No Nevadan should be silenced or have their vote suppressed, especially those in the Hispanic community, who have been disproportionately impacted during these tough economic times,” said Luis Valera, vice president of Las Vegas’ Latin Chamber of Commerce. Valera was joined by other Hispanic leaders in calling for Republican candidates Angle and Brian Sandoval — himself a Hispanic — to denounce the ads, and for radio, television, and Internet providers to pull the plug on the commercials. The Latinos for Reform commercial campaign to suppress the Hispanic vote, whether or not by design, may complement Angle’s efforts to turn out the anti-illegal immigrant vote. Angle’s commercial — which is no longer airing, after a copyright infringement tiff with Getty Images over the featured photograph — isn’t the first commercial to have earned charges of race-baiting. David Vitter, a Republican senator from Louisiana campaigning for re-election, is earning as much, if not more, vitriol for a series of anti-illegal immigration commercials — one of which used the same photo — that juxtaposed white and Hispanic people in a way that portrays Hispanics as outsiders. Hispanic advocates have also likened Angle’s ad to the nowinfamous Willie Horton ad of 1988, and Jesse Helms’ 1990 Senate campaign, which featured a pair of white hands crumpling up a letter as a narrator said: “You needed that job, but they had to give it to a minority.” Both were heavily criticized at the time they aired for racially motivated fear-mongering. But in both of those instances, the candidates airing the controversial ads won. And Vitter? Despite a past term that even put the senator at the center of a national callgirl controversy, he’s leading his opponent by double-digits. To be sure, the Hispanic populations of Louisiana and Nevada aren’t comparable. At 26 percent of the state population, and 15 percent of the 2008 electorate, Hispanics in Nevada represent a potentially election-swinging force in the midterm race. Hispanic advocates have said that Hispanics are a unique force to be reckoned with — and warned that the community in Nevada will respond to efforts to sideline, stereotype, and marginalize them by turning out in droves to the polls. But those numbers weren’t visible this weekend, at a pair of campaign rallies headlined by gubernatorial candidate Rory Reid and Senate candidate Harry Reid, who commented in his remarks at the small size of the crowd. Hispanic leaders admit the ad worries them. With voters already angry about the economy, worried about jobs, frustrated by inaction — especially on immigration reform — in Washington and punch drunk from near-constant negative campaign commercials, they know the ad could keep people from the polls. “Of course I’m worried,” said Fernando Romero, president of Hispanics in Politics, a nonpartisan group that encourages Latinos to be politically active, adding that immigration trumps jobs and the economy as Hispanic voters’ top concern. “We should all be worried.” “Please go out and vote,” pleaded Democrat Assemblyman Ruben Kihuen, a state Senate candidate, at an appearance with other Hispanic leaders to respond to the advertisements. “We can’t let them win.” Sun reporter Delen Goldberg contributed to this story. karoun@lasvegassun.com / 202-662-7436 County set to approve liquor store at McCarran It won’t be long before tourists can buy liquor in the baggage claim area of McCarran International Airport, the first such setup in the United States. The Clark County Commission appears poised to approve an airport liquor store contract today with Lee’s Runway Liquor LLC. At 49 pages, the contract says Clark County will keep 15 percent of the store’s gross revenue. An airport spokeswoman did not know if projections for gross revenue had been made by airport staff. The store will be allowed to sell liquor directly to customers or through the Internet, with customers picking up their online purchases in an “assigned area.” The contract also gives the county the right to change its percentage after three years. Hours of operation would be from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m., seven days as a week. The contract specifically says that the hours may be increased at any time “but may only be decreased with prior written approval.” The liquor store must open no later than 120 days after the contract is approved, unless an extension is granted in writing. Detailed plans of the store must be completed by the business within 90 days of the signed agreement. Lee’s Runway Liquor scored higher than other applicants, and the commission voted 5-2 in August to allow the county to negotiate a lease. McCarran operations are not funded by taxpayers but by revenue from leases to airport vendors and fees to airlines. — Joe Schoenmann Decision to scuttle drug regulation under scrutiny CARSON CITY — Two state senators from Clark County aren’t happy that the state Board of Pharmacy has scuttled a proposed regulation to tighten the storage of prescription drugs. Sen. Maggie Carlton, D-Las Vegas, has expressed concern about the safety of the flu vaccine being shipped into the Las Vegas area. Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-Las Vegas, is wondering why the pharmacy board backpedaled on the proposed regulation. They expressed their concerns Friday at a meeting of the Legislative Committee on Regulations. The regulation, adopted by the pharmacy board, required that a refrigerator storing drugs must be kept at a temperature of 36 to 46 degrees. And a storage freezer must be maintained at below 32 degrees. If the temperature rises above those levels, the pharmacist must determine if these prescription drugs should be discarded. But the pharmacy board withdrew the regulation before it could be considered and approved. Larry Pinson, executive director of the pharmacy board, told the legislative committee that current regulations are adequate and the industry opposed the regulation. He said his inspectors are checking for the safe handling of prescription drugs. A bill is expected to be introduced in the 2011 Legislature to clearly set temperature limits. — Cy Ryan Former Nye County sheriff candidate sues over arrest There’s more drama in Nye County politics, law enforcement and government, with former sheriff’s candidate Ted Holmes suing the county and four officials over his March arrest. An attorney for Holmes, whose full name is Robert Ted Holmes, filed the civil rights complaint Friday in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas. The suit alleges Holmes’ arrest March 12 on charges of impersonating an officer and resisting arrest caused him to lose in the June primary election and violated his civil rights. A Nye County sheriff’s office news release on the arrest said an out-of-state law enforcement officer who was in Pahrump on official business was approached by Holmes at the Pahrump Nugget. The officer reported that Holmes flashed some sort of “deputy” badge at him and advised him he was committing a crime by having his gun visible with a badge from another state, the sheriff’s office said at the time. — Steve Green