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According to source, Smoking on college campuses in Nevada, people can do it just about anywhere outside, but that may all change.
Assemblyman Paul Aizley, D-Las Vegas, is proposing to make all higher education campuses in Nevada smoke-free.
“Students at one of our campuses should be able to walk in between campuses, go outside to the student union, go to the health club and not have to inhale secondhand smoke. That’s the whole purpose of my bill,” said Aizley.
His smoke-free proposal will affect these 8 locations: University of Nevada Reno, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Truckee Meadows Community College, Western Nevada College, College of Southern Nevada, Nevada State College, Desert Research Institute, and the Nevada System of Higher Education Chancellor’s Office.
This draft bill doesn’t designate where people can smoke, but Assemblyman Aizley says he is open to suggestions.
“I need to have someone tell me what those places should be,” explained Aizley. “The current bill is no smoking anywhere, the rest can be done with an amendment and changes as people bring them in.”
Many students at University of Nevada, Reno were thrilled about making the campus smoke free.
“It’s just kind of another step in the right direction to clean up our campus,” said UNR student, Kyle Devries.
“It just doesn’t smell good,” said another classmate Stephen Colombo. “It’s just that puff of smoke and everything…you just feel so dirty.”
Others say smokers will still find a way around it.
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According to source, Governor Sandoval proposed cuts in higher education funding during his State of the State Address Monday and now college students are waiting to see how deep the budget axe will cut.
Sandoval told Nevadans he’s giving the University Board of Regents 17 percent less money and having them figure out what to cut. Higher education leaders are now on the defensive, deciding between tuition hikes or fewer classes.
UNLV’s Greek organizations continue Recruitment Week while worrying about budget cuts proposed by Governor Sandoval that could lead to tuition hikes.
“He needs to stop increasing them because there’s a lot of students who are already struggling especially with the economy and everything. A lot of parents don’t have jobs,” said Karla Ramirez, UNLV freshman.
“It’s hard enough to get federal loans for money. I’ll have to take out loans as opposed to being able to pay for a semester out of pocket,” said Teri Marx, UNLV graduate student.
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