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Tax breaks backed for buyers of energy-efficient houses
CARSON CITY — Nevadans who buy energy-efficient houses will get big tax breaks under a proposal that won unanimous approval Friday in a key Senate committee.
Senate Commerce and Labor Chairman Randolph Townsend, R-Reno, said the goal of Senate Bill 437 is to help Nevada become a leader in renewable energy, and ease its dependence on out-of-state energy producers. Nevada is already producing more solar power per capita than any other state, he said.
Under the bill, consumers “are going to see a greater chance of stability in their rates, and a greater chance of taking spikes out of energy prices,” said Townsend.
The bill offers 10-year property tax breaks of up to 50 percent for home buyers who purchase houses that meet national “green” building standards. In previous hearings, builders who make such homes said that those tax breaks could add up to $30,000 over 10 years. Some facilities that produce renewable energy also would get the tax cuts.
The committee amended those tax breaks Friday, ruling out a break on certain property taxes that goes to schools.
The proposal also includes regulatory changes for natural gas, and requires utility companies to set their rates quarterly, rather than annually.
The bill also requires home sellers to do an energy audit on a building before they sell it, and mandates that real estate brokers and salespeople be trained in energy efficiency standards.
Committee members voted to incorporate several measures from two other bills into SB 437. Senate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, sponsored Senate Bill 427, a bill to expand a program offering energy credits to solar power generators, and create similar programs for homeowners who produce wind or water power.
Titus’ bill was rolled into SB 437 along with a proposal to exempt Clark County School District, which produces some of its own energy, from certain utility regulations.
Also on Friday, the Nevada Assembly passed Assembly Bill 7, which would require Nevada utilities prove they acted “prudently” in purchasing fuel before passing those costs on to consumers.
Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, had testified for AB 7, saying it was a reaction to a 2006 Nevada Supreme Court decision that allowed Las Vegas-based Nevada Power Co. to pass on $180 million in costs to customers.