Nevada Secretary of State

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The Secretary of State for Nevada is the third highest ranking state official, behind the governor and lieutenant governor. The office is responsible for maintaining the official records of the acts of the state legislature and of the executive branch of of the Nevada government.

Current officeholder

The current officeholder is Ross Miller. Elected in 2006 at the age of 30, he was the youngest Secretary of State in the history of Nevada and currently the youngest Secretary of State in the country. [1]

Authority

The state Constitution addresses the office of the secretary of state in Article V, the Executive Department.

Under Article V, Section 19:

A Secretary of State, a Treasurer, a Controller, and an Attorney General, shall be elected at the same time and places, and in the same manner as the Governor.

Qualifications

There are no specific qualifications for this office.

Elections

See also: States with gubernatorial term limits, State legislatures with term limits

The Secretary of State for Nevada is a publicly elected official who serves a term of four years in length. As specified in Article V, Section 19 of the Nevada State Constitution, a term-limit of two four year terms is imposed on those who occupy this statewide position.

Duties

The secretary of state acts as the official record-keeper of the state of Nevada, and is the keeper of the State Seal of Nevada. The secretary also maintains the official bond of the state treasurer, and serves on the State Board of Prison Commissioners, the State Board of Examiners, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Governing Board, the State Records Committee, the State Advisory Committee on Participatory Democracy and the Executive Branch Audit Committee.

The secretary also maintains the state's registry of living wills and advance medical directives, and maintains a list of ministers and clergy in the state.

Divisions

The secretary of state is organized into four divisions: Commercial recordings, Elections, Notary and Securities.

  • Commercial Recordings: is responsible for accepting, filing, and providing public access to organizational documents of business entities. This department is also in charge of the Commercial Recordings Division which registers trade names, trademarks, service marks, and rights of publicity.
  • Elections Division: certifies candidates, registers and files campaign finance reports, certifies ballot questions, supervises elections, and reports and certifies primary and general elections. This Division also administers the Confidential Address Program for victims of domestic violence.
  • Notaries Division: this office is responsible for appointing, training Notaries Public serving in Nevada. The division is also responsible for administering the state's digital signature laws.
  • Securities Division: licenses individuals that sell securities, registers securities offerings, and enforces the civil and criminal provisions of the state security laws. It also licenses sport agents.

Electoral history

2006

2006 Race for Secretary of State - Democratic Primary [2]
Party Candidate Vote Percentage
     Democratic Party Approveda Ross Miller 60.6%
     Democratic Party Roderick Boyd 19.4%
     Write-In 20.0%
Total Votes 112,800
2006 Race for Secretary of State - General Election [3]
Party Candidate Vote Percentage
     Democratic Party Approveda Ross Miller 48.7%
     Republican Party Danny Tarkanian 40.6%
     Reform Party Janine Hansen 6.8%
     Write-In 3.9%
Total Votes 573,638

2010

See also: Nevada Secretary of State election, 2010

Democratic Primary

  • 2010 Race for Secretary of State - Democratic Primary
  • Ross Miller ran unopposed in this contest

Republican Primary

  • 2010 Race for Secretary of State - Republican Primary

General Election

2010 Race for Secretary of State - General Election [4]
Party Candidate Vote Percentage
     Democratic Party Approveda Ross Miller 53.2%
     Republican Party Rob Lauer 37.3%
     American Independent Party John Wagner 6.0%
     None of these candidates 3.6%
Total Votes 703,513

Role in the initiative process

Before a petition may be circulated in Nevada it must first be submitted to the secretary of state. The ballot description must abide by the petition guidelines and consist of a 200 words or less description.

Signature Verification

After a petition has been circulated, signatures and all other documents relating to the petition should be submitted to the County Clerk in the respective county in which the petition was circulated.

The County Clerk will do a raw count of all the signatures and forward the number to the secretary of state within 4 days. If the raw count returns at 100% of signatures required to qualify a ballot then the Secretary of State will notify the County Clerk to verify the rest of the signatures.

If more than 500 signatures have been submitted, the County Clerk will verify 500 or 5% (whichever is greater) signatures. A sponsor of the petition is allowed to witness the verification process. Upon the competition of this process the County Clerk forward the petition and certificate of the signature results to the Secretary of State. The County Clerk will also notify the secretary of names that wrote in to be removed from the petition at this time. The entire process must be completed within 9 days after the initial notification.

If the random sampling of signatures has between 90% or greater, but less than 100% the secretary of state will have the County Clerk reexamine the signatures for verification. This means that each signature must be re-verified within 12 days after receiving the order from the secretary of state.

Ballot Question

Once the initiative is qualified for the ballot, the secretary of state must draft the ballot as question. Upon consultation with the Nevada attorney general the secretary will write the ballot as a question and a short summary of the ballot. The office is also obligated to determined the fiscal impact of the measure with Fiscal Analysis division of the Legislative Counsel Bureau. The Secretary then assigns the ballot question a number for the General Election Ballot.

Ballot Summary

The secretary of state may reject any arguments found to be libelous or factually inaccurate. The office also may make arguments more clear and concise as long as the message of the argument is not altered.

Appealing the Secretary of State

  • Proponents of a ballot may challenge the Secretary of State within 5 working days after receipt of signature sufficiency is filed.
  • Committees may appeal the reject of a statement by the Secretary of State within 5 days of the rejection to the First Judicial Court. No later than 3 days after the complaint is filed will the Court rule on the matter.

Compensation

In 2010, the Nevada Secretary of State was paid an estimated $97,000 according to the Council of State Governments.[5]

Contact Information

Capitol Address:
Nevada

Nevada State Capitol Building
101 North Carson Street, Suite 3
Carson City, NV 89701

Phone: (775) 684-5708
Fax: (775) 684-5725
Email: sosmail@sos.nv.gov

See also

External links

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Portions of this article were adapted from Wikipedia.

References

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