This bill makes an appropriation to the Outdoor Education and Recreation Grant Program Account. With this investment, Nevada students will have more equitable access to outdoor education opportunities—helping ensure that every student, regardless of background, can learn, explore, and thrive in Nevada’s great outdoors.
Climate change does not affect everyone equally. Across Nevada, frontline communities, lower-income neighborhoods, rural counties, communities of color, Indigenous communities, face disproportionate burdens.
Here are key impacts and realities:
Heat stress and extreme heat days are rising, putting seniors, children, outdoor workers, and unhoused neighbors at greater peril
Water scarcity and shifting precipitation reduce access to clean water; in some Native American households, lack of indoor plumbing is more frequent than the national average
Wildfire smoke affects air quality, undermining health, especially asthma and respiratory conditions, in neighborhoods already burdened by pollution
Flooding, infrastructure strain, and storm extremes destabilize communities without robust resources
We are taught to care for the vulnerable, protect the stranger, steward the earth. Our moral purpose demands that we turn our faith into climate justice action.
Step into the work: volunteer on resilience projects, advocate for clean energy policies, support affected neighborhoods, lift your voice for justice.
Nevada Day honors the milestone of our statehood when Nevada became the 36th state. Today, we celebrate our history and the resilient, independent spirit that continues to shape the Silver State. At LEAN, we remain committed to advocating for the common good and for a Nevada where all can thrive.
Over 505,000 Nevadans rely on SNAP benefits — that’s 1 in 6 of our neighbors.
Beginning November 1, federal funding for SNAP administration will run dry. This halt in benefits is expected to push many families to turn to emergency-style food assistance, such as drive-through food banks, instead of their usual grocery stores.
To help bridge the gap, the State of Nevada has committed $38 million for November to support food distribution. This funding will go directly to the Food Bank of Northern Nevada (FBNN) and Three Square in Southern Nevada to purchase bulk food supplies and distribute them to hundreds of community partners after the state was denied access to the USDA’s SNAP database. An additional $200,000 will fund the Nevada National Guard to assist with food distribution efforts.
Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada (LEAN) urges Lutherans across the state to take action. Contact your Members of Congress through the ELCA Action Center and urge them to protect and restore SNAP benefits for Nevada families.
Together, we can help ensure that every Nevadan has enough to eat.