June 2 is the "sine die" of the 83rd Nevada Legislative Session.
With about two weeks left in the Nevada Legislature, lawmakers will be quite busy.
Both the Assembly and Senate floors will be busy this week ahead of the second house passage deadline this Friday.
However, last Friday's deadline saw multiple bills die.
Some of the notable ones include Assembly Bill 81, also known as the "Lock the Clock" Act.
That bill would have made Nevada stay on standard time the entire year.
Another is Senate Bill 180. The Nevada Trucking Association was against that bill being passed that would increase insurance costs.
The assisted suicide bill that Nevada Governor Joe Lombardo said he would veto months ago is also officially dead.
There are still plenty of bills making their way through the legislature, though.
Assembly Bill 375, that would allow restaurants to sell to-go alcoholic drinks and make Picon Punch the state's drink is still alive.
The animal cruelty bill, also known as Reba's Law, which looks to strengthen consequences for those guilty of animal abuse, remains alive.
The movie studios bill is still up for consideration as well as a bill to criminalize AI child porn.
AB198, also known as Lizzy's Law, which would impose stronger regulations on inflatable devices after a little girl was killed in one a few years back is still progressing.
After the second house deadline, budget bills and exempt bills from committee will be discussed next week.
Once bills pass their second house, they will await a final vote from Governor Lombardo.
The governor has announced four massive priority bills.
So far, the only one with any movement is his Nevada Housing Access and Attainability Act.
It finally passed out of its first committee on Friday.
There were some notable amendments to the bill.
Some changes include lowering the attainable housing account from $200 million to $150 million.
Another would remove the exemption of prevailing wages, and it would require that the Housing Division submit annual reports to the Interim Finance Committee.
Lombardo's education bill is scheduled to have its first hearing Tuesday in the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
As of this writing, Lombardo's other two bills, the one centered around public safety and the other centered around health care, do not have any hearings scheduled.
