Nevada Code § 223.920

Duties of Director
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
The
Director of the Office for New Americans created by NRS 223.910 shall ensure that the Office:
1. Serves as the coordinating office for
each state agency that is responsible for a program that provides services to
immigrants in this State, including, without limitation, a program that:
(a) Relates to professional licensing,
registration, permitting or similar types of authorization issued by a
regulatory body;
(b) Connects immigrants to entrepreneurial and
other business resources and workforce development training and programs; and
(c) Assists immigrants in areas relating to
quality of life, including, without limitation, education, housing and health
care.
2. Reviews and analyzes the policies and
programs of state agencies relating to immigrants and makes recommendations to
the Governor on such policies and programs, including, without limitation, the
elimination of duplication in existing state programs.
3. Provides information and assistance
relating to issues affecting immigrants to state agencies, both directly and by
serving as a clearinghouse for information received from state agencies, other
departments of the State Government, political subdivisions of this State, any
other state or the Federal Government.
4. Engages in state and federal advocacy
and makes recommendations concerning law and policy affecting immigrants to
advance economic and population growth in this State.
5. Develops sustainable partnerships with
community foundations and other nonprofit and private sector entities that
serve immigrant communities in this State.
6. Employs a person to serve as the
language access coordinator who:
(a) Coordinates with:
(1) Each board of county commissioners and
each governing body of a city required to develop a language access plan
pursuant to NRS 244.184 or 268.01925 , as applicable;
(2) Refugee resettlement agencies in this
State to identify gaps in programs provided by those agencies; and
(3) State agencies to assist in efforts to
resettle, integrate and assimilate refugees in this State;
(b) Provides oversight, central coordination,
consultation and technical assistance to any state agency, board of county
commissioners and governing body of a city in the implementation of language
access plans;
(c) Provides any state agency, board of county
commissioners and governing body of a city with a policy manual containing
baseline policies and procedures for compliance with language access plans;
(d) Maintains a publicly available roster of
language interpreters and translators in positions that regularly have contact
with the public and the languages each interpreter or translator speaks;
(e) Trains any state agency, board of county
commissioners and governing body of a city to effectively recruit and retain
language interpreters and translators and to support the recruitment and
retention process;
(f) Receives and investigates complaints relating
to language access against any state agency, board of county commissioners or
governing body of a city and works with the Director to resolve such
complaints;
(g) Implements an annual budget and procurement
strategy for expenses related to state language access plans; and
(h) Provides any local government with the
demographical information of persons with limited English proficiency who are
constituents of the local government.
7. On or before September 30 of each
even-numbered year, submits a report to the Director of the Legislative Counsel
Bureau for transmittal to the Legislature or, if the Legislature is not in
session, to the Legislative Commission, that sets forth any recommendations for
legislation relating to language access plans of state agencies or local
governments.
8. As used in this section, person with
limited English proficiency has the meaning ascribed to it in NRS 232.0081 .

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.