Nevada Code § 289.510

Peace Officers Standards and Training Commission: Powers and duties; regulations; construction of section
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1. The Commission:
(a) Shall meet at the call of the Chair, who must
be elected by a majority vote of the members of the Commission.
(b) Shall provide for and encourage the training
and education of persons whose primary duty is law enforcement to ensure the
safety of the residents of and visitors to this State.
(c) May make necessary inquiries to determine
whether the agencies of this State and of the local governments are complying
with standards set forth in the regulations adopted pursuant to subsection 2.
(d) Shall carry out the duties required of the
Commission pursuant to NRS 432B.610 and 432B.620 .
(e) May perform any other acts that may be
necessary and appropriate to the functions of the Commission as set forth in NRS 289.450 to 289.680 , inclusive.
(f) May enter into an interlocal agreement with
an Indian tribe to provide training to and certification of persons employed as
police officers by that Indian tribe.
(g) Shall develop and approve a standard
curriculum of certified training programs in crisis intervention, which may be
made available in an electronic format, and which address specialized responses
to persons with mental illness and train peace officers to identify the signs
and symptoms of mental illness, to de-escalate situations involving persons who
appear to be experiencing a behavioral health crisis and, if appropriate, to
connect such persons to treatment. A peace officer who completes any program
developed pursuant to this paragraph must be issued a certificate of
completion.
2. The Commission shall adopt regulations
establishing minimum standards for:
(a) The certification and decertification,
recruitment, selection and training of peace officers. The standards adopted
pursuant to this paragraph must:
(1) Establish requirements for evaluations
to be conducted during the recruitment and selection of peace officers, which
must identify implicit bias on the part of a peace officer on the basis of
race, color, religion, national origin, physical or mental disability, sexual
orientation or gender identity or expression;
(2) Establish requirements for basic
training for category I, category II and category III peace officers and
reserve peace officers;
(3) Establish standards for programs for
the continuing education of peace officers, including minimum courses of study
and requirements concerning attendance, which must require that all peace
officers annually complete not less than 12 hours of continuing education in
courses that address:
(I) Racial profiling;
(II) Mental health, including,
without limitation, crisis intervention;
(III) The well-being of officers;
(IV) Implicit bias recognition;
(V) De-escalation;
(VI) Human trafficking;
(VII) Firearms; and
(VIII) Interactions with persons
with developmental disabilities which may include, without limitation, training
on recognizing and responding to persons with an autism spectrum disorder;
(4) Establish qualifications for instructors
of peace officers;
(5) Establish requirements for the
certification of a course of training;
(6) Require all peace officers to receive
training in the handling of cases involving abuse or neglect of children or
missing children;
(7) Require all peace officers to receive
training in the handling of cases involving abuse, neglect, exploitation,
isolation and abandonment of older persons or vulnerable persons;
(8) Not prohibit the certification of an
applicant solely on the basis that the applicant has engaged in the adult use
of cannabis or the medical use of cannabis;
(9) Not require the decertification of a
peace officer solely on the basis that the peace officer has engaged in the
adult use of cannabis or the medical use of cannabis; and
(10) Require the decertification of a
peace officer upon a determination by the Commission that the peace officer
knowingly provided false or misleading information in his or her application
for certification.
(b) An annual behavioral wellness visit for peace
officers to aid in preserving the emotional and mental health of the peace
officer and assessing any conditions that may affect the performance of duties
by the peace officer.
(c) The reciprocity of a person who has been
certified as a category III peace officer or its equivalent by the certifying
authority of another state or who has successfully completed a federal law
enforcement training program that is equivalent to a category III peace officer
in this State.
3. The regulations adopted by the
Commission pursuant to subsection 2:
(a) Apply to all agencies of this State and of
local governments in this State that employ persons as peace officers; and
(b) May require that training be carried on at
institutions which it approves in those regulations.
4. Nothing in this section shall be
construed to prohibit a law enforcement agency from adopting a policy that
requires a peace officer to submit to a screening test as:
(a) A condition precedent to employment; or
(b) A condition for continued employment.

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