Nevada Code § 711.255

Video service provided to tenants: Prohibited conduct by landlord; responsibilities of provider; payment of compensation for access; rights and duties regarding construction, installation, repair and purchase of facilities; certain discounts prohibited
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1. A landlord shall not:
(a) Interfere with the receipt of service by a
tenant from a video service provider or discriminate against a tenant for
receiving service from a video service provider.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection 3,
demand or accept payment of any fee, charge or valuable consideration from a
video service provider or a tenant in exchange for granting access to the
provider to provide service to the tenant.
2. A video service provider which desires
to provide service to a tenant shall give 30 days written notice of that
desire to the landlord before the provider takes any action to provide that
service. Before authorizing the receipt of such service, a landlord may:
(a) Take such reasonable steps as are necessary
to ensure that the safety, function and appearance of the premises and the
convenience and safety of persons on the property are not adversely affected by
the installation, construction, operation or maintenance of the facilities
necessary to provide the service, and is entitled to be reimbursed by the
provider for the reasonable expenses incurred;
(b) Require that the cost of the installation,
construction, operation, maintenance or removal of the necessary facilities be
borne by the provider; and
(c) Require the provider to provide evidence that
the provider will indemnify the landlord for any damage caused by the installation,
construction, operation, maintenance or removal of the facilities.
3. A landlord is entitled to receive
reasonable compensation for any direct adverse economic effect resulting from
granting access to a video service provider. There is a rebuttable presumption
that the direct adverse economic effect resulting from granting access to the
real property of the landlord is $1,000 or $1 for each dwelling unit thereon,
whichever sum is greater. If a landlord intends to require the payment of such
compensation in an amount exceeding that sum, the landlord shall notify the
provider in writing of that intention. If the provider does not receive such a
notice within 20 days after the landlord is notified by the provider that a
tenant has requested the provider to provide service to the tenant on the
landlords premises, the landlord may not require compensation for access to
that tenants dwelling unit in an amount exceeding $1,000. If within 30 days
after receiving a landlords request for compensation in an amount exceeding
$1,000, the provider has not agreed to pay the requested amount or an amount
mutually acceptable to the provider and the landlord, the landlord may petition
a court of competent jurisdiction to set a reasonable amount of compensation
for the damage of or taking of the landlords real property. Such an action
must be filed within 6 months after the date the provider completes
construction.
4. In establishing the amount which will
constitute reasonable compensation for any damage or taking claim by a landlord
in excess of the sum established by rebuttable presumption pursuant to
subsection 3, the court shall consider:
(a) The extent to which the facilities of the
video service provider physically occupy the premises;
(b) The actual long-term damage which the
facilities of the video service provider may cause to the premises;
(c) The extent to which the facilities of the
video service provider would interfere with the normal use and enjoyment of the
premises; and
(d) The diminution or enhancement in value of the
premises resulting from the availability of the service.
5. The right of a video service provider
to construct, install or repair its facilities and maintain its services within
and upon the landlords premises is not affected or impaired because the
landlord requests compensation in an amount exceeding the sum established by
rebuttable presumption pursuant to subsection 3, or files an action to assert a
specific claim against the provider.
6. A video service provider shall not offer
a special discount or other benefit to a particular group of tenants as an
incentive for those tenants to request service from the provider, unless the
same discount or benefit is offered generally in the county.
7. A video service provider and a landlord
shall negotiate in good faith for the purchase of the landlords existing cable
facilities rather than for the construction of new facilities on the premises.
8. As used in this section, landlord
means an owner of real property, or the owners authorized representative, who
provides a dwelling unit on the real property for occupancy by another for
valuable consideration. The term includes, without limitation, the lessor of a
mobile home lot and the lessor or operator of a mobile home park.

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