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Nevada schools received $700M from cannabis since 2018. It’s still a drop in the bucket.

Policy experts say the tax revenue is "unequivocally" going to Nevada schools after lawmakers stopped funneling dollars to the state's rainy day fund.
Rocio Hernandez
Rocio Hernandez
EducationK-12 Education
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Mature cannabis plants as seen in a grow room during a tour of Green Life Productions.

Are schools getting tax money from Nevada’s cannabis industry? 

It’s a question that’s come up again and again since 2016 when Nevada voted to legalize recreational marijuana in the state — in part on the promise to raise school funding. 

The short answer: Yes, Nevada schools are benefiting from the cannabis taxes.

But the revenue generated isn’t enough to move the needle much for state K-12 education funding. 

There are two excise taxes placed on the sale of recreational marijuana: a 15 percent wholesale tax, included in the original ballot question and primarily paid by marijuana businesses, and a 10 percent retail tax added by the Legislature in 2017 that is primarily paid by consumers. 

Democratic lawmakers in 2017 moved to place the revenue from the retail tax into the state’s rainy day fund — a move (reversed two years later) that still leads to a steady stream of questions and accusations that cannabis tax dollars aren’t going to education.

Today, all proceeds from the retail tax and the majority of proceeds from the wholesale tax (portions of which fund the Cannabis Compliance Board and local governments’ costs) are among the roughly 20 revenue sources that make up the state education fund, which funds Nevada’s public schools.  

A new report by the Guinn Center for Policy Priorities found that since 2018, the two cannabis taxes have raised nearly $716 million in K-12 education funding. Last year alone, the taxes brought in $108 million for schools. 

“The tax is dedicated to the state education fund by statute, and the state has complied with that, and the Legislature is budgeted that way as such,” said the report’s author, Mark Krmpotic, the Guinn Center’s interim director of economic and fiscal policy. “That is unequivocal at this point, and has been that case for several years.”

Anna Colquitt, the Guinn Center’s director of education policy, estimates that the seven years of tax revenue equals out to roughly $1,500 per student.

Although it seems like a big number, the cannabis tax revenue is a drop in the bucket, making up about 2 percent of compared to the $12.9 billion budgeted for K-12 education for next two years, which includes $11.5 billion for the state’s funding formula for K-12 education. 

Colquitt and Krmpotic said that while cannabis taxes are an important piece of how Nevada funds K-12 education, the roughly $225 per pupil it brought in last year isn’t enough to close the $4,000 gap between the state’s per-pupil funding and the national average. 

“It was never going to solve all of our problems in education,” Colquitt said. “I think maybe that was the perception, but that wasn't rooted in any substantial fact.”

Krmpotic noted that total revenue from Nevada’s cannabis taxes is declining — a trend he’s seen in other states. 

It comes as other funding streams for Nevada K-12 education, such as the sales tax and room tax, have also taken a hit

“As we're seeing decreases in other areas as well, if that’s an additional area of decreased funding when we're trying to go in the upwards direction, it's alarming,” Colquitt said. 


A Reno High School hallway.
Reno High School on March 14, 2018. (David Calvert/The Nevada Independent)

News briefs 

🏫 Washoe County district attorney charging 27 students accused of school vandalism — The Washoe County District Attorney's Office announced Friday it’s charging 27 students in connection with May vandalism that resulted in $6,000 worth of damage at Reno High School that included hate slurs and symbols sprayed on campus

The majority of those individuals are age 18 and are current or former Reno High students. 

Washoe County School Board President Beth Smith said in a statement it “brings a sense of closure to a deeply upsetting event that affected Reno High School, the Washoe County School District, and the entire community.” 

“The crimes that occurred weren’t just property damage — they were an attack on a place that means so much to students, staff, families, and alumni,” she said. 

Superintendent Joe Ernst said the district also took disciplinary action against the students who were involved. 

“Together, we’re making it clear: This kind of behavior has real consequences,” he said. 

💲Clark County among the top school districts at greatest risk in federal fund freeze — An analysis by New America, a liberal think tank, puts the Clark County School District (CCSD) among the top 100 school districts set to lose the most funding in the latest federal funding freeze by the Trump administration. The Department of Education announced in late June it was withholding $6 billion in federal grant money that was expected to be distributed to programs nationwide, pending a review. The move has led to uncertainties about when or if the funds will be released.

The analysis estimates that $21 million dedicated for CCSD is at risk. The funds include grants for migrant education, educator development, student support and enrichment and English language learners. More than 15 percent of CCSD students during the 2023-24 school year were English language learners, according to the latest data by the Nevada Department of Education. 


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Three district leaders worry that the bill and its new requirements will put in place standards impossible to meet as they are confronting funding challenges.

The child tax credit is changing. Here’s what it means for your family.

President Donald Trump’s tax and spending package increases the tax credit from $2,000 to $2,200, but it also adds new parameters to qualify for the credit that will directly affect immigrants and the lowest-income families.

Trump admin freezes after-school, English learner grants; $56M for Nevada on hold
The move, which affects more than $6 billion in grants nationwide, leaves states and schools in limbo as they budget for programs this summer and in the upcoming school year.


Featured social media post 

Great news for the school’s future 400 students. 

A post from the Storey County School District about the groundbreaking day of Virginia City Combined School.

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