POLL INDICATES VOTER SUPPORT FOR A GREENER
NEVADA
June 2, 2000
Nevada -- Nevada voters are extremely concerned about clean water
and air, and 84 percent say that environmental issues play a role
in how they make their voting decision, according to a statewide
poll released today.
Greenberg Quinlan Research, Inc. polled 600 Nevadans likely to
vote in the 2000 election and found that voters in all parts of
the state and across party lines have a strong commitment to environmental
protection. The poll was conducted between February 29 and March
5, 2000 for the League of Conservation Voters Education Fund.
"For the first time, a comprehensive statewide poll on
environmental issues has been conducted in Nevada and the results
show that Nevada is greener than expected," said Kaitlin
Backlund, Executive Director of Citizen Alert.
Support for stronger environmental protection was wide spread
across many key issues such as clean water and air, wilderness
protection, the proposed nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain,
urban sprawl, and toxic pollution. Concern about clean water
and air (61 percent) falls below concern about crime and drugs
(75 percent) and education (70 percent) but ranks significantly
ahead of taxes (54 percent).
"Nevadans clearly oppose pollution of our water and air.
Policy makers need to reflect this broad based concern and address
the industries that contribute to toxic pollution," said
Tom Myers, Director of Great Basin Mine Watch.
The majority of Nevadans do not believe that there must be a
trade-off between the environment and the economy. Of those who
do believe there is a trade-off, a greater number of voters would
choose the environment over the economy.
"This poll clearly shows that Nevadans understand the
relationship between a healthy environment and a healthy economy,"
said Matt Holford, Executive Director of Nevada Trout Unlimited.
"The fact is that Nevadans believe that clean water and healthy
ecosystems can go hand in hand with improved local economies and
quality of life. It's high time Nevada's lawmakers listen to
the people and make natural resource protection a top policy priority."
Although more Nevadans believe that government generally does
the right thing rather than the wrong thing on the environment,
70 percent of voters believe that the laws protecting the environment
are either not strong enough or are not being enforced.
"Contrary to what many of our legislators believe, Nevadans
want more environmental protection and enforcement, not less,"
said Marge Sill, of the Toiyabe Chapter of Sierra Club. "I
think we will see the environment take center stage in the public
policy debate, from the protection of public lands in Nevada to
urban sprawl to water allocation."
Highlights of the poll include:
- Voters in Nevada are nearly unanimous
(84 percent) in saying that environmental issues are an important
consideration in making a voting decision.
- When given a choice, more than
7 in 10 voters (71 percent) say they would favor a candidate
who would act in the best interests of the environment over
a candidate who would reduce the regulatory burden on business.
- Clean air and water is in the
top tier of issues that Nevada’s voters are concerned about.
When thinking about the future, 61 percent of voters are extremely
concerned about clean air and water. While this falls behind
crime and drugs (75 percent) and education (70 percent), it
ranks significantly ahead of taxes (54 percent).
- The overwhelming majority of Nevadans
(68 percent) do not believe that there has to be a tradeoff
between the environment and the economy. Among those who do
believe there is a tradeoff, a greater number of likely voters
would choose a clean environment over a strong economy (48 percent
environment - 45 percent economy).
- Nevadans want more environmental
protection, not less. Slightly more Nevadans believe that government
generally does the right thing rather than the wrong thing on
the environment (48 percent right thing, 36 percent wrong thing).
However, 70 percent of voters believe that the laws protecting
the environment are either not strong enough or are not being
enforced sufficiently.
- Nevada’s voters are sensitive
to special interest money influencing elected official to vote
against environmental protections. Eighty percent of voters
think that campaign contributions influence how elected officials
vote on environmental issues. More voters than not (36 - 25
percent) think that contributions usually work against
environmental protections.
- Nevadans are particularly concerned
about the quality and quantity of water in their dry state,
and they are also concerned about toxic chemicals, the Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste storage facility and clean air.
- When deciding whether the government
should protect federally owned land for environmental and recreational
purposes or whether government should allow for economic development,
64 percent of Nevadans support protection while 24 percent support
economic development.
METHODOLOGY
The telephone survey of 601 registered Nevada voters likely to
vote in the 2000 election was commissioned by LCVEF and conducted
by Greenberg Quinlan Research, Inc. The survey was conducted
between February 29 - March 5, 2000. A random sample of this
type is likely to yield a margin of error of +/- 4 percent.
Click
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download the PDF version of the Nevada poll summary!
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