Several members of the public used the Nevada Commission on Ethics meeting's public-comment period to raise allegations about procedures and conduct at the Washoe County Commission.
Multiple commenters — including Renee Resentes and Penny Brock — told the Ethics Commission that Chair Alexis Hill has removed morning public comment at recent Washoe County Commission meetings and that County Manager Eric Brown has acted unilaterally on agenda matters. A speaker on Zoom said she had verification from the county clerk and an insurer that a newly appointed county commissioner had not filed a required bond and cited multiple NRS sections in arguing the office should be vacated. Commenters described long waits to speak (one said an elderly man waited eight hours) and urged the Ethics Commission to investigate.
Executive Director Ross Armstrong responded to procedural questions about filing ethics complaints and referenced statutory time frames in NRS Chapter 281A. He offered to provide complaint forms and educational materials and gave the commission email for staff assistance: ncoe@ethics.nv.gov. Chair Wallen clarified that allegations of open-meeting-law violations are outside the Ethics Commission's jurisdiction and should be referred to the Nevada Attorney General's Office.
Speakers expressed frustration at perceived retaliation and one commenter asked the Commission to put restoration of morning public comment on a Washoe County agenda. No formal ethics charges were filed during the meeting; the Commission directed members of the public to its complaint form and to the Attorney General's office for open-meeting matters.
The meeting record contains multiple overlapping names for a county appointee mentioned in public comment (the speaker used "Clara Anriola" and later "Sarah Andriola"). The Commission's staff did not confirm the identity during the public-comment period; callers provided alleged county-clerk and insurer verification that a bond had not been filed, which they said supports their claim.