Nevada has become the last state in the nation to release its annual financial report for fiscal year 2023, which ended more than 780 days ago. While Illinois finally published its overdue report earlier this month, Nevada continues to lag, as we are missing two years of data.
To make matters worse, Nevada’s state websites and phone systems have been down for several days due to a widespread cyberattack. This outage has blocked public access to crucial government services. It also makes it impossible for our researchers to verify the state’s financial position in the lead-up to the release of our Financial State of the States report.
The Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) sets clear expectations: states should release their annual financial reports within 180 days after the close of the fiscal year. This benchmark is designed to promote accountability, fiscal transparency, and trust in government.
Nevada’s failure to meet that standard is more than a technicality. It means taxpayers, legislators, and investors are being kept in the dark about how billions of public dollars have been managed. At a time when public trust in government is already fragile, missing these deadlines undermines confidence even further.
The cyberattack compounds the problem. Without functioning websites or phone systems, Nevadans are unable to access services ranging from unemployment assistance to public records requests. The attack raises serious questions about the state’s preparedness for digital threats—and highlights how fragile public access to financial data can be when it’s tied to a single vulnerable system.
Timely financial reporting is not just about meeting an accounting benchmark; it’s about ensuring government transparency even in the face of crises. Nevada’s current silence—both from the missing 2023 report and 2024 report—leaves the public in the dark at a critical time.
Nevada must act quickly to restore its systems, publish its overdue report, and reassure its citizens that it takes both financial transparency and cybersecurity seriously. Until then, it remains an outlier, falling short of the standards set by the GFOA and the expectations of its taxpayers.