Gov. Steve Sisolak is not yet joining groups of state leaders eyeing a post-coronavirus economic recovery.

Governors in at least 10 states — among them California, Oregon, Washington and New York — have recently announced plans to kickstart regional economies ravaged by measures meant to contain the deadly respiratory ailment.

Sisolak is yet to unveil a similar effort, and has not ruled out extending last month’s statewide shutdown of schools, casinos and other nonessential businesses.

A spokeswoman said his plan to phase-out Nevada’s business closure order “will be driven by the advice of medical experts to ensure the health and safety of our residents, in addition to the millions of visitors we welcome every year as the premier domestic and international travel destination.”

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“Governor Sisolak understands that because of Nevada's position as one of the leading tourism hubs in the world, our state has the unique challenge of enacting the highest safety standards possible,” Meghin Delaney, a spokeswoman for the governor’s COVID-19 response team, wrote in a Monday statement to the Reno Gazette Journal. “He views this challenge as a great opportunity and will work with his fellow western regional governors, leaders from around the country, and local governments across Nevada to ensure our residents and future visitors know there is a strong plan in place when we reopen for business.”

It's been roughly one month since Sisolak first ordered Nevada’s nonessential businesses to shut their doors, and two weeks since he issued an even sterner stay-at-home order extending that shutdown through April 30.

Coronavirus-related travel and social distancing protocols have clobbered the Silver State’s tourism-driven economy in recent weeks, prompting huge waves of casino worker layoffs that have overwhelmed the state’s unemployment office.

Casino resort closures have also staunched the flow of crucial sales and gaming taxes that pay for most of Nevada’s budget, threatening huge chunks of cash promised to thousands of teachers, health care workers and corrections officers.

Some of the nation's biggest states on Monday announced plans to coordinate a post-COVID economic recovery, including a group of governors working to kickstart business activity in California, Oregon and Washington.

That group, together with a cohort of governors from densely populated states on the East Coast, collectively represent about one-third of the country’s population.

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James DeHaven is the politics reporter for the Reno Gazette Journal. He covers campaigns, the Nevada Legislature and everything in between. Support his work by subscribing to RGJ.com right here.