Commissioners are among the most powerful local officials in Southern Nevada. They manage the county’s multi-billion-dollar budget, pass ordinances, oversee infrastructure such as roads, parks, libraries, and flood control, regulate land use and development, and provide oversight of the county jail system. Their decisions directly impact public safety, housing affordability, economic opportunity, environmental sustainability, and how transparently and responsibly taxpayer dollars are used. In a rapidly growing region like Clark County, these races are critical to ensuring accountable governance, long-term planning, and policies that serve the broad interests of the community.
Campaign Phone Number
6198237073
Endorsements
Sheriff Brad Pope, Ken Gray, Veterans of Lyon County, Jay Dini, Larry Masini and family, Danny Villalobos, Patty Clark, Ricky Nuzum (BDR Construction,) Melissa Squires, Gary Weaver, Les Wilson, Gary Simmons, Elaine St. John, Anita Talbot, Monica Ladd, Rosie (Rosie’s Cantina), Letter of support from Sam Brown
Fiscal Prudence and Efficiency: With tighter revenues (declining trends noted, low per-capita base, ARPA wind-down), emphasize productivity—e.g., shared regional services, grant pursuit (Secure Rural Schools, federal infrastructure), technology (phone/IT upgrades already planned), and contingency reserves. Avoid over-expansion of headcount; focus on retention for critical roles amid rising benefits costs.
Economic Development as Enabler: Targeted spending here (e.g., industrial park support, retail attraction) generates future revenue to fund the above. Lyon’s strengths in logistics, rail, and proximity to Reno position it well, but require infrastructure and planning to capitalize.
Risk Management: Address hazards (wildfire, drought, flood
Strategic Planning and Zoning
Comprehensive Plans: Developing and adhering to a long-term comprehensive plan that outlines a vision for the community's future is fundamental. This includes designating areas for residential, commercial, industrial, and open space uses.
Smart Growth Principles: Implementing smart growth principles, such as promoting compact, walkable neighborhoods, mixed-use development, and preserving open space, can help manage sprawl and reduce the strain on infrastructure.
Zoning Ordinances: Updating and enforcing zoning ordinances to align with the community's vision and encourage sustainable development practices.
Public Safety (Sheriff's Office, Fire/EMS, Emergency Management, and Justice Facilities)
This should remain or become the top allocation, including staffing, vehicles/equipment (as seen in recent budgets), training, and facility upgrades (e.g., justice complexes, potential jail needs).
Why? Population and employment growth increase calls for service, traffic (major corridors like US 95 Alt), crime potential, and emergency incidents (wildland fire, floods, earthquakes, hazmat from industrial/logistics growth). The Sheriff's Office has noted tactical resource allocation for growth; violent crime rates have trends worth monitoring; rural response times and EMS capacity are perennial issues. Recent budget emphasis on sworn personnel PERS hikes
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.