Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

More than 30,000 are expected at Monday’s 38th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Parade in downtown Las Vegas.

- By Julie Wootton-Greener

More than 30,000 spectators are expected to attend Monday’s 38th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade in downtown Las Vegas.

The parade starts at 10 a.m., and the theme is “Living the Dream — The Time is Right to Do What’s Right.”

Las Vegas’ event is likely one of the largest Martin Luther King Jr. parades in the United States, organizer Wendell Williams said Friday. “It’s been around longer than most in the nation,” he also said.

Williams — a former Nevada assemblyma­n — is president and founder of the local Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Committee, which puts on the parade. The committee launched in 1981, and the first parade was held in 1982, before the federal holiday existed.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day is observed the third Monday in January in remembranc­e of the civil rights leader and minister. King’s birthday

was Jan. 15, and he was assassinat­ed in 1968.

Williams said he expects more than 100 entries in this year’s parade. The parade — sponsored by MGM Resorts Internatio­nal — will feature marching bands, school groups, floats, dancers and elected officials, including Gov. Steve Sisolak, Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman and U.S. Reps. Susie Lee and Steven Horsford.

Other sponsors include Cox Communicat­ions, KSNV-TV and KCEP radio station.

Williams said he’s hesitant to provide an exact number for entries, though, because he’s still getting phone calls from individual­s and groups trying to get in.

The parade will run along Fourth Street from Gass Avenue to Ogden Avenue. The grand marshals are community activist Bettye Fortson and KCEP General Manager Craig Knight.

The event typically draws 30,000 or more spectators, Williams said. “I think this one will be the largest spectator crowd we’ve ever had, based on the phone calls I’m getting.”

The parade is part of local King Week events, which include the Martin Luther King Jr. Technology

Summit, two church services, the Young Dreamers Awards Program and the MLK Scholarshi­p Awards Banquet.

The parade has come a long way in nearly 40 years. Just 13 entries took part in the first parade in January 1982, Williams said. “The first parade was so pitiful that I had some friends say, ‘We need to help you.’ ”

Martin Luther King Jr. Day was approved as a federal holiday in 1983 and was first observed in 1986.

In Nevada, it was adopted as a state holiday in 1987.

The Nevada Legislatur­e first considered a bill in 1983 to observe King’s birthday as a state holiday, but the measure failed, according to Review-Journal archives, and it failed again in 1985.

The measure was passed in 1987 after proponents emphasized how the holiday would benefit Nevada’s economy by creating a spike in visitor numbers over the three-day weekend. Williams was instrument­al in pushing for a state holiday.

For more informatio­n, visit www. kingweekla­svegas.com.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto ?? Mila NcNealy, 9, and the Somerset Academy participat­e in 2019’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade in downtown Las Vegas. This year’s parade is Monday.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPh­oto Mila NcNealy, 9, and the Somerset Academy participat­e in 2019’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade in downtown Las Vegas. This year’s parade is Monday.
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