Las Vegas Review-Journal

Commission postpones vote on NLV constable

Eliason says injury has delayed certificat­ion

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

After allowing the constable of North Las Vegas to serve for more than two years without the required state certificat­ion, Clark County commission­ers had an opportunit­y to end his term Wednesday.

Instead, the commission postponed taking any action for two weeks in hopes that Constable Robert Eliason could find a legal avenue to stay in office.

“I don’t see the necessity or the hurry” to make a decision, Commission­er Chris Giunchigli­ani said. “We’re already a year into this, and it still comes back to the public voted him in.”

Eliason has served as constable since January 2015. Under Nevada law, he had 18 months to become certified by the Nevada Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training or forfeit the office.

The deadline passed a year ago. Eliason told commission­ers Wednesday that an injury keeps him from meeting the physical requiremen­ts for certificat­ion.

“My desire was, and still is, to become POST certified so that I can continue to serve the people that elected me and can continue to provide the county with a positive cash flow,” he told the commission.

Commission­ers asked county counsel Mary-anne Miller if they

CONSTABLE

could waive the certificat­ion requiremen­t.

“The determinat­ion was made that he cannot perform the essential functions of the job as determined by the state of Nevada, not by the county, and the county is not the final arbiter of that decision,” Miller said.

While county staff said Eliason must be removed, a majority of commission­ers were reluctant to do so.

“Robert, I have your back, and I support you 100 percent,” Commission­er Lawrence Weekly said. “I hope it all works out for you. I’m going to stay out on a limb with you, because I think you’ve been a good guy and done well by the citizens of North Las Vegas.”

Giunchigli­ani motioned to postpone making a decision. She told Eliason that he should try to seek an accommodat­ion from POST under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act.

“It’s not been an issue of fulfilling the actual requiremen­ts of constable. It just simply has to do with a physical part of the job descriptio­n,” she said.

Eliason told commission­ers that he had a pending ADA claim, but his attorney Jeffrey Barr declined further comment on the subject after the meeting.

Commission­ers voted 6-to-1 to delay their decision until their next regular meeting in two weeks. Commission Chairman Steve Sisolak dissented.

“I don’t think we have any flexibilit­y” under the law, Sisolak said. “We’ve been talking about this for a year, and I don’t see anything changing in two weeks, unfortunat­ely.”

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

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