Las Vegas Review-Journal

Meeting slated on forming city

Commission­ers want to hear from residents about idea

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

Clark County commission­ers say they want to hear firsthand why a committee of citizens is exploring creating a new city on the eastern side of the Las Vegas Valley.

Commission­ers will hold a town hall meeting from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Hollywood Recreation Center, 1650 S. Hollywood Blvd.

Small-business owner and state Assembly candidate Brandon Casutt and other residents have begun gauging interest in combining the unincorpor­ated towns of Sunrise Manor and Whitney into a single city. Doing so would create Nevada’s third-largest city, home to more than 260,000 residents.

A name for the city has not been decided.

“I’m hoping this is a two-way conversati­on so that the organizers have an opportunit­y to pitch this to their neighbors as well as us,” Commission­er Jim Gibson said.

County staff will outline the incorporat­ion process during the meeting. Discussion is planned for topics including police and fire protection, infrastruc­ture and tax revenue distributi­on among local government­s.

Gibson and fellow commission­ers Chris Giunchigli­ani, Marilyn Kirkpatric­k and Lawrence Weekly — whose districts cover almost all the land in the Valley east of Interstate 15 — will host the town hall.

Weekly, a former Las Vegas city councilman, said it is the commission­ers’ duty to help residents of the towns determine if incorporat­ion is right for them.

“I don’t think it’s an easy feat to run a city,” he said. “Could it be done? Possibly. Would it be an uphill battle with trials and tribulatio­ns along the way? Absolutely.”

Casutt said the county has not directly contacted his committee about the meeting or their proposal.

“We’re puzzled about how they’re going to comment on a proposal they haven’t seen,” he said.

An informal town hall hosted by Casutt and other members of his committee this month showed that even the idea of creating a city is an emotional one for many. At times audience members shouted at one another.

Some said the best way to invest money into neighborho­od roads and parks would be to create their own government. Others said doing so would take a toll on their pocketbook­s via new taxes.

Casutt said the new city wouldn’t need to raise property taxes, because it would be entitled to a larger portion of the county’s consolidat­ed tax revenue, which is distribute­d to local government­s.

“Zero people on the committee have intentions of raising property taxes,” he said.

But Giunchigli­ani contends that wouldn’t be enough to cover the costs of local police, fire and other government services.

“If folks want to move to the petition process (to create a city), that’s totally their right to do so, but they need to know what the potential outcomes will be,” she said.

Kirkpatric­k could not be reached for comment, but she wrote in a statement that residents need to know “what creating a new city could mean for their taxes and how it would impact the local government services they receive.”

 ??  ?? Henderson Chamber of Commerce Clark County Commission­er Jim
Gibson said he wants to have a “twoway conversati­on” so proponents of a plan to form a new city can “pitch this to their neighbors as well as us.”
Henderson Chamber of Commerce Clark County Commission­er Jim Gibson said he wants to have a “twoway conversati­on” so proponents of a plan to form a new city can “pitch this to their neighbors as well as us.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States