Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sheriff ’s campaign makes misleading claim

- By Blake Apgar Las Vegas Review-journal

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo’s re-election campaign materials include a misleading claim about wait times for 311 calls.

The sheriff ’s campaign mailers and commercial­s claim the addition of civilian staff in the past three years has reduced wait times for these nonemergen­cy calls “from hours to seconds.” In reality, average wait times have decreased by about 2½ minutes since he took office in January 2015.

Lombardo said he received his data from police dispatch in September, but he would not comment further on how the informatio­n has been used in his campaign.

“Obviously I don’t have access to his data, but from a campaign tactic point of view, I think that you should make sure your data is accurate and supportabl­e,” said retired North Las

TIMES

Areas of proposed expansion

Draft maps obtained by the Review-journal identify 38,636 acres of federal land that would be made available for auction and developmen­t under the proposed lands bill, most of it along the east side of I-15 between the southern edge of Henderson and small community of Jean.

The land is outside the existing disposal boundary establishe­d in 1998 as part of the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act, which allows for the sale of federal land within the Las Vegas Valley for private developmen­t.

The county also wants to carve out other pockets of public land for what

it calls “economic developmen­t opportunit­ies” along U.S. Highway 95 and Kyle Canyon Road in the northwest valley and at the southweste­rn edge of Henderson and in the neighborin­g Eldorado Valley.

The draft maps also include a 41,000-acre expansion of the Moapa River Indian Reservatio­n, several new or expanded wilderness areas totalling almost 83,000 acres and nine areas of “critical environmen­tal concern” totaling almost 293,000 acres.

Such conservati­on designatio­ns sound good on the surface, said local environmen­talist Patrick Donnelly, but the county’s current proposal is unacceptab­le to desert tortoise advocates.

Tortoise advocates concerned

“Clark County is going after the mother of all Endangered Species

Act exemptions here,” said Donnelly, who serves as Nevada director for the Tucson, Arizona-based Center for Biological Diversity. “Basically, they are trying to sell off thousands and thousands of acres of public land for developmen­t in prime tortoise habitat and then write their own mitigation plan.”

Among the other actions proposed in the draft resolution:

The county would take ownership of Camp Lee Canyon from the U.S. Forest Service in exchange for county-owned land in the Lee Meadows area of the Spring Mountains.

The Bureau of Land Management would transfer to local government control several pieces of property on which permanent public infrastruc­ture has been built.

The Department of Interior

would be directed to complete six remaining flood control structures on the Las Vegas Wash and grant a right-of-way to the Southern Nevada Water Authority for a power transmissi­on project in eastern Nevada.

Federal land would be transferre­d to the county for a new joint-agency public safety complex on Mount Charleston.

And a new fee would be collected at Red Rock Canyon National Conservati­on Area to reimburse the county for police and fire calls it responds to there.

According to county spokesman Kevin Macdonald, the commission is slated to vote on the resolution at its June 19 meeting.

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter.

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