Las Vegas Review-Journal

NLV council OKS raises for alternate judges

- By Art Marroquin Las Vegas Review-journal

Alternate judges filling in for the North Las Vegas Municipal Court will get paid the same as their counterpar­ts elsewhere across Nevada, under an ordinance adopted Wednesday night by the North Las Vegas City Council.

Compensati­on will be increased to $300 for hearing a full day of misdemeano­r and traffic-related cases, up from the current rate of $200 per day. Half-day shifts will rise from $100 to $150.

City officials said the compensati­on increase matches what alternate judges earn while serving other local municipal courthouse­s. It is also aimed at attracting qualified justices to step in when Judge Sean Hoeffgen — the lone North Las Vegas Municipal Court judge — is absent.

“We want to bring ourselves in line with what the other courts are doing,” Hoeffgen told the City Council. “We did a study to look at what other jurisdicti­ons are doing, in particular other municipal courts, and we would be in line with what Reno and Henderson compensate their protem judges.”

The North Las Vegas municipal bench lost a seat in July 2016 as part of a cost-cutting effort by the City Council to save $365,821 annually on salaries for a judge and an assistant. The move was also a political rebuke of former Municipal Court Judge Catherine Ramsey, who was barred from seeking re-election last year after admitting to seven charges of unprofessi­onal conduct.

A part-time judge currently assists with overflow cases, holidays and weekends, Hoeffgen told the City Council earlier this year.

Separately, roughly 40 employees from the Secretary of State’s office will move out of the Grant Sawyer State Office Building and into North Las Vegas City Hall under a deal approved Wednesday night by the City Council.

By mid-august, the Secretary of State workers will occupy a 14,184-square-foot space on the fourth floor of City Hall — along with two customer service windows on the first floor — under a $973,590 lease spanning three years.

Other agencies have taken up residence in North Las Vegas City Hall. Employees from Ames Constructi­on and the Nevada Department of Transporta­tion moved last September into a 10,000-square-foot space on the third floor of City Hall under a $176,012 one-year lease.

The constructi­on firm moved to North Las Vegas shortly after it was awarded a $57.8 million contract by NDOT to widen a five-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 93 from Interstate 15 to Apex Power Parkway.

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