Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two cities could lose judges if no deal

New rule means tight restrictio­ns

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

Boulder City and Mesquite each risk losing their only municipal judges in January unless city officials hastily strike a deal with the Clark County Commission.

That’s because a new county policy is placing tight restrictio­ns on a long-standing tradition. City councils can no longer appoint elected county judges to also preside over municipal courts unless the government­s enter a written agreement.

Drafts of the agreements were supposed to be ready in April. That deadline has come and gone without much explanatio­n, but County Commission­er Jim Gibson said he’s confident a contract can be entered before the new policy kicks in on Jan. 7.

“I have every reason to believe we will get to the bottom of all of this before the

JUDGES

end of the year,” said Gibson, whose district includes Boulder City.

The practice of having one judge serve two courts dates back decades in Boulder City and Mesquite, small citiesouts­idethelasv­egasvalley’s urban core.

The judges receive pay, benefits and pension contributi­ons from both the city and county.

Boulder City pays Victor Miller about $93,500 a year. Mesquite pays Ryan Toone about $67,000 a year. The county pays each judge almost $76,000 in annual salary and an additional $15,000 a year to Miller for longevity pay.

Municipal courts process misdemeano­r criminal cases and traffic infraction­s. County-run justice courts handle some civil cases and preliminar­y hearings for felony cases before they proceed to district court.

The county realized last year that it had long been out of step with a 1983 Nevada law that requires commission­ers to grant permission before an elected judge also takes on an appointed city role. Commission­ers had not done so for either Toone in Mesquite or Miller in Boulder City.

Instead of immediatel­y remedying the problem, commission­ers passed a policy last December requiring written agreements to be in place by the time the judges begin their new terms in 2019.

Gibson said the county and city are working out details about how much each government will pay for costs related to court staff, equipmenta­ndmaintena­nce.

“Therewasal­ottheretha­thad never been up for discussion before, which drove the parties back to look at the costs to determine whatwouldb­efair,”hesaid.

“It’s too important to not get it right.”

Any agreement must be approved by both the County Commission and city council before it can go into effect.

“We have the framework of the agreement, but we are working out details,” Mesquite spokesman Aaronbaker­said.

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

 ??  ?? Victor Miller
Victor Miller
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Ryan Toone

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