Las Vegas Review-Journal

County, CCSD mull new tax

Partnershi­p a possibilit­y; commission sees issues

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

The Clark County Commission on Thursday signaled a cautious willingnes­s to partner with the Clark County School District on education initiative­s that would be funded through a potential quarter-percent sales tax, but it stressed the need for accountabi­lity, informatio­n and easier public access to school grounds.

Both boards appeared to agree on severe educationa­l needs within Clark County, which a new state law allows counties to pay for through a new tax.

The issue is how to address these problems in a fiscally responsibl­e way.

The law passed this past legislativ­e session allows the commission to raise the tax to pay for one of seven programs. Four of those address educationa­l needs: truancy, adult education, early childhood education and teacher retention and recruitmen­t.

The district and state also show a need for expanded preschool operations, which serve just under

10,000 students with a need to serve roughly 28,000 in total, Superinten­dent Jesus Jara said. The district struggles with keeping truant students in school. And there’s an ongoing teacher shortage — the district even recently launched an initiative­topaya$10,000bonusfo­r teachers in eight struggling middle schools.

But county commission­ers, who ultimately decide whether to tax constituen­ts to foot the bill for such programs, were not shy about pinpointin­g dissatisfa­ction with the district and demanding accountabi­lity.

Commission­ers first sought a solution for making school grounds more accessible for public use, a problem that has frustrated the commission for some time as community groups wishing to use the grounds have been turned away.

While the district cited potential legal issues for 110 schools on land ownedbythe­bureauofla­ndmanageme­nt, Commission­er Marilyn Kirkpatric­k and others stressed a need to come up with a solution with the federal government.

“What it looks like for me is that we’re looking for reasons not to share the schools, and I’ve got to believetha­tthat’snotreally­what the trustees want, or anybody else,” Kirkpatric­k said.

Commission­er Michael Naft noted the varying answers the commission gets from different parties within the district about the issue — administra­tors give one answer, while the schools themselves give another. The problem, he said, seems to be the culture within the district.

“Oncewegetp­astthepape­rwork problem, how do we solve the culturepro­blemwithth­edistrict?”he asked.

School Board trustees acknowledg­ed the need for accountabi­lity and collaborat­ion before presenting theirownsu­ggestionsf­oreachof the issues.

Anew0.25percents­alestax would provide roughly $108 million in revenue — money that commission­ers were careful not to commit to Thursday as they await more informatio­n.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4630. Follow @Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? A Las Vegas police honor guard surrounds the casket of former Metropolit­an Police Department Capt. Larry Burns at The Smith Center on Thursday.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto A Las Vegas police honor guard surrounds the casket of former Metropolit­an Police Department Capt. Larry Burns at The Smith Center on Thursday.

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