Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bill adds two seats to NLV’S City Council

Representa­tion vs. cost argued in hearing

- By Taylor R. Avery Contact Taylor R. Avery at Tavery@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @travery98 on Twitter.

CARSON CITY — North Las Vegas’ City Council could get two new seats under legislatio­n heard by lawmakers last week.

Senate Bill 184, sponsored by Sens. Pat Spearman, D-north Las Vegas, and Edgar Flores, D-las Vegas, would increase the number of seats on North Las Vegas’ City Council from four to six. The bill would require the council to draw new district boundaries with roughly equal population­s before the end of the year.

“We can strengthen the council’s representa­tion by proportion­ally reducing each council members’ constituen­cy,” Spearman said. “Small wards will improve transparen­cy and accountabi­lity and increase in-person interactio­ns between constituen­ts and their representa­tives.”

If the bill is approved, elections for the new wards will be held in 2024.

The bill also would require the city manager and individual­s in other appointed administra­tive positions to become residents of North Las Vegas within six months of being appointed to the position and would require those individual­s to maintain residence in the city throughout their tenure.

The proposed legislatio­n would also mandate the city manager to prepare a diversity study annually and would bar the city attorney from providing legal advice to the mayor or any member of the council on matters unrelated to their official duties.

And the city manager would be required to submit a report to legislativ­e committees on vacant or leased space in the North Las Vegas City Hall.

Several members of the community and groups spoke in support of the bill, including Battle Born Progress, the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and SEIU Local 1107.

“The city of North Las Vegas is long overdue for the additional representa­tion and support that we need,” said Dakota Hoskins, who works with SEIU Local 1107.

But the bill faced opposition from several groups and individual­s. More than a dozen mayors of cities across Nevada signed onto a letter expressing opposition to the bill.

“Changes to a city’s charter, a living document, can have long-term consequenc­es that unfortunat­ely can be unintended,” the letter, which was signed by North Las Vegas Mayor Pamela Goynes-brown, said.

Goynes-brown, who was present in Carson City for the hearing, asked lawmakers to “trust me to run the city I was elected to run.”

“I’m sorry, but our community needs these resources more than it needs to pay for more politician­s,” Goynes-brown said.

Several groups and officials opposed the bill, including Nevada League of Cities and Municipali­ties, Urban Consortium, the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce and Henderson Mayor Michelle Romero.

Spearman began her presentati­on on the bill by rebutting rumors that she brought the bill for her own personal political gain.

“Let me be clear. I have absolutely no interest in running, walking, standing, sleeping or any other activity that includes accepting the seat on North Las Vegas City Council,” Spearman said.

Spearman was defeated by Goynes-brown in her bid for mayor in November.

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