I was looking at a map of Las Vegas jurisdictions. The areas in green designate the city of Las Vegas. The areas in peach are unincorporated Clark County. Why are there sections within the Las Vegas metro area that are excluded from the city? There are small areas in Henderson (purple) that also show up this way. What gives?
People notice this from time to time and we've answered this question previously, but not for many years. So here's our take on it again, updated with population statistics from the 2020 Census.
There are three incorporated cities in Las Vegas Valley: Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, and Henderson. The rest of the Las Vegas area is officially unincorporated; Clark County provides government and municipal services to a million county residents, compared to the 1.2 million people who live in the cities.
However, there are other geopolitical designations in the Las Vegas Valley. The three "townships" are the Las Vegas Township, the North Las Vegas Township, and the Henderson Township -- yes, the same as the three cities, but they have different boundaries, which delineate the jurisdictions for the state courts.
A third political subdivision is the "unincorporated town." There are six of these: Enterprise, Spring Valley, Sunrise Manor, Whitney, Winchester, and, of course, Paradise.
The six unincorporated towns are incorporated, so to speak, in the Las Vegas Township (a couple have edges that jut into the Henderson and North Las Vegas townships).
The post office, it seems, follows the township divisions. For example, a "Las Vegas" resident to the post office can live in Paradise, which is in the county and has nothing to do with the City of Las Vegas at all, but does fall within the Las Vegas Township. (There’s no Paradise town address or zip code.) So a southern Nevada resident can live in a city and a township at the same time, or in a town and a township at the same time, but not a city and a town at the same time, even though the post office considers all the towns to be in the cities.
To further complicate matters, there are also named "unincorporated areas" in the valley, such as Lone Mountain, that don’t qualify as official towns, since the county hasn’t granted town status to them (either because it hasn’t approved submitted petitions or because the residents haven’t petitioned the county government for official status).
As far as services go, combined county and city services include public schools, health, water, and flood control. Las Vegas and Clark County share law enforcement and libraries, though North Las Vegas and Henderson have their own police and fire departments and library districts. Las Vegas and Clark County have separate fire departments. The towns, though falling within the Las Vegas Township, are governed by the county; they vote for county commissioners, not city councilors, and everything from animal control to parks and public works are administered by the county.
Unincorporated towns have voluntary "town advisory boards" that confer with the Clark County Commission on town issues, such as zoning and planning. In addition, town homeowners and landowners pay less in property taxes than their city counterparts.
Lowered taxes were a beneficial unintended consequence of the inception of unincorporated towns, whose main reason for being started out as jurisdiction, annexation, and service conflicts with the cities. Paradise, for example, was formed way back in 1950, at a time when the City of Las Vegas was launching an attempt to annex the incipient Las Vegas Strip. But the bosses had built their resorts way out in the desert specifically to avoid city regulation and taxation, so they petitioned the county commissioners to form the town of Paradise to block the city’s land grab. The commissioners quickly saw an opportunity to expand the county’s own fledgling tax base and granted unincorporated-town status to the Strip, forever blocking the city from acquiring it.
The town of Winchester to the east of the Strip was created in 1953, splitting the big -- and growing -- town of Paradise in two. Sunrise Manor was created in 1957 to fight annexation by North Las Vegas. Spring Valley west of the Strip became a town in 1981. Enterprise was formed in 1996 to stave off annexation by Henderson.
The Census Bureau recognizes the unincorporated towns as proper population divisions. The 2020 Census gives Spring Valley 218,697 people, one of the most populated unincorporated towns in the country, while Sunrise Manor has 198,187 people and Paradise has 193,150 residents.
We'll post a quiz on all this in the near future.
|
Kevin Lewis
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Dave_Miller_DJTB
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Gregory
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Adam Cohen
Jun-30-2022
|
|
alohafri
Jun-30-2022
|
|
rokgpsman
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Kurt Wiesenbach
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Roy Furukawa
Jun-30-2022
|
|
Kenneth Mytinger
Jun-30-2022
|