The District

Meet Clark County Commission District E.

More than 299,000 residents across Sunrise Manor, Paradise, Whitney, Winchester, downtown Las Vegas, the Boulder Highway corridor, and parts of east Las Vegas. It's the most racially and culturally diverse part of Clark County — and it deserves leadership that listens.

District at a glance

0 Residents Per Clark County official District E biography
55.8% Hispanic/Latino in Sunrise Manor 2024 Census ACS estimate
46% Spanish-speakers in Sunrise Manor Primary or secondary language
33.7 Median age in Sunrise Manor Younger than Clark County overall
$58K Median household income in Sunrise Manor $58,421 — 2024 ACS
27% Foreign-born residents in Sunrise Manor 2024 ACS estimate
Where We Live

Neighborhoods in District E.

Use the official Clark County address locator to confirm a specific address: Address locator →

Sunrise Manor

The largest population center in District E. Stretching from Nellis Air Force Base in the north to Boulder Highway in the south, Sunrise Manor is the cultural heart of east Las Vegas.

Paradise (parts)

Portions of Paradise CDP, including stretches near the airport corridor and University Park, fall within District E.

Whitney

Centered on the 89122 ZIP. Whitney is a younger, mid-density community with a strong identity along the Boulder Highway corridor.

Winchester

Including Lorenzi Park, the Meadows Mall area, and stretches east of Maryland Parkway. A dense, walkable part of the city.

Downtown Las Vegas (portion)

Portions of the City of Las Vegas downtown core, including the Charleston corridor east of Maryland.

East Las Vegas

The diverse, immigrant-anchored east side — home to the Commercial Center District and the Latino-business spine of the city.

Boulder Highway corridor

One of the longest commercial corridors in the valley, running from downtown through Henderson — and a focus of public-safety and revitalization work.

Lake Las Vegas (portion)

Portions of the Lake Las Vegas area east of Henderson fall within District E's footprint.

By the ZIP

ZIPs that fall in or near District E.

ZIP boundaries don't perfectly match commission district lines. Use the official address locator to confirm.

89101
Downtown / East Las Vegas
89104
Winchester / Sunrise Manor
89109
Winchester / Paradise
89110
Sunrise Manor
89115
Sunrise Manor / North LV border
89121
Sunrise Manor / Winchester / Whitney
89122
Whitney
89142
Sunrise Manor
89156
Sunrise Manor
89169
Winchester / Paradise
The Job

What the Clark County Commission actually does.

The County Commission is a seven-member body that runs unincorporated Clark County — about 1.07 million people, including the Las Vegas Strip. Here's what's on the desk.

Municipal services

The Commission acts as the municipal government for unincorporated Clark County — including the Las Vegas Strip, much of Paradise, Spring Valley, and Sunrise Manor. That's where the buck stops on services.

Budget & taxes

The Commission adopts the annual county budget (due June 1) and sets the property tax levy. Roughly $11.8 billion across all funds.

Zoning

Sitting as the Zoning Board, the Commission decides land use and development applications across unincorporated Clark County.

Public safety

Clark County funds about 40% of LVMPD's budget — the largest single contribution. The Commission oversees the Clark County Fire Department too.

Water & transit

Commissioners hold seats on the Southern Nevada Water Authority and the Regional Transportation Commission.

Airport & infrastructure

Harry Reid International Airport — the gateway to Vegas — is run by Clark County. So are major roads, parks, and public health.

Ethics & disclosure

The Commission sets the rules — and follows them. Recent ethics findings on F1 ticket disclosures have put commissioner conduct in the spotlight.

Vital records

Marriage, divorce, and child-custody administration all live at the County level — about 80,000 marriage licenses a year alone.

What's on the Table

Issues District E voters are watching.

Housing

Median home: ~$490,000

Resale prices grew 53% Dec 2019 – Dec 2025. Investors own 11% of single-family rentals.

See Manny's plan →
Homelessness

7,906 counted homeless (2024)

A decade high. Camping ban took effect Feb 2025. Boulder Highway has felt the impact.

See Manny's plan →
Commercial Center

$12M+ County investment

The Commercial Center has seen significant public spend but uneven visible progress.

See Manny's plan →
Water

Lake Mead at risk

Nevada has the smallest Colorado River allocation. Lake Mead could fall to 1,021 ft by summer 2027.

Read the context →
Public safety

+59% robbery rate

Sunrise Manor's robbery rate is 59% above the U.S. average. New LVMPD Hollywood Area Command opening Aug 2026.

See Manny's plan →
Accountability

5 commissioners cited (F1 tickets)

The Nevada Commission on Ethics found a non-willful ethics violation against five commissioners over undisclosed F1 tickets.

See Manny's plan →
The Seat

Who holds District E now?

The District E seat is currently held by Richard "Tick" Segerblom (D), who was sworn in January 7, 2019. He was re-elected in 2022 with 53.0% of the vote. Segerblom served as Chair of the Board of County Commissioners from January 2024 through January 2026.

Under Nevada's term-limits law, county commissioners are capped at 12 years of service. If Segerblom is re-elected in 2026 to a final 4-year term, he would reach the 12-year cap in January 2031 — making this his last allowable run for this seat.

Source: Clark County official biography; Wikipedia; Nevada Constitution Term Limits Act.

Who's on the ballot for 2026

The June 9 primary will be decided within each party.

Republican primary

  • Emanuel "Manny" Kess — filed March 2, 2026
  • Randolph W. "Randy" Rose — filed March 3, 2026

Democratic primary

  • Richard "Tick" Segerblom (incumbent)

Sources: Clark County Contests & Candidates roster; Las Vegas Review-Journal, March 2, 2026.

Your district. Your vote.

District E deserves leadership that shows up.

Manny is on the ballot. Be on the team.