CCSD Board of Trustees
The Clark County School District, one of the nation's largest with about 300,000 students, is run by its own separately elected Board of Trustees, not the County Commission.8
District E . Deep Dive . Who Represents You
In an unincorporated county district, one commissioner is your closest elected voice, and a handful of other elected bodies handle the rest. Here is who does what, and how to be heard by each.
A plain map of who is actually responsible for what, so you call the right office the first time. Every office and law below is attributed to the correct government and sourced. Know who holds the seat, know what it controls, and know how to reach it.
District E is a single seat on the Clark County Commission, the board that governs the unincorporated valley.
The Clark County Commission has seven members, each elected from a single geographic district, A through G, to staggered four-year terms.1 District E is one of those seven seats. Because the townships District E draws from are unincorporated, with no mayor or city council, that commissioner is the closest thing most residents here have to a hometown representative.1
It is worth being precise about the word "represents." At the county level, the District E commissioner is your representative. But you are also represented by other elected officials at the city, school, state, and federal levels, each with their own lane. Knowing the difference is the whole point of this page: it saves you from calling the wrong office, and it tells you exactly who to hold accountable for what.
The facts, stated plainly. Who currently represents District E, and when the seat is decided.
The District E seat is currently held by Commissioner Richard "Tick" Segerblom, who has represented the district since taking office in January 2019. Before the commission, he served in the Nevada Assembly and the Nevada Senate.2 That is the factual record of the office, offered here as civics, not commentary.
The seat is decided by the voters of District E. In 2026, the path runs through a Republican primary on Tuesday, June 9, 2026, with early voting through June 5. Whether you are deciding among candidates or just confirming you can vote, the official county and state election resources below are the authority on your registration and your ballot.67
Manny Kess is a candidate for this seat, and this is his campaign's site. The civics on this page, who holds the office, what it controls, and how to engage, are nonpartisan and sourced to public records. For the campaign's own positions, the issue pages and the main site are the place to look. Knowing your district is the first step; the vote is yours.
A county commissioner is one vote of seven on a long list of things that shape daily life in the unincorporated valley.
In the unincorporated townships, the county is the local government, so the commission sets land use and zoning, adopts the county budget, funds and runs county parks and social services, licenses local businesses, and oversees public works.1 Commissioners also sit on regional boards: the county helps fund police through the Metropolitan Police fiscal arrangement, and the commission's members serve on bodies like the Southern Nevada Water Authority and oversee University Medical Center.1
A lot of what people call the county is actually run by a different elected body. Here is who to call instead.
One of the most common mistakes is bringing a problem to the wrong government. Schools, for example, are not run by the County Commission. Knowing the map below means your concern lands where someone can actually act on it.
The Clark County School District, one of the nation's largest with about 300,000 students, is run by its own separately elected Board of Trustees, not the County Commission.8
The Las Vegas-Clark County Library District is an independent taxing district with its own board, separate from both the city and the county.9
UNLV and CSN are governed by the Nevada System of Higher Education under an elected Board of Regents, a state body, not the county.10
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is led by an elected Sheriff. The county helps fund it but does not run it day to day.11
If your address is inside the City of Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, or Henderson, a city council represents you there, not the county commission.12
State law and the state budget run through the Nevada Legislature; federal matters through Congress. Different ballots, different offices.6
The point is not to pass the buck. It is the opposite: knowing exactly which elected body is responsible means you can hold the right one accountable. The District E commissioner owns the county's lane; these offices own theirs.
Below the commission, each township has a Town Advisory Board, a local panel that puts neighborhood issues on the record.
Every one of the townships District E draws from has a Town Advisory Board, a panel of local residents that reviews neighborhood matters, hears from the public, and makes recommendations to the County Commission.3 The recommendations are advisory, not binding, but they are made in public and entered into the record, which makes a TAB meeting one of the most direct ways for a resident to be heard close to home.
Three concrete ways to get your voice in front of the people who decide.
The commission posts its agendas, minutes, and video online, with public comment at its meetings. This is where the votes happen.4
Bring a neighborhood concern to your township's board to get it on the record before it reaches the commission.3
The county maintains a District E commissioner page with contact information for the office that represents you.2
A practical note: for an emergency call 911, and for non-emergency police or county service questions the county and Metro publish the right non-emergency lines. The commission and your Town Advisory Board are for policy, budget, zoning, and the decisions that shape the district over time.4
Before anything else, make sure you know your district and that your registration is current.
Township lines and commission-district lines are not the same, so the only reliable way to know your District E status is the county's official map, and the only authority on your registration is the state.56 Both take a minute and settle the question.
The county's 2021 Political District Maps show which commission district your address is in.5
The Nevada Secretary of State lets you confirm your registration and see your districts.6
The county Election Department has dates, early-voting sites, and how to vote in the June 9, 2026 primary.7
Knowing the steps tells you where your voice fits, and when.
Most county decisions follow a path you can step into. An item is placed on a public agenda, the commission takes public comment at its meeting, and then the seven members vote.4 For neighborhood matters, a Town Advisory Board often reviews the issue first and forwards a recommendation, which gives residents an earlier, more local point of entry.3
The practical lesson: showing up earlier, at the agenda and comment stage, beats reacting after a vote. The calendar is public, and so is the record.
A quick map from everyday issues to the body that can actually act on them.
A county commissioner's reach extends through regional boards that touch water, health, and public safety.
Part of what makes the county seat consequential is that commissioners do not only vote on county business. They also serve on or oversee regional bodies that run some of Southern Nevada's most essential systems.1 That is real power and real responsibility, well beyond the boundaries of any one district.
So when people say a county commission seat is "just local," they are underselling it. The District E vote reaches into water, health, and the funding of regional policing, the kind of systems most residents never think about until they fail.
Being straight about the limits of the office is part of representing you well.
A District E commissioner is powerful within the county's lane and limited outside it. One member is a single vote of seven, so nothing passes on one person's say-so.1 The seat does not run the schools, command the police, set state law, or control the federal land that rings the valley. Pretending otherwise is how residents end up disappointed.
The honest version is more useful. Within the county, the seat shapes land use, the budget, services, and licensing, and it carries a real voice on the regional boards. Outside the county, its power is to advocate, coordinate, and tell the truth about who actually holds the lever. A representative who is clear about that is easier to hold accountable, because you know exactly what to expect.
In an unincorporated valley, the county seat is unusually close to daily life.
In a city, residents have a mayor and a council for local matters. Here, because the townships are unincorporated, that role falls to the county, and the District E commissioner is the single elected official closest to your street, your zoning, and your park.1 That makes this one of the most consequential offices most east-valley residents will ever vote on, and one of the least understood.
So knowing who represents you is not a civics-class nicety. It is the difference between a complaint that lands somewhere it can be acted on and one that disappears. Learn the seat, learn its lane, learn how to be heard, and the government closest to you stops being a mystery and starts being answerable.
Representation is not just a title. It is a set of habits a resident has every right to demand.
You do not need to take a candidate's word for what good representation looks like. You can set the bar yourself, and then measure anyone in the seat against it. The list below is not partisan; it is the basic service a county district is owed by the person who holds its one vote.
Hold the seat to that standard regardless of who sits in it. A district that knows what to expect, and asks for it out loud, gets better representation than one that does not.
If you are new to the east valley, five quick facts orient you to who governs your new home.
That is enough to get oriented. The rest of this page, and the District E field guide, fill in the detail when you are ready. Welcome to the east valley.
The whole page, distilled. Each line is backed by the sources below.
The things people actually ask about who represents them.
Who represents you is one part of the story. Here is the rest of the District E hub.
The full overview of District E: the office, where it is, how it got here, who lives here, and what the county does.
From a 1905 railroad townsite to the unincorporated east valley of today, the history behind the district.
The district in verified figures, and an honest account of the numbers that do not exist at the district level.
Know who to call.
Half the frustration people feel with government is bringing the right problem to the wrong office. The county seat has a clear lane, and I think whoever holds it owes you a straight answer about what is in that lane and what is not. Know who represents you, know what they actually control, and hold that person to it. That is the deal.
Civics should be checkable, and every office here is tied to the government that actually runs it.
How we handled the offices. Every elected body on this page is attributed to the government that actually runs it: the County Commission for county matters, the CCSD Board of Trustees for schools, the Library District board for libraries, the NSHE Board of Regents for colleges, the elected Sheriff for Metro, and city councils for incorporated cities. The point is to send you to the office that can act.
One source of truth. Your commission district and your registration are settled only by the county's official map and the Nevada Secretary of State. The links above go straight to them.
Found something to fix? If an office, a contact, or a date here is out of date, the campaign wants to know. Accuracy is the whole point of a guide like this. Reach the team through the main site.