I . Unincorporated
Four towns, no city hall.
The single most useful fact about District E is that almost all of it is unincorporated. No mayor, no city council. The county runs it directly.
An unincorporated town in Clark County is a community that never became a self-governing city. It has no mayor and no city council of its own. Instead it is governed directly by the elected Clark County Board of Commissioners, with a local Town Advisory Board offering nonbinding input on neighborhood matters.1 When you live in Paradise or Sunrise Manor, the people who set your zoning, fund your parks, and license your businesses are county commissioners, not a city government.
This is why the District E commission seat matters so much. In an incorporated city, a council handles local services. Here, the county is the local government, and the commissioner for your district is the closest thing you have to a hometown representative.
The 1950 story . why the Strip dodged the city
The casinos asked the county for town status, and never looked back.
In 1950, Las Vegas Mayor Ernie Cragin moved to annex the Strip and pull its tax base inside the city. Casino executives, led by Gus Greenbaum of the Flamingo, lobbied county commissioners for town status instead, because an unincorporated town cannot be annexed by a city without the commission's approval. On December 8, 1950, the commission created the unincorporated town of Paradise. The first town board was five casino managers, chaired by Greenbaum.23
The pattern held. In 1975, a Nevada law would have folded Paradise, Sunrise Manor, and Winchester into the City of Las Vegas, but the Nevada Supreme Court struck it down as unconstitutional before it took effect.2 Three quarters of a century later, most of metro Las Vegas, including the majority of the Strip, still sits on unincorporated county land.2
A note on names
These towns have been renamed more than once.
The names were not handed down once and left alone. Winchester started life in 1951 as the plainly labeled "Town A," split off from Paradise, and only became Winchester in 1953.4 Whitney was founded in 1942, renamed "East Las Vegas" by resident petition in 1958, then changed back to Whitney in 1993.6 Where a record confirms a renaming but not the reason behind a chosen name, this guide reports the change and does not guess at a story.
Four things follow from being unincorporated. They are worth keeping straight, because they shape who you call, where you vote, and who answers for the neighborhood.
No city hall
No mayor and no city council. The Clark County Commission is the local government for all four townships, and your district commissioner is your closest elected voice.1
A town board
Each township has a Town Advisory Board that advises the county on local issues. Its recommendations are nonbinding, but they are public and on the record.1
Mail says "Las Vegas"
All four townships use a "Las Vegas, NV" postal address. The township name does not appear in your mailing address, which is why many residents do not know which town they live in.24
Lines are only parts
District E draws only portions of each township. Living "in Paradise" does not by itself mean you are inside District E. The county map is the only authority.9