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Las Vegas approves 30-year extension of tax that pays for police officer positions

About 25% of LVMPD positions are paid for by the tax, which was set to expire in 2027; the Clark County Coummission and the Las Vegas City Council voted to extend it until 2057

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Metropolitan Police Department (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @bizutesfaye

Bizuayehu Tesfaye/TNS

By Ricardo Torres-Cortez
Las Vegas Review-Journal

LAS VEGAS — A property tax in the Las Vegas Valley will continue to pay for Metropolitan Police Department officers for an additional three decades.

The Clark County Commission and the Las Vegas City Council approved a 30-year-extension of a 0.2 percent “ad valorem” tax on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively.

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That adds up to 20 cents for every $100 assessed on a home within the city and unincorporated county.

The tax pays for 825 Metro positions, of about a quarter of its police officers.

Voters originally greenlit the tax in 1996. It was set to expire in 2027, but the 2025 Nevada Legislature stepped in to extend it until 2057.

Local governments had to approve the measure afterward.

Officials had argued that not approving the extension would have left Metro with an annual shortfall of about $158 million.

The tax accounts for about $310 yearly on a $3,100 tax bill for a home assessed at $500,000.

Las Vegas City Attorney Jeff Dorocak noted Wednesday that taxes weren’t going up or down.

The assessment-based tax would’ve still been collected even if the Metro measure hadn’t been extended, he said.

Metro did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

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Contact Ricardo Torres-Cortez at rtorres@reviewjournal.com.
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