An Initiative . Clark County Commission . District E

Affordability.

A home you can actually afford, and a rent that does not eat your paycheck. In one of the toughest housing markets in the country.

This page is about why it costs so much to live here, told straight. The prices and figures below are sourced and footnoted, with their dates. The honest answer involves something most campaigns skip: there is barely any land left to build on, and most of it is owned by the federal government. Manny's plan is at the end.

~$475K
Median home, spring 20261
58%
Of renters are cost-burdened2
78,000
Homes Nevada is short3
88%
Of the county is federal land4
Scroll to begin
I . The Squeeze

The math stopped working.

Paychecks went up a little. Housing went up a lot.

The price of a typical single-family home in Southern Nevada was about $475,000 in spring 2026, after hitting a record near $489,000 in late 2025, according to Las Vegas Realtors.1 For a working family, a teacher, a nurse, or a young person trying to buy their first place, that is simply out of reach.

Renting is no relief. Las Vegas rents have climbed by more than half in recent years, among the fastest increases in the country.10 Today nearly six in ten Las Vegas-area renters are cost-burdened, meaning they spend more than 30 percent of their income just on rent, according to a UNLV Lied Center for Real Estate analysis of Census data.2 When rent eats that much, there is nothing left to save for a down payment, and the trap closes.

For buyers

A record-high market

A typical home around $475,000 this spring, off a late-2025 record near $489,000. Ownership has moved out of reach for many working households.1

For renters

Nearly 6 in 10 stretched

About 58 percent of area renters pay more than 30 percent of income on rent, a cost-burden rate that has ranked worse than some far pricier metros.2

For the state

Tens of thousands short

Nevada is short roughly 78,000 rental homes that are affordable and available to its lowest-income renters, per the National Low Income Housing Coalition.3

The trap

No room to save

When rent takes a third or more of a paycheck, there is nothing left for a down payment. The rental squeeze and the ownership wall feed each other.2

The direction

Up fast, then a plateau

Rents climbed by more than half in recent years, among the fastest in the country, before leveling near the top. The level is the problem now.10

The common thread

Not enough homes

Behind every one of these numbers is the same root problem: the valley is not building enough housing to keep up with the people who want to live here.3

II . The Real Cause

We are running out of land.

Here is the part most campaigns will not tell you, because it is not a villain you can put on a mailer. The single biggest reason housing is so expensive in Las Vegas is that there is almost nowhere left to build, and the federal government owns most of what is left.

About 88 percent of Clark County's 5.1 million acres is federally administered land, and the Bureau of Land Management alone controls roughly half of the county.4 The Las Vegas Valley is essentially a bowl of private land surrounded by federal land. New land for housing only becomes available when the federal government sells it, under the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act of 1998.5

And the bowl is nearly full. UNLV's Lied Center for Real Estate estimates only about 25,000 developable acres remain in the valley, enough for roughly six to eight more years of growth unless more federal land is released.6 When the supply of land is capped and demand keeps rising, the price of every lot, and every home on it, goes up. That is not a slogan. That is supply and demand.

The bottleneck nobody mentions

Even when builders want to build, the clock works against them.

On top of the land squeeze, getting a project approved here takes time. The entitlement and permitting process in Southern Nevada commonly runs about six to eight months, far longer than in competing markets where a builder might move in a couple of months.7 Every extra month is carrying cost that ends up in the price of the home.

So the recipe for expensive housing is simple: a hard cap on land, a slow path to approval, and demand that keeps climbing. Fix the things local government actually controls, the speed and the rules, and push hard on the thing it does not, the federal land, and you start to move the price.

About 88 percent of Clark County is federal land, and the valley has roughly six to eight years of developable land left. Clark County Comprehensive Planning and UNLV's Lied Center for Real Estate46

This is why the federal lands question is not some distant Washington debate. In Las Vegas it is the housing debate. A commissioner who understands that, and who treats freeing more land and speeding more approvals as the core of the affordability fight, is working on the actual cause. One who only talks about rent is treating the symptom.

The Numbers

Federal land, by the numbers.

Why this is the part that matters most. These four figures explain the price of a home in Las Vegas better than any slogan.

Fact 01

88% is federal land

About 88 percent of Clark County's 5.1 million acres is federally administered. The valley is private land ringed by federal land.4

Fact 02

The BLM holds half

The Bureau of Land Management alone manages roughly half of the county, and decides when more can be sold for development.4

Fact 03

~25,000 acres left

UNLV's Lied Center estimates only about 25,000 developable acres remain inside the valley.6

Fact 04

6 to 8 years

At current growth, that land lasts roughly six to eight years without new federal releases. The clock is the crisis.6

Fact 05

Since 1998

SNPLMA, the law that lets the federal government sell Las Vegas-area land for development, has set the rules for new supply since 1998.5

Fact 06

6 to 8 months

And even with land, approval here commonly takes six to eight months, far longer than competing markets. Time is cost.7

III . The Levers

What a commissioner actually controls.

No mayor or commissioner sets your mortgage rate. Here is what they do set.

Honesty matters here, because the office is often blamed for things it cannot fix and credited for things it cannot do. The County Commission does not set interest rates, that is the Federal Reserve, and it does not build most housing, that is private builders and nonprofits. What it does control is the rulebook and the speed.9

What the county controls

  • Zoning and land-use approvals, including how much can be built where.9
  • Density and the rules for new neighborhoods and infill.9
  • Development and impact fees charged on new construction.
  • How fast a project moves through permitting and review.7
  • Advocacy to release more federal land for housing.5
  • Where it puts public dollars for affordable housing.8

What it cannot do

  • Set mortgage interest rates. That is the Federal Reserve.
  • Build most of the housing itself. That is private developers.
  • Sell federal land on its own. Only Washington can.5
  • Act alone. A commissioner is one of seven votes.
Lever 01

Zoning and density

Deciding how many homes can be built where. More allowed homes on land already in the valley is supply the county can unlock on its own.9

Lever 02

Permitting speed

How long a project waits for approval. Shaving months off a six-to-eight-month clock takes cost straight out of the final price.7

Lever 03

Development fees

What the county charges new construction. Fees should cover real public costs, not quietly inflate the price of every new home.

Lever 04

Fighting for land

Pressing Washington to release more federal land through the lands bill and SNPLMA. The biggest long-term lever of all.5

That short "can" list is more powerful than it looks. The county recently moved to update its zoning rules to allow more housing on land already inside the valley.9 Speeding approvals, allowing sensible density, keeping fees honest, and leaning on Washington to release land are exactly the levers that change how many homes get built, and at what price.

IV . What's Been Done

Money spent, results still coming.

The county has not ignored housing. It has put real federal relief money toward it. The issue, as with so much here, is how long it takes to turn dollars into homes people can actually move into.

Clark County received roughly $440 million in federal American Rescue Plan relief funds and steered a significant share toward affordable housing, approving dozens of projects to build and rehabilitate units.8 The county also runs ongoing housing funds that help finance income-restricted homes.

But money committed is not the same as keys in hands. Reporting found that many of the relief-funded units were still more than a year from completion well after the dollars were approved.8 That gap, between a vote and a move-in date, is exactly where accountability and a published timeline matter most.

The commitment

Federal relief to housing

Out of about $440 million in American Rescue Plan funds, the county directed a major share to affordable-housing projects across the valley.8

The lag

Slow to deliver

Many funded units were reported to be over a year from completion long after approval. Commitments are not the same as occupied homes.8

The ongoing tools

Standing housing funds

Beyond the one-time relief money, the county runs ongoing housing funds that help finance income-restricted homes year to year.9

The gap to close

From vote to move-in

The distance between approving money and handing someone keys is exactly where a published timeline and real accountability matter most.8

$440M
Federal relief funds received8
Housing
A major share directed to it8
1yr+
Many units still not done8
Speed
The missing ingredient
V . Manny's Plan

Build more. Build faster. Count what's finished.

Measured in homes built and occupied, not promises.

Manny is a candidate, not yet a commissioner, so these are his proposals, not actions he can take today. His approach to affordability is supply-side and practical: make it faster and more sensible to build the homes the valley is short, fight for the land to build them on, and judge it all by whether families actually move in.

Step 1

Cut the permitting clock

Shorten the months-long approval process for housing. Every month of delay is a cost that ends up in the price of the home.

Step 2

Allow the right density

Use the land already inside the valley wisely, with sensible density and infill near jobs and transit, instead of only sprawling outward.

Step 3

Fight for the land

Push Washington hard to release more federal land for housing through the lands bill and SNPLMA, the single biggest lever on long-term supply.

Step 4

Measure homes, not headlines

Judge success by homes actually built and occupied each year at attainable prices, and report it in public, not by dollars announced.

A fair word on the limits. A commissioner is one vote of seven, cannot set interest rates, and cannot release federal land alone. What Manny is offering is a standard for the seat: move supply, cut the delays the county controls, and be honest about the rest.

VI . The Yardstick

How you would check the work.

Affordability is easy to promise and hard to measure. Here is what real progress would actually look like, year over year.

Permits . housing approvals up, not down Speed . months shaved off the entitlement clock Homes built . units completed each year Homes occupied . families actually moved in Land . acres released for housing Cost burden . the renter squeeze trending down

None of these are mysteries. The county already tracks permits and approvals. The point is to publish them against a target, so residents can tell the difference between a market that is loosening and a press release that says it is.9

The Right Questions

What a commissioner should be asking.

Accountability starts with the questions you put on the record. These are the ones Manny would ask about housing, every budget cycle.

On supply

How many homes did we permit this year?

Up or down from last year. If the valley is tens of thousands of homes short, the permit count is the first number that matters.3

On speed

How long does approval take now?

If entitlement runs six to eight months, what are we doing to shorten it, and by how much, measured in real weeks saved.7

On land

How many acres did we get released?

With six to eight years of land left, what is the county actively doing to push Washington for the next release, and what came of it.6

On delivery

How many funded homes are occupied?

Not announced, not approved, not under construction. Occupied. Families with keys. That is the only number that ends the squeeze.8

On fees

What does it cost to build here, and why?

A clear accounting of the development fees the county charges, and whether any of them are higher than the real public cost they are meant to cover.

On renters

Is the cost-burden rate moving down?

With nearly six in ten renters stretched, the share paying more than 30 percent of income on rent is the human scoreboard. Track it.2

The Standard

What good housing policy looks like.

Bigger than any one project. This is the test Manny would hold every housing decision to, so the county stops talking about affordability and starts producing it.

Principle 01

Supply is the strategy

When a region is short tens of thousands of homes, the surest way to ease prices is to build more of them. Everything else is a patch.

Principle 02

Time is money

Every month a project waits in permitting is a cost that lands in the price of the home. Speed the county controls is affordability the county controls.

Principle 03

Fight for the land

The single biggest long-term lever is freeing more federal land. A commissioner who is not pushing Washington on this is leaving the real fix on the table.

Principle 04

Use the land we have

Sensible density and infill near jobs and transit add homes without waiting on Washington. The empty lot already inside the valley counts.

Principle 05

Honest fees

Development fees should pay for real public costs, not pad a budget. Fees set too high or applied unevenly quietly raise the price of every new home.

Principle 06

Count occupied homes

Report progress in homes built and lived in, published against a target, so residents can tell a loosening market from a press release.

Principle 07

Renters count too

With nearly six in ten renters cost-burdened, a real housing plan keeps a share of new supply income-restricted, not just market-rate at the top.2

Principle 08

Be honest about the limits

No commissioner sets interest rates or builds the homes. Promising to "lower rent" from a county seat is a tell. Honesty about the levers is the standard.

Myth vs Reality

Four things people get wrong.

Affordability attracts easy answers. Here are four of the most common, and what the sourced picture actually shows.

Myth

"A commissioner can lower my rent."

Reality: the seat does not set rents or interest rates. It controls supply, zoning, density, fees, permitting speed, and advocacy for land. That is where the real, lasting effect on price comes from.9

Myth

"It's all greedy landlords."

Reality: the structural driver is a hard land shortage. About 88 percent of the county is federal land, with only years of buildable acreage left. Scarcity, not just behavior, sets the price.46

Myth

"We're out of room, nothing can be done."

Reality: there is room. Sensible density and infill add homes on land already in the valley, and federal land releases add more. The county can move both.9

Myth

"Building more only helps developers."

Reality: when a region is tens of thousands of homes short, adding supply is what stops prices climbing for everyone. The accountability is in counting occupied, attainable homes.3

Myth

"The county already fixed this with relief money."

Reality: real money was committed, but many funded homes were still over a year from completion long after approval. Dollars announced are not keys in hands.8

Myth

"Federal land is a Washington problem, not local."

Reality: in Las Vegas it is the local housing problem. New supply depends on federal releases, so pushing Washington is one of a commissioner's most important jobs.5

Plain Words

The terms, in plain English.

Housing policy hides behind jargon. Here is what the words actually mean.

Cost-burdened
Spending more than 30 percent of your income on housing. Nearly 6 in 10 Las Vegas renters are in this group.2
Entitlement
The government approval process a project must clear before building, covering zoning, design, and permits. In Southern Nevada it commonly takes six to eight months.7
SNPLMA
The Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act of 1998. It is how the federal government sells public land around Las Vegas for development, including land set aside for affordable housing.5
BLM
The Bureau of Land Management, the federal agency that controls roughly half of Clark County's land and decides when more can be sold for development.4
Density
How many homes are allowed on a piece of land. Allowing more density on land already in the valley is one way to add homes without needing new land.9
Impact fee
A charge on new construction meant to pay for the public services it needs. Set too high or applied unevenly, it can add to the cost of a home.
Supply gap
The difference between the homes a place has and the homes it needs. Nevada's gap for its lowest-income renters is around 78,000 units.3
Infill
Building on empty or underused land already inside the developed valley, rather than expanding outward into new federal land.
Median price
The middle of all home sale prices, half above and half below. It moves month to month, which is why this page dates every figure.1
Lands bill
Federal legislation that would authorize the release of more public land around Las Vegas for development, the main path to a bigger long-term housing supply.7
Extremely low income (ELI)
Renters earning at or below about 30 percent of the area median income. Nevada has tens of thousands more ELI households than affordable homes for them.3
Attainable housing
Homes priced within reach of local working households, not only the very low income or the very wealthy. The missing middle of the market.
Area median income (AMI)
The midpoint income for the region, used to define who qualifies as low or extremely low income for housing programs.
Income-restricted
Housing reserved, by agreement, for households below a set income, often in exchange for public funding or zoning incentives. How affordable units stay affordable.
Fair market value
The price federal land is supposed to sell for under SNPLMA. It is why releasing more land matters: scarce land bids the value, and the home price, up.5
VII . Questions

Straight answers about affordability.

The things people actually ask, answered plainly and with sources.

Three things at once: there is very little developable land left and the federal government owns most of it, approvals take a long time, and demand keeps rising. About 88 percent of Clark County is federal land, and the valley has roughly six to eight years of buildable land left.46
Not directly, and anyone who promises that is not being straight with you. A commissioner cannot set interest rates and cannot build most housing. What the seat can do is speed approvals, allow more homes to be built, set fair fees, and push for federal land, all of which affect supply and price over time.9
A lot, in Las Vegas. Because Washington owns most of the land around the valley, new land for housing only comes available when the federal government sells it under SNPLMA. Less land means higher land prices, which means higher home prices.45
Yes. The county directed a large share of about $440 million in federal relief funds to affordable housing. The problem has been speed: many of those units were still more than a year from completion well after the money was approved.8
The goal is homes families can afford, measured by units actually built and occupied at attainable prices, not by who profits. When a region is tens of thousands of homes short, adding supply is how prices stop climbing. The accountability is in counting finished, occupied homes.3
The facts and figures are nonpartisan and sourced to Las Vegas Realtors, UNLV, the county, the BLM, and NLIHC. The plan at the end is Manny's. This page is published by the campaign as voter education, with the committee disclaimer in the footer. For more on the area, see the District E field guide.
Setting that aside as a state-and-legal question a county commissioner does not control, the deeper issue is supply. When a place is short tens of thousands of homes, the lasting fix is building more of them. Price controls do not add a single home, and a commissioner's real levers are about getting homes built.3
The standard Manny sets is homes built and occupied at attainable prices, and a share of supply that is income-restricted, not just whatever pencils out at the top of the market. Density and faster approvals lower the cost to build, which is what makes attainable homes possible in the first place.9
No. Renters feel it first. Nearly six in ten area renters are already cost-burdened, and rents rise when there are not enough homes to go around. More supply eases the squeeze for buyers and renters alike.210
Prices move monthly, so every figure here is dated and sourced. If the market shifts, the numbers get updated against the originals. The structural story, a land-constrained valley that needs to build more, holds regardless of the month's price.1
Every figure is footnoted in the Sources section: Las Vegas Realtors for prices, UNLV for cost burden, the county and BLM for federal land, and NLIHC for the shortage. Check our work.
VIII . Sources & Method

Every figure, shown its work.

Housing numbers move, so each one here carries its date and its source.

  1. Las Vegas Realtors median price data, via VEGAS INC / Las Vegas Sun (May 6, 2026): about $473,875 in April 2026, off a record of $488,995 in November 2025. vegasinc.lasvegassun.com
  2. UNLV Lied Center for Real Estate analysis of Census data, via the Las Vegas Review-Journal (May 29, 2024): 58.3 percent of area renters are cost-burdened. reviewjournal.com
  3. National Low Income Housing Coalition, Nevada profile: a shortage of about 78,121 rental homes affordable and available to extremely low-income renters. nlihc.org
  4. Clark County Comprehensive Planning, Federal Lands: about 88 percent of the county is federally administered, with the BLM managing roughly half. clarkcountynv.gov
  5. U.S. Bureau of Land Management, Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act (SNPLMA). blm.gov
  6. UNLV Lied Center for Real Estate estimate, via the BLM: roughly 25,000 developable acres remain, about six to eight years at current growth absent new releases. blm.gov
  7. Nevada Business (November 2025): Southern Nevada entitlement and permitting commonly takes six to eight months; the Clark County lands bill. nevadabusiness.com
  8. Nevada Current: Clark County's roughly $440 million in American Rescue Plan funds and the affordable-housing share, with completion delays. nevadacurrent.com
  9. Clark County zoning and land use (Title 30), Comprehensive Planning. clarkcountynv.gov
  10. Las Vegas Review-Journal: Las Vegas rents climbed at one of the fastest rates in the U.S. in recent years. reviewjournal.com
  11. Clark County, District E composition (Paradise, Sunrise Manor, Whitney, Winchester, and part of the City of Las Vegas). clarkcountynv.gov
  12. National Low Income Housing Coalition, Nevada Housing Profile. nlihc.org (PDF)

How we handled the prices. Home prices change monthly, so this page uses the most recent Las Vegas Realtors figure with its date (about $475,000 in spring 2026) and notes the late-2025 record near $489,000, rather than quoting one round number as if it were permanent.

What we left out. We did not publish a single current median-rent dollar figure, because the reliable, dated source was a cost-burden share (about 58 percent), not a clean monthly rent number. We also kept the county's affordable-housing spending to the well-documented $440 million relief total rather than unit counts that varied between sources.

Issue, not attack. The land squeeze is bipartisan, and so is the fix. This page is about supply and accountability, not about blaming any one official. When homes are this scarce, the job is to build more and to be honest about who controls what.

Close To Home

What this means for District E.

Affordability is not an abstraction here. District E is a working, diverse, east-valley seat, and the squeeze lands hardest on exactly the families who live in it.

District E draws from the working neighborhoods of Paradise, Sunrise Manor, Whitney, and Winchester, and it was drawn as one of the county's two Hispanic-majority districts.11 These are renters and first-time buyers, families and young workers, the households that a cost-burden rate near 58 percent describes most directly.2 When the valley does not build enough homes, this is where the pressure shows up first: in the rent, in the doubled-up households, in the kids who cannot afford to live near where they grew up.

That is why Manny treats supply as the heart of the affordability fight, and why a commissioner who actually moves homes, faster, matters more in District E than almost anywhere else in the county. To understand the district itself, read the District E field guide.

Who lives here

A renter-heavy, working district

District E's working east-valley neighborhoods are exactly where a near-58-percent renter cost-burden rate is felt most directly, in the rent and the doubled-up households.211

Why it matters here

First to feel a shortage

When the valley underbuilds, the pressure shows up first in seats like this one. More homes, sooner, is not abstract policy here. It is whether people can stay.3

The Bigger Picture

Affordability is a supply story.

Strip away the noise and the housing crunch comes down to one thing: the valley is not building enough homes, on enough land, fast enough. Everything Manny proposes points at that.

It is tempting to look for a villain, a greedy landlord, an out-of-state buyer, a single bad vote. The honest picture is structural. A region hemmed in by federal land, with years of buildable land left, slow approvals, and more people arriving every month, is going to have expensive housing until it builds its way out. That is not comfortable, because it means the fix is patient work, not a soundbite.

But patient work is exactly what a county commissioner can do: speed the approvals, allow the density, keep the fees honest, and never stop pushing Washington for land. Do that for four years and measure it in homes occupied, and you have done more for affordability than any promise to "lower rent" ever could.

If we build

  • More homes at attainable prices, measured and reported.
  • Rent pressure that finally levels off as supply catches up.
  • Young people and workers able to stay in the valley they grew up in.
  • A county that pushed Washington and won more land.

If we stall

  • Prices grind higher as land runs out.
  • More renters tipping past the breaking point.
  • Families and young workers priced out of town.
  • Another cycle of announcements with no keys in hands.

Manny's whole case on affordability is that the first column is a choice, not a fantasy. It takes a commissioner who treats supply as the job, moves the levers the county actually holds, fights Washington for land, and reports the result in homes occupied. That is unglamorous, patient work. It is also the only thing that has ever brought a housing market back down to earth.

Get Involved

How to weigh in.

This is your market and your paycheck. Here is the nonpartisan way to follow it and be heard, no matter who you support.

01

Watch the votes

Zoning, density, and fee decisions happen in public at the County Commission. Agendas are posted by the county. Housing supply is decided in those rooms.9

02

Read the sources

Every figure here is footnoted. Start with the Sources section and check the prices, the land share, and the shortage against the originals.

03

Reach the office

For a county housing or land-use matter, the District E commissioner's office represents the area. It is the right door for a constituent issue.11

04

Know your district

Confirm you live and vote in District E, and read the District E field guide for the full lay of the land.

The Short Version

If you remember five things.

The whole initiative, distilled. Each line is backed by the sources below.

The squeeze
A typical home near $475K this spring, rents up by half, and about 58% of renters cost-burdened.12
The cause
About 88% of the county is federal land, with roughly 6 to 8 years of buildable land left.46
The shortage
Nevada is short about 78,000 homes affordable to its lowest-income renters.3
The levers
The county controls zoning, density, fees, permitting speed, and advocacy for federal land. Not interest rates.9
Manny's plan
Build more and faster, fight for land, and measure success in homes built and occupied.

That is affordability in five lines. It does not fit on a yard sign, because the truth rarely does. The fix is more homes, faster, on land we have to fight for, counted honestly.

A note from Manny
Measured in homes built and occupied. Not promises.
Build local. Hire local.

People are getting priced out of the place they grew up in. The honest answer is not a gimmick, it is more homes, built faster, on land we have to fight Washington to free up. I will not promise to lower your rent from a county seat, because no one can do that with a vote. What I can promise is to push supply, cut the delays we control, and show you the homes that actually got built. Count those.

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