You can't be let down by a promise never made
A commissioner who never claimed to run the schools cannot betray you on it later. Honest scope is how trust survives contact with reality.1
An Initiative . Clark County Commission . District E
Start with the truth: a county commissioner does not run your schools. Here is what the county can really do, for jobs, skills, and access.
Most campaigns promise the world on schools. A county commissioner has no authority over them. The schools are run by a separately elected board. So this page does the honest thing: it draws the line between what the county controls and what it does not, then focuses on the real levers, tech and skilled jobs, digital access, libraries, workforce, and a county government that finally uses technology well. Every claim is sourced. Manny's plan is at the end.
Read it top to bottom, or jump to what you came for. Every claim is sourced, and every agency is matched to the level of government that runs it.
A commissioner does not run the schools. Saying so out loud is where an honest plan begins.
Schools, libraries, colleges, broadband: a clear map of who is actually in charge of each.
Jobs, digital access, libraries, workforce, and modern county tech. The county's actual lane.
Grow tech and skilled-trade careers so District E kids can build a future without leaving home.
No pandering on schools. Real work on jobs, access, libraries, workforce, and county tech.
Every claim footnoted, and every agency attributed to the right government.
So Manny will not pretend otherwise.
It is the most common pander in local politics: a candidate for an office with no authority over schools promising to fix them. Here is the truth. K-12 schools in the valley are run by the Clark County School District, one of the largest in the country with more than 300,000 students, and it is governed by a separately elected Board of Trustees.13 The County Commission has no authority over its budget, its curriculum, or its hiring. A commissioner does appoint one non-voting member to that board, and that is the extent of it.2
The same goes for most of what people lump under "education and technology." The libraries are an independent district. UNLV and the College of Southern Nevada are state institutions. Broadband is led by the state. A commissioner who claims to control any of those is either confused or counting on you to be.410
Manny would rather tell you the truth about the limits of the office than win your vote with a promise he cannot keep. That is the same standard that runs through every page on this site: be straight about what the seat controls, then go hard on the parts that are real.1
And the real parts are not small. The county can shape whether there are good tech and skilled-trade jobs here, whether families have digital access, whether libraries and workforce programs thrive, and whether county government itself finally works like it is the 21st century. That is the education-and-technology agenda a commissioner can actually deliver.
A commissioner who never claimed to run the schools cannot betray you on it later. Honest scope is how trust survives contact with reality.1
Even without running a classroom, the county shapes the jobs, access, and training that decide what a graduate's options actually are.8
The fastest way to spot a pander is to know who actually runs each thing. Here is the map, with the county's real lane marked.
A separately elected Board of Trustees runs CCSD and its 300,000-plus students. Not the County Commission.13
An independent district with a ten-member board. The county appoints five of those trustees, the city appoints five. A real foothold, not control.4
State institutions under the Nevada System of Higher Education and its elected Board of Regents. Not county-run.10
Led by the Governor's broadband office, with hundreds of millions in federal funds. The county's role is its own facilities and unincorporated areas.56
The regional workforce board for Southern Nevada, running job training and apprenticeship pathways. The county is a partner.9
Economic development, digital access in unincorporated areas, library and workforce support, and modernizing county services. This is where a commissioner moves.8
Once you set the schools aside, the county's education-and-technology toolkit is real and underused. Here is the honest split.
Notice the shape of the "can" list. It is jobs, access, and institutions the county helps fund and steer, plus the county's own technology. None of it requires pretending to run a school. All of it shapes whether a kid growing up in District E has a path to a good career without leaving Las Vegas. That is the honest version of an education-and-technology agenda.
Tech jobs and skilled trades, not just gaming and tourism.
This is where a commissioner has real leverage. Southern Nevada has spent years trying to diversify its economy beyond gaming and tourism, and the regional engine for that is the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance, which targets growth sectors including technology, advanced manufacturing, and healthcare.8 The county is a partner and funder in that work. When an AI computing company chooses to put its headquarters and jobs in Clark County, that is the diversification strategy working.12
And not every good job needs a four-year degree. The region's workforce board, Workforce Connections, runs job training, youth programs, and apprenticeship and skilled-trade pathways across Southern Nevada.9 A commissioner who champions both, the high-tech employers and the trades pipeline, helps make sure a young person in District E can build a career at home instead of moving away to find one.
Back the regional push to grow tech, advanced manufacturing, and innovation jobs, so the valley is not riding on the Strip alone.8
Champion apprenticeships and skilled-trade training through the regional workforce system, so good careers do not all require a degree.9
Hire local, build local. The point of jobs and skills is so a kid from District E can build a life here instead of leaving to find one.
A tourism downturn hits a one-industry town hardest. Diversifying into tech and trades is how the valley steadies itself for the next slow year.8
The county does not do this alone. It works through the regional economic-development alliance and the workforce board, as a funder and partner.89
You cannot do homework, apply for a job, or see a doctor online without a connection and a device. Closing that gap is partly the county's job, and honestly, mostly not.
Most of the heavy lifting on broadband is done by the state. Nevada's broadband office is running a federal program with hundreds of millions of dollars to connect tens of thousands of unserved homes and businesses, with new deployment expected to ramp up in 2026.56 A county commissioner does not run that program, and should not claim to.
What the county can do is real but bounded: push connectivity in unincorporated areas, wire its own facilities, and treat libraries as public access points for people without a connection or a device at home.47 It is a supporting role, played honestly, not a headline a commissioner gets to claim alone.
A commissioner who claims to control the schools, the colleges, or the state broadband program is either confused or counting on you to be.The honest premise of this page
None of that means a commissioner should shrug. It means knowing exactly where the county can lean in: pressing for connectivity as new areas develop, keeping libraries open as the public on-ramp to the internet, and making sure county services themselves do not assume everyone already has a fast connection at home. Small, honest, and within reach, which beats a big promise that is not.47
Small things that make the who-runs-what picture concrete. Each one is sourced below.
CCSD educates more than 300,000 students, ranking among the largest school districts in the entire United States, and the County Commission does not run it.13
Five of the ten Las Vegas-Clark County Library District trustees are appointed by the County Commission. A real voice in a vital institution.4
Nevada's state broadband effort carries hundreds of millions in federal funds to connect tens of thousands of homes and businesses, with rollout expected in 2026.6
The region's diversification push has drawn new technology investment, including AI computing, to the county. Momentum a commissioner can help sustain.812
UNLV and the College of Southern Nevada sit in the valley but answer to the state's elected Board of Regents, not the County Commission.10
Since 2024 the County Commission appoints a single non-voting member to the CCSD board. A voice at the table, not a hand on the wheel.2
There is exactly one piece of "technology" a commissioner has direct control over: the county's own. And it is the one most candidates ignore.
The county runs its own services, its own permitting, its own records, its own website. Making those faster, cheaper, and easier to use online is squarely within a commissioner's power, and it is where the "technology" half of this initiative is most honest. It also ties straight to the accountability agenda: a searchable public checkbook, online services that do not require a trip downtown, and a county that treats residents like the customers paying for it.
Permits, records, and requests handled online without a trip downtown or a day on hold. The county controls this entirely.
The public checkbook and open data from the accountability plan are technology working for residents, not against them.8
Phone, text, and online options that actually work, so a resident can get an answer without taking a day off to stand downtown.
The county already collects data. Using it to find where services and access are short, by area, is the unglamorous half of govtech.
Honest about schools. Relentless on jobs and access.
Manny is a candidate, not yet a commissioner, so these are his proposals, not actions he can take today. The first one is the rarest in politics: tell the truth about what the office can and cannot do, then work the parts that are real.
No promises a commissioner cannot keep. Partner with the elected school board where it helps, and never pretend to run it.2
Back economic development that brings tech and advanced industry here, and the apprenticeship pipeline that trains people for it.89
Push connectivity in unincorporated areas, support libraries as access points, and back the state's broadband rollout where the county can help.6
Use the county's appointments and funding to strengthen libraries and job-training programs, the quiet engines of opportunity.49
And the fifth, the one fully in a commissioner's hands: modernize the county's own technology so its services work online and its books are searchable. A fair word on limits, though. A commissioner is one of seven votes, does not run the schools, and shares most of this work with the state and the cities. What Manny offers is honesty about that, and energy on the parts that are real.
Bigger than any one program. This is the test Manny would hold every education-and-technology promise to, his own included.
If a commissioner cannot deliver it, do not run on it. The test starts with honesty about the limits of the seat.1
Measure the agenda by careers created here, tech and skilled trades both, not by announcements or ribbon cuttings.8
A connection and a device are basic infrastructure now. Within its lane, the county should help close the gap, not widen it.7
Libraries and workforce programs rarely make headlines, but they open doors. Use the county's appointments and dollars to back them.49
The county's own technology is the one tech lever fully in hand. Make its services work online before lecturing anyone else about innovation.
The measure of success is a young person from District E who can build a career here, not one who has to leave to find one.
Opportunity is easy to promise. Here is what real progress would look like, year over year.
Notice what is not on the list: school test scores or anything a commissioner does not control. That is on purpose. You measure a seat by the things it can actually move, and you hold it to those.1
No issue draws more confident, wrong answers than this one. Here are four, and what the sourced picture shows.
Reality: the commission has no authority over CCSD. Schools are run by a separately elected board. A commissioner appoints one non-voting member, and that is it.12
Reality: those are state institutions under the Nevada System of Higher Education and its elected Board of Regents. Not county-run.10
Reality: broadband is led by the state with federal money. The county's role is its own facilities and unincorporated areas, plus libraries as access points.56
Reality: it can do a lot, just not run a classroom. Jobs, digital access, libraries, workforce, and the county's own technology are all real levers.8
Reality: the region is actively diversifying, and tech employers, including AI computing, are choosing Clark County. The job is to keep that momentum going.812
Reality: skilled trades and apprenticeships are good careers that do not require a four-year degree, and the county can champion that pipeline.9
If the office cannot run schools, what should a serious commissioner be pressing on? These.
How many tech and advanced-industry jobs landed here this year, and what did the county's investment in that effort produce.8
Through the regional workforce system, how many people are getting into skilled-trade and tech training, and finishing it.9
Which unincorporated areas lack connectivity, and what is the county doing within its lane to help close that gap.7
What can a resident still only do by standing in line downtown, and when does that move online. This one is fully in the county's hands.
As an appointer of half the library board, is the county using that voice to keep branches open, staffed, and serving as access points.4
Without running CCSD, where can county services, parks, safety, after-school space, support students and families. Partner, do not pretend.2
Who runs what is half the battle. Here are the names and what each one actually does.
The things people actually ask, answered plainly and with sources.
In a working, diverse district, opportunity is not abstract. It is whether the kid down the street can find a good job, get online, and use a library that is open.
District E spans working neighborhoods across Paradise, Sunrise Manor, Whitney, and Winchester, and it is one of the county's most diverse seats.11 These are exactly the families for whom a tech or skilled-trade job, a home internet connection, and a strong neighborhood library are the difference between getting ahead and getting stuck. The county cannot run their kids' school, but it can shape whether the path after school leads somewhere.
That is why this connects to every other fight on this site: affordability means jobs that pay enough to live here, and accountability means a county that uses technology to serve people instead of frustrate them. To understand the district itself, read the District E field guide.
This page is unusual because it spends as much time on what a commissioner cannot do as what he can. That is the point, not a weakness.
The fastest way to lose trust is to promise what you cannot deliver. The fastest way to earn it is to be straight, even when the truth is less flattering than the slogan. Manny would rather tell you he does not run the schools than win your vote pretending he does. And once that honesty is on the table, the real agenda, jobs, access, libraries, workforce, and a modern county, is something he can actually be held to.
Knowing who runs what is power. Here is the nonpartisan way to act on it, no matter who you support.
For schools, that is the elected CCSD Board of Trustees. For jobs, access, and county tech, that is the County Commission. Push the body that can actually act.1
Every claim here is footnoted and attributed to the right government. Start with the Sources section and check who runs what.
The library district is a real community and digital-access resource the county helps appoint. Using it, and backing it, matters.4
Confirm you live and vote in District E, and read the District E field guide for the full lay of the land.
The whole initiative, distilled. Each line is backed by the sources below.
That is the honest version of an education-and-technology agenda. It does not include a promise to run your school, because that promise would be a lie.
On this subject the whole game is attributing authority correctly. Here is who runs what, with sources.
Attribution first. The single biggest way this subject goes wrong is claiming authority the office does not have. We label each agency by the government that runs it: schools (the elected school district), libraries (an independent district the county helps appoint), colleges (the state), broadband (the state), workforce and economic development (regional partnerships the county joins).
What we left out. We did not publish a specific percentage of households without internet, because we could not confirm a current figure from a primary source. We described the digital divide qualitatively instead, and pointed to the state programs that address it.
Honesty as the policy. The premise of this page, that a commissioner should be candid about what the office cannot do, is not a dodge. It is the standard Manny brings to every issue, and it is what makes the promises he does make worth believing.
I will not promise to run your schools. I do not get to.
Every cycle, somebody running for an office that has nothing to do with schools swears they will fix them. It is not true, and you know it. So here is my version. I will tell you the truth about what this seat controls, and then I will go to work on the parts that are real: tech and skilled jobs you can raise a family on, internet access for the families who do not have it, libraries and training that open doors, and a county government that finally runs like the technology exists. Different background. Different commission.