Clark County . The Issues . Human Services
The county is the safety net.
Most people never see it until they need it. The county protects abused children, keeps families housed through a rough month, helps seniors stay in their own homes, and stands in for adults who have no one else. This is one of the biggest things the seat does, and one of the least understood.
Every figure below is tied to a Clark County department, the Nevada Revised Statutes, or the county budget. This page is about the people side of county government, the safety net the District E seat funds and oversees. The civics are nonpartisan and sourced.
A safety net the county is required to run.
This is not optional charity. Nevada law makes caring for residents in need a county duty, and the budget shows how big it is.
Under Chapter 428 of the Nevada Revised Statutes, every county must provide care, support, and relief to the poor, the indigent, and those incapacitated by age, disease, or accident, paid for largely through property taxes.57 In Clark County, that mandate is enormous. The county's Welfare function is budgeted at about $892.7 million for the FY2026 budget year, with roughly 285 employees, making it the county's fourth-largest area of spending, behind only public safety, public works, and general government.14
That money does not buy a single program. It funds an entire system: child protection and foster care, rent and eviction help, indigent medical and burial assistance, in-home care for seniors, guardianship for vulnerable adults, and youth services. The seven-member Commission appropriates that budget and oversees the departments that spend it. A commissioner who understands the safety net can make it work better. One who does not can let it quietly fail the people who need it most.
The county runs the local safety net. The state runs the big federal programs.
Be precise about who does what. Medicaid, food stamps, and cash welfare are run by the state, not the county. What the county runs is the local layer: protecting children, the indigent-aid programs that fill the gaps, guardianship, child-support enforcement, and juvenile services. This page is nonpartisan civics. Manny Kess is a candidate for the seat, and his positions are flagged as proposals where they appear.
When a child is not safe.
The county is the agency that answers the abuse hotline and raises the children the state takes into care.
The Clark County Department of Family Services is the local child-welfare agency. It runs Child Protective Services, which investigates reports of abuse and neglect, and it operates the foster-care and adoption system for the valley.1 The 24-hour Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline is (702) 399-0081, and it is the number to call if a child is in danger.2 On most days there are about 3,400 children in foster care in Clark County, with more than 100 children, teens, and sibling groups legally free and waiting for adoption.3
The county also supports the relatives who step up. Through a partnership with the nonprofit Foster Kinship, grandparents and other kin who take in a child can be licensed and receive the same foster-care support payments as any other foster home, plus respite and training.4 The goal of the system, where it is safe, is reunifying children with their families. This is a core county responsibility, and the Commission funds and oversees all of it.
Help to keep the lights on and the door yours.
The county runs the help of last resort for residents who do not qualify for anything else.
Clark County Social Service is the front line of the safety net. Its programs include housing-expense and rental assistance, an Eviction Diversion Program that helps families stay housed through a crisis, transportation help, and a fixed-income rental program for residents on Social Security, disability, a pension, or VA income.56 Applications can be started online, and the main line is (702) 455-4270.6
These are not abstractions in a working district. Eviction diversion can keep a family in their home through a rough month, which is far cheaper, for the family and the county, than the homelessness that can follow a lost apartment. The honest part of the job is not just funding these programs. It is making sure east-valley families actually know they exist before the crisis hits.
Care for those who cannot pay.
Nevada law makes the county the payer of last resort for the medical care and final dignity of its poorest residents.
State law requires the county to maintain a fund for medical assistance to indigent persons, financed by a dedicated property tax, with portions going toward long-term care under the state Medicaid plan and to a fund for hospital care for the indigent.7 The same chapter of law obligates the county to provide burial or cremation for indigent residents who die with no one able to pay, so that a poor family is not denied the basic dignity of laying a loved one to rest.57
These are quiet, unglamorous duties that almost no campaign talks about, and that is exactly why they matter. The seat helps decide how seriously the county takes its obligation to the people at the very bottom. Done right, it is the difference between a humane county and one that lets its most vulnerable residents fall through entirely.
Helping seniors stay in their own homes.
County in-home help lets seniors and people with disabilities age in place instead of entering costlier institutional care.
Through Clark County Social Service's Adult Care programs, the county offers a Homemaker and Home Health Aide program that helps low-income seniors and people with disabilities with grocery and medication shopping, meal preparation, light housekeeping, and personal care like bathing.8 A Long Term Care program supports residents who can no longer live independently, and an Alternative Health Care program helps people transition from a hospital back to home.8 The Adult Care line is (702) 455-4270.
One honest clarification, because getting it wrong is common: the broader senior network, the Aging and Disability Resource Center and home-delivered meal programs like Meals on Wheels, is run by the state, not the county.16 The county's piece is the in-home and indigent care above. In an aging, diverse, lower-income district, keeping seniors in their homes is both more humane and far less expensive than the alternative, and it is a service a commissioner directly funds.
Standing in for adults with no one to act.
Two county offices protect people who cannot protect themselves and have no family able to step in.
The Public Guardian's Office is appointed by the court to manage the financial and personal affairs of adults who are legally incapable of caring for themselves and have no able family. It oversees more than 500 guardianships and also runs a money-management program for vulnerable residents over 60.9 Separately, the elected Public Administrator steps in to secure and settle the estate of a resident who dies with no next of kin or executor able to act, protecting their property and final affairs.10
These are the offices most people never hear about until a parent, a neighbor, or they themselves need one. In a diverse, aging district there are more isolated seniors and vulnerable adults than the comfortable assume. These offices are the last line of dignity, and they are funded and overseen by the Commission.
Steering young people away from the deep end.
The county runs juvenile justice, and the smart money is on prevention and alternatives, not just detention.
The Clark County Department of Juvenile Justice Services runs juvenile probation, the youth detention center, and a set of prevention and diversion programs.11 The county is part of the national Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative, which favors community-based alternatives to locking kids up where it is safe to do so.11 It also operates Spring Mountain Youth Camp on Mount Charleston, a residential program for adjudicated boys aged 12 to 18, with a capacity of about 100 that serves roughly 240 youth a year, pairing school with a forestry and trail-work program.12
Be honest about the framing: this is a justice department, and the public-safety side of it connects to the Public Safety page. But the human-services truth is that a kid diverted early, mentored, and kept in school is a kid far less likely to end up in the adult system later. That is both the humane outcome and the cheaper one, and it is a county-funded choice.
Getting children the support they are owed.
Child-support enforcement here is a county job, and a huge one.
The District Attorney's Family Support Division establishes paternity, locates absent parents, and sets, enforces, and collects child-support orders using tools like wage withholding and license suspension.13 It is one of the largest such operations in the state, reportedly handling around 45,000-plus cases, roughly 59 percent of Nevada's child-support caseload, reachable at (702) 671-9200.13
This is human services in the most practical sense. Child support is often the difference between a single parent making rent and not. A county that runs this function well is putting money directly into the pockets of working east-valley families and the children who depend on it.
What the seat actually decides.
Real authority over the local safety net, and an honest account of the limits.
The Commission appropriates the roughly $892.7 million Welfare budget and funds and oversees the county-run human-services departments: Family Services, Social Service, the Public Guardian, Juvenile Justice Services, and the District Attorney's child-support work.14 It sets local eligibility policy for indigent aid under NRS 428 and approves the claims against that fund.7 What it does not do is run Medicaid, food stamps, or cash welfare, which are state programs, set foster-care licensing standards, which are state, or run Adult Protective Services, the state ADRC, or general veterans services, all of which are state functions.16
Where Manny stands.
These are candidate positions, offered as proposals, not enacted county policy.
Manny's view of human services starts with stewardship and honesty. Make the help findable. Too many east-valley families never learn that rent help, eviction diversion, in-home senior care, and 2-1-1 even exist, and a commissioner can fix that with plain, relentless communication.515 Protect the people with no one else. Back the child-protection, guardianship, and indigent-care offices that catch residents at the very bottom, and treat the foster-care system as the serious obligation it is.39
Spend it like it works. Welfare is the county's fourth-largest budget; a businessman expects every dollar of it to be measured by outcomes, families housed, kids reunified, seniors kept at home, not just dollars spent.14 Invest early in youth. Diversion and mentoring beat detention on both cost and results. The thread is the same accountability he brings everywhere: a safety net that actually catches people, run responsibly, with results you can see.
Where to turn today.
If you or someone you know needs help right now, here are the real front doors.
Dial 2-1-1
Nevada 211 connects you to housing, food, utility help, and crisis resources across the state. Free and confidential.15
Clark County Social Service
Rental and housing assistance, eviction diversion, transportation, and burial assistance. Call (702) 455-4270.6
Child Abuse Hotline
If a child is being abused or neglected, call the county's 24-hour hotline at (702) 399-0081.2
Foster and Adopt
The Department of Family Services licenses foster and adoptive homes, including relatives who step up.1
Who runs the safety net.
Human services are split across the county, the state, and the federal government. The common mix-ups, corrected.
The terms, in plain English.
A few terms come up a lot. Here is what they mean.
If you remember five things.
The whole page, distilled. Each line is backed by the sources below.
Fair questions.
The things people actually ask about county human services.
More on the county and the district.
Human services is one duty of the seat. Here is where it connects to the rest.
Health Care
The county runs University Medical Center, Nevada's only Level I trauma center, and public health.
Homelessness & Safety
Beds and outreach paired with accountability, where the safety net and the street meet.
Affordability
The housing costs that push families toward the safety net in the first place.
A safety net only works if it catches people.
Most people have no idea the county protects abused kids, keeps families from being evicted, helps seniors stay in their homes, and stands in for adults who have no one. It is nearly a billion dollars of our budget, and half the battle is that the families who need it never learn it exists. I want to run it like it matters: protect the children and the vulnerable, measure it by outcomes instead of dollars spent, and make sure every east-valley family knows the help is one phone call away. Two one one. A net that actually catches people.
Every figure, sourced.
Claims about the safety net should be checkable, and every one here is tied to Clark County, Nevada law, or the county budget.
- Clark County Department of Family Services (child welfare, foster care, and adoption): clarkcountynv.gov family services
- Clark County Department of Family Services, child protection (the 24-hour Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline, (702) 399-0081): clarkcountynv.gov child protection
- Clark County Department of Family Services, adoption (about 3,400 children in foster care on most days, and 100-plus free for adoption): clarkcountynv.gov children in foster care
- Clark County Department of Family Services, caregiver and kinship support (the Foster Kinship partnership): clarkcountynv.gov caregiver support
- Clark County Social Service, about (the safety-net programs, including eviction diversion and burial assistance, and the NRS 428 mandate): clarkcountynv.gov social service
- Clark County Social Service, assistance programs (applications and the (702) 455-4270 line): clarkcountynv.gov assistance programs
- Nevada Revised Statutes, Chapter 428 (the county's duty to aid the indigent, the indigent-medical and hospital-care funds, and burial of the indigent): leg.state.nv.us NRS 428
- Clark County Social Service, senior and adult care services (the Homemaker, Long Term Care, and Alternative Health Care programs): clarkcountynv.gov senior services
- Clark County Public Guardian's Office (guardianship for vulnerable adults, with 500-plus guardianships): clarkcountynv.gov Public Guardian
- Clark County Public Administrator (settling the estates of residents who die with no one able to act): clarkcountynv.gov Public Administrator
- Clark County Department of Juvenile Justice Services (probation, detention, and the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative): clarkcountynv.gov juvenile justice
- Clark County Spring Mountain Youth Camp (the residential youth program on Mount Charleston): clarkcountynv.gov Spring Mountain Youth Camp
- Clark County District Attorney, Family Support Division (child-support enforcement, around 45,000-plus cases): clarkcountynv.gov family support
- Clark County FY2026 budget (the roughly $892.7 million Welfare function and its 285 budgeted staff, under NRS 428.050): clarkcountynv.gov finance and budget
- Nevada 211 (the free, confidential number for housing, food, utility, and crisis help): nevada211.org
- Nevada Aging and Disability Services Division (the state-run Aging and Disability Resource Center and senior nutrition, distinct from county programs): adsd.nv.gov
- Clark County Board of County Commissioners (the body that appropriates the Welfare budget and oversees the human-services departments): clarkcountynv.gov commissioners
How we handled the numbers. The department facts come from Clark County's own pages, the legal mandate from the Nevada Revised Statutes, and the $892.7 million Welfare figure and 285-staff count from the county's FY2026 budget schedules. We describe foster care as "about 3,400 on most days," matching the county's own phrasing, because the precise live count changes daily.
What we were careful about. We separated county-run services from state-run ones: the county runs the indigent safety net, child welfare, guardianship, child support, and juvenile justice, while the state runs Medicaid, food stamps, cash welfare, the Aging and Disability Resource Center, and general veterans services. We did not cite a standalone Family Services budget, which the county does not publish separately.
Found something to fix? If a figure here is out of date, the campaign wants to know. Accuracy is the whole point. Reach the team through the main site.