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Nevada judge dismisses lawsuit challenging Election Worker Protection Act

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Nevada judge dismisses lawsuit challenging Election Worker Protection Act


CARSON CITY, Nev. (KOLO) – A Nevada judge has dismissed a lawsuit challenging the Election Worker Protection Act.

The motion to dismiss was filed on behalf of the office of the Nevada Attorney General on behalf of Governor Joe Lombardo and Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar.

Judge Cristina Silva dismissed the suit on the grounds that the plaintiffs failed to allege a credible threat of prosecution and dismissed it with prejudice.

“I’m grateful to Judge Silva for dismissing the case against Governor Lombardo and I with prejudice. The Election Worker Protection Act was brought by a Democratic Secretary of State, passed with unanimous bipartisan support, and was signed by a Republican Governor. Nevada has said loud and clear: threats and harassment against election workers will not stand.” said Aguilar.

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“Elections don’t work without people. As we approach the June Primary and November Presidential Election, our local election officials and poll workers will be protected when they go to work and at home thanks to this bill.  Our focus remains on conducting some of the most secure, transparent and accessible elections in the country,” he continued.

Plaintiffs Susan Vanness, Alexandrea Slack, Martin Waldman, and Robert Beadles challenged the constitutionality of sections 1 and 2 of the Act as alleged violations of the 1st and 14th Amendments of the Nevada Constitution.

The Election Worker Protection Act came into being after being passed in the Nevada Legislature in April 2023. Aiming to combat a statewide shortage of election workers, it contained provisions that criminalized the use, threat, or attempted use of force, intimidation or violence that intends to interfere with the duties of an election worker.



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Henderson mental health professionals to be dispatched through 988

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Henderson mental health professionals to be dispatched through 988


A group of Henderson licensed mental health professionals has become the first dedicated response team in Nevada that can be dispatched through the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline as part of a pilot program, the city announced this week.

Lisa Kelso, a licensed clinical supervisor for the city’s Crisis Response Team, said during Tuesday’s Henderson City Council meeting that the unit, made up of licensed clinicians and licensed social workers, launched in July 2025 and works with the city’s police and fire departments to be dispatched automatically after officials receive a behavioral health-related 911 call.

From last July until December, Kelso said the city received about 1,700 calls related to behavioral health.

“On scene, our licensed mental health clinicians can complete assessments and provide treatment recommendations,” Kelso said Tuesday. “We work to connect to the individual to the right level of service.”

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City official: 988 model reduces strain on 911

Kelso said a formal partnership with the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health is still being finalized, but the goal is to begin dispatching the Crisis Response Team in Henderson through 988 later this year. She noted that Nevada currently has just two 988 call centers, one in the northern part of the state and another in Southern Nevada.

According to a Wednesday news release from the city, expansion of the 988 program — which launched nationally in 2022 — seeks to make support immediately available during mental health or substance use emergencies.

Nationally, Kelso said, an estimated 10 percent to 20 percent of all 911 calls are related to behavioral health and that less than 2 percent of calls to 988 have required law enforcement intervention. Hayley Jarolimek, a licensed social worker and director of Henderson’s Department of Community and Neighborhood Programs, told City Council members on Tuesday that older approaches to mental health crises have traditionally resulted in high incarceration rates for those with mental illness and have strained care systems.

Jarolimek said the 988 model reduces pressure on emergency services like 911 and allows law enforcement and firefighters to respond to service requests that align more with their missions.

State developing certification process

Henderson’s Crisis Response Team is able to dedicate professionals to provide immediate support by telephone, text or chat in English and Spanish, as well as provide personnel to respond on-site to de-escalate crises and connect people in need to treatment and support resources to stabilize them during times of crisis, Jarolimek said.

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“This framework is designed to prevent the criminalization of mental illness and to enhance collaboration between the justice system and the behavioral health systems,” Jarolimek said. “It identifies critical intercept points where interventions can prevent further involvement into the criminal justice system.”

In an email Thursday, Jesse Stone, a spokesperson for the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health, thanked Henderson for its participation in the pilot project. Stone said the division is developing regulations that will allow certified mobile crisis teams be dispatched through 988.

“The initial pilot project is the first stage of a larger effort from DPBH that would allow any mobile crisis team across the state, in any municipality, to be dispatched from 988 after meeting minimum standards to receive a Behavioral Health Certification of Excellence,” Stone said.

Those regulations, Stone said, are tentatively expected to go into effect in 2027.

Contact Casey Harrison at charrison@reviewjournal.com. Follow him on X @Casey_Harrison1.

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Historic Nevada elementary school to close this summer

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Historic Nevada elementary school to close this summer


A century-old Southern Nevada elementary school will shut its doors this summer after the Clark County School Board approved its closure Thursday.

Goodsprings Elementary School, said to be Nevada’s longest-operating school, will close June 30 after the board voted 6-0 to cease operations at the rural schoolhouse. Trustee Brenda Zamora was absent.

Located about 40 miles southwest of Las Vegas, Goodsprings Elementary had just two students this school year and was expected to have just one student next school year. That remaining student will be rezoned to attend Sandy Valley School, a K-12 school about 12 miles west of Goodsprings, under the plan approved by the board.

Tammy Flanagan, principal of Goodsprings Elementary, said closing the rural school will allow its remaining student to access more social opportunities through clubs and activities.

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“Goodsprings Elementary School is a special place to me, and one that I want to preserve with the hope that many people will be able to experience the 113-year-old building and its history,” Flanagan said. “We need to be fiscally responsible. The cost of operating, and the upkeep of the school, is substantial when considering only one student.”

$1 million a year to operate school

The Clark County School District spends about $1 million per year to operate the rural school, district chief of facilities Brandon McLaughlin previously said. Closing Goodsprings will allow the district to redistribute that money to other schools, and the cost of transporting its sole student to Sandy Valley will be cost-neutral for the district, he added.

Goodsprings Elementary began inside a tent in 1907 before its current building opened in 1913, according to its website.

The approved plan did not determine what will become of the schoolhouse, but McLaughlin said the Las Vegas-Clark County Library District has shown interest in relocating its nearby facility into the schoolhouse permanently. McLaughlin added that Goodsprings residents said they would like to turn the building into a community space or a location for the town’s historical society.

If another entity were to take ownership of Goodsprings Elementary School, they would be responsible for any maintenance costs, according to reference materials associated with the plan. The schoolhouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Goodsprings Elementary has two employees: one licensed educator and one part-time custodian and food service worker. Both have already accepted new positions in the district, school officials previously said.

‘We have seen the writing on the blackboard’

Former Goodsprings students reflected on the school’s history during public comment, but acknowledged the strain keeping it open would have on the district.

“I am deeply saddened that we’re facing closure … but we have seen the writing on the blackboard,” said Steve Fleming, a Goodsprings Elementary alumnus whose father was a teacher at the school.

His sister, Mary Blake, who is a member of the Goodsprings Historical Society, urged trustees to visit Goodsprings Elementary and see firsthand what it means to the town’s residents.

“It’s more than just a little school. It’s an important cultural part of the Goodsprings community,” Blake said. “There’s nothing else there except the school.”

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In first grade, Bobbie Poole said, she met her future husband while they were students at Goodsprings Elementary. She called the school a cornerstone of Goodsprings that has helped preserve the spirit of rural Nevada life.

Poole called on the school board to ensure the rich history of Goodsprings Elementary does not disappear.

“Once a building like this is unused, it quickly falls to disrepair,” Poole said. “We have an opportunity right now to do something different.”

She added: “Closing a school does not mean we have to lose it.”

The school district previously said district leaders will visit Goodsprings Elementary to celebrate its history on May 2 between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. The last day of school at the campus is scheduled for May 21.

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Contact Spencer Levering at slevering@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0253.



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Three more Nevada counties included in disaster declaration

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Three more Nevada counties included in disaster declaration


NEVADA (KOLO) – Three more Nevada counties have been included in a disaster declaration over drought conditions.

Elko, Lincoln, and White Pine Counties have now been added to the list of counties in the state of Nevada the USDA says are experiencing extreme drought.

Their inclusion in the list allows the Farm Service Agency to extend emergency credit to producers through emergency loans.

The loans can be used to replace essential items, reorganize farming operations and more.

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The deadline to apply for such credit is Dec. 10.

Extreme drought has previously been declared in Clark, Esmeralda and Nye Counties in Nevada as well as for Mono County and Inyo County in California.

Copyright 2026 KOLO. All rights reserved.



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