Engage & Hold Accountable
Engage & hold them accountable
How to register and vote, contact your representatives, attend public meetings, report a non-emergency issue, and hold officials accountable — in Las Vegas / Clark County, NV.
A first version — sourced, still filling in.
Scope: the steps below are for Las Vegas / Clark County, NV. Every date and channel is sourced from the official authority (Nevada Secretary of State, Clark County, City of Las Vegas) and dated. This is how to participate — not who to vote for.
Vote & elections
How and where to register, check your registration, and vote — Nevada votes by mail unless you opt out.
Register to vote online
Register or update your registration online at the Nevada Secretary of State's portal (a Nevada DMV driver's license or ID is required). The online portal opens 45 days before each election and closes when polls close at 7 p.m. on Election Day.
Nevada Secretary of State — Registering to Vote2026-06-08nvsos.gov
Same-day registration
Nevada offers same-day registration: you can register for the first time or update your registration in person during Early Voting or on Election Day at a polling place, then vote — bring your Nevada driver's license or ID.
Nevada Secretary of State — Same-day Registration2026-06-08nvsos.gov
Check your registration
Look up your current voter registration status, polling place, and districts with the Nevada Secretary of State's voter registration search.
Nevada Secretary of State — Voter Registration Search2026-06-08nvsos.gov
Nevada's all-mail ballot
Since AB321 (2021 Legislative Session), every active registered Nevada voter is mailed a ballot for each election — you don't have to request one. You can complete it and return it by mail, at a drop box, or at a vote center, or opt out and vote in person.
Nevada Secretary of State — Mail Ballot Voting (AB321, 2021 Legislative Session)2026-06-08nvsos.gov
AB321 (2021): every active registered Nevada voter is mailed a ballot for each election (since 2022) unless they opt out.
Track your mail ballot
Sign up to track your mail ballot through every step — sent, received, and counted — with the state's ballot-tracking service (BallotTrax), and get alerts by email, text, or voice.
Nevada Secretary of State — Ballot Tracking (BallotTrax)2026-06-08nvsos.gov
Find your vote center or drop box
Clark County voters can use any vote center in the county during Early Voting and on Election Day. Find current vote centers, drop-box locations, and hours at the Clark County Election Department.
Clark County Election Department2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
Key 2026 dates
Only dates confirmed from the official source are listed below. For early-voting hours and any updates, always confirm with the Nevada Secretary of State and the Clark County Election Department.
2026 Primary Election — Election Day
Early voting May 23 – June 5, 2026. Polls open 7 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Clark County Election Department2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
2026 General Election — Election Day
Clark County Election Department2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
Online registration deadline — 2026 Primary
The online voter-registration portal closes 45 days before Primary Election Day. (Same-day registration is still available in person during Early Voting and on Election Day.)
Nevada Secretary of State — 2026 Election Information2026-06-08nvsos.gov
Local elections authority
Clark County Election Department
Clark County Election Department2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
Contact your representatives
Your federal representatives for Las Vegas — call, email, or open the full profile. See state and local officials, or look up your own address, on the Representatives page.
Public meetings
When your city council and county commission meet, where to find the agenda, and how to give public comment.
Las Vegas City Council
The City Council meets regularly (typically twice a month) at City Hall, Council Chambers. The City publishes the schedule and agendas on its Meetings & Agendas portal — confirm the next meeting there.
How to give public comment
Agendas and meeting materials are posted on the City's PrimeGov portal. Public comment is taken at the meeting; the agenda lists the public-comment period and instructions.
City of Las Vegas — City Council Meetings (PrimeGov portal)2026-06-08lasvegasnevada.gov
Exact 2026 dates not asserted — the City publishes the calendar + agendas on its Meetings & Agendas portal; confirm there.
Clark County Commission
The Board of County Commissioners meets the 1st Tuesday (9:05 a.m.) and 3rd Tuesday (9 a.m.) of each month. Current and archived agendas are on the County's meeting-agendas page.
How to give public comment
To speak, fill out a Public Comment Interest Card in the Commission Chambers and give it to staff; comments are limited to three minutes — step to the podium and state your name. Meetings are broadcast on Clark County Television.
Clark County — Board of County Commissioners Meeting Agendas2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
Board meets the 1st Tuesday (9:05 a.m.) and 3rd Tuesday (9 a.m.) of each month; confirm the live calendar on the agendas portal.
Report an issue
Official non-emergency channels for potholes, streetlights, graffiti, code, and other requests.
Emergency? Call 911. For a crime in progress or any immediate danger, always dial 911 — the channels below are for non-emergency requests only.
City of Las Vegas — Report A Problem
Streets, lighting, graffiti, code, and other maintenance requests within City of Las Vegas limits — report online or in the SeeClickFix app.
A free mobile app is also available for this service.
City of Las Vegas — Report A Problem2026-06-08lasvegasnevada.gov
Clark County — FixIt Clark County
Potholes, streetlights, graffiti, trash, abandoned vehicles, short-term-rental and code concerns in unincorporated Clark County — report online or in the FixIt Clark County app.
A free mobile app is also available for this service.
Clark County — FixIt Clark County2026-06-08clarkcountynv.gov
Hold them accountable
See how your representatives are performing — voting records, attendance, and the constituent-service scorecard.
Representative Scorecard
Voting records, attendance, and grades — the factual record, ranked. Each row opens the full profile.
Civic Hub is non-partisan: party is shown as a neutral label, every figure is sourced and dated, and we never assert causation from correlation. We surface the record; you draw the conclusions.
