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Clark County to launch Neighborhood Traffic Management Program in 2026 with $500,000 start-up funding
Summary
Clark County Public Works presented a Neighborhood Traffic Management Program (NTMP) to the West Highlands Neighborhood Association, saying the program will begin accepting applications in January–March and aims to install traffic-calming measures in 2026 using an initial $250,000 mitigation budget and $250,000 for program staffing.
Clark County Public Works told the West Highlands Neighborhood Association that it will launch a Neighborhood Traffic Management Program, or NTMP, in 2026 funded initially with $250,000 for traffic-calming measures and $250,000 to hire two staff to run the program.
“This program is set to go live in 2026 to try and help out the neighborhoods and local streets,” David Jardine, traffic engineering section manager for Clark County Public Works, said during the association’s meeting. Jardine and Steve Gallup, the county’s traffic safety division manager, presented the program and answered residents’ questions.
County staff said the NTMP is a systematic, countywide effort to address speeding, cut-through traffic and other neighborhood safety concerns on local and residential roads. “It combines education, enforcement and engineering — the three E’s,” Gallup said, describing the program’s mix of sheriff’s office enforcement coordination, data collection and physical…
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