Commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick used the meeting’s “emerging issues” item to flag three matters she asked county staff to investigate: hemp and Delta‑X product signage on the Las Vegas Strip, a cut to SNAP education funding that threatens Cooperative Extension nutrition programs, and a set of rental “junk fees” that she said can add $180–$250 or more to monthly housing costs. “They have the hemp that's, there. They're selling it … they're on front windows of storefronts on the Las Vegas Strip, and that troubles me,” Kirkpatrick said, urging staff to examine possible local regulatory responses to Delta‑8, Delta‑10 and other products. On SNAP education funding, Kirkpatrick asked the board to direct staff to work with UNLV Cooperative Extension to amend a spending plan and preserve nutrition‑education programs that reach children and seniors; she said the loss of funds could affect about 78,000 children in Clark County and thousands of seniors and asked for a quick review because a program deadline was approaching. On tenant fees, Kirkpatrick said she had reviewed apartment listings and constituent complaints showing a variety of monthly surcharges — labeled “real estate tax allocation,” carport fees, trash‑valet, pool use fees and others — that together can tack $150–$500 a month onto rent. She said some charges are being passed through by out‑of‑state owners and hedge funds and asked county attorneys to investigate whether local authority, including limits created by recent state rulemaking (referred to in discussion as “Dylan’s rule”), could curb certain pass‑throughs. Staff responses and follow‑up: Vice Chair Krupetschik said staff in business licensing and code compliance will schedule outreach with the marijuana industry to address signage and illegal sales. Commissioner McCurdy and state housing staff offered to assist with SNAP‑related spend‑down planning; Kirkpatrick asked for direction to staff to explore adding “a couple million dollars” to preserve SNAP education programs if needed. Steve Acroft of the Nevada Housing Division said he will check whether federal tax‑credit rules could be implicated when landlords attempt to allocate property‑tax charges to tenants, noting that noncompliance can jeopardize tax credits for projects that rely on investor equity. The commission did not adopt an ordinance or appropriations at the meeting; commissioners asked staff and county attorneys to return with findings and options.