Clark County officials warn jail medical costs are straining budget as court approves transfers
Loading...
Summary
Clark County Fiscal Court approved transfers to cover shortfalls and discussed repeated medical expenditures at the detention center, including an estimated $130,000+ annual cost for one inmate and pending litigation over state responsibility for inmate healthcare funding.
Clark County Fiscal Court on March 26 approved budget transfers intended to cover shortfalls in equipment repairs and jail medical services, while county officials warned that inmate healthcare costs are unusually high and may require recurring budget adjustments.
The court approved a transfer that moves funds from HVAC and boiler accounts into the county’s medical services account to cover immediate shortfalls. County members said medical expenses at the detention center have exceeded allocations and that transfers of tens of thousands of dollars may recur. "This is not gonna be the end of this," a court member said when explaining the transfer.
A county corrections official told the court that individual inmate medical costs can be substantial, estimating that one inmate’s dialysis and related care runs "about $130,130 to 140,000 a year for that one inmate." The official added that counties have limited ability to control these costs while state rules require provision of medically necessary care.
Members cited ongoing litigation involving five counties against the Commonwealth over responsibility for inmate medical bills, and one court speaker referenced House Bill 557 — which the speaker said has drawn 51 cosponsors — as relevant to shifting state responsibility for some costs. The court did not change that litigation or bill language; members discussed using their legislative contacts to urge state action.
Chair (speaker 2) and other members asked staff to document recurring medical spending and to bring formal, written proposals on how to manage future transfers. The court approved the immediate transfers and agreed to monitor budget impacts as revenue (including incoming tax receipts) and reimbursements are received.
What happens next: county staff will continue to compile medical expense data and present options for managing the detention center’s medical services budget in future meetings. Any formal fiscal changes beyond the transfers approved March 26 will return to the Fiscal Court for action.

