The Nevada Forum, By The Numbers

From March 11 to May 22, 2026, Nevadans answered this question: If Nevada’s state leaders and residents could solve one problem, what should it be?

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Total Number of Visits to Our Digital Platform

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Total Actions Taken

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Total Issues Submitted

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Counties Represented
Based on Zip Code

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Total Number of Contributors

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Participation Across Nevada

The data below is based on the 14,327 of the 30,618 contributors who provided their zip codes. 16,291 additional Nevadans contributed but did not provide a zip code.

Hover over a county to see the number of contributors from that area.

LOWHIGH

What Nevadans Want To Fix

When we asked what needs to be fixed, Nevadans contributed more than 700 issues, inspiring thousands more comments and reactions.

Tap a circle below to see what your fellow Nevadans said. (Note: Some duplicate submissions were removed or combined, and some issues fit in multiple categories.)

See the full issues dataset here.

  • Housing, Economy & Cost of Living: 162
  • Government Accountability, Elections & Civic Trust: 144
  • Transportation & Infrastructure: 140
  • Education, Youth & Workforce Development: 133
  • Public Safety & Social Services: 122
  • Environment, Water & Natural Resources: 119
  • Healthcare, Public Health & Mental Health: 90
  • Urban Planning & Development: 90

What Nevadans Agree On

Based on Nevadans’ inputs, we identified the top 20 issues informed by contributors’ engagement on the topics and shared them with the public on May 1, 2026.

Once again, Nevadans from across the state stepped up and 3,707 people selected what matters most. These are the results. See the full voting dataset here.

98.40%

Voters with at least 1 issue in top 6

84.70%

Voters with at least 1 issue in top 3

Rising Basic Living Costs Are Massive Burdens to Households

Food, gas, rent, and basic groceries are stretching Nevadans of all ages and incomes; the middle class describes feeling that any margin for error has disappeared.

Housing Is Unaffordable for Working Nevadans

Nevada's housing market is increasingly unaffordable, with rents outpacing wages, build-to-rent developments limiting homeownership, and corporations acquiring homes, pricing out the working-class.

Nevada Is the Driest State and Running Out of Water

Water scarcity is reaching a critical point, with declining surface water, collapsing ecosystems, and groundwater increasingly depleted by mining, data centers, and large-scale development.

Education for K-12 in Nevada Is Failing Students

Nevada's K-12 system is underperforming, with overcrowded classrooms and low literacy rates leaving many students' needs unmet.

Data Centers Drain Nevada's Water and Electricity for Few Jobs

Several data center projects moved into Nevada, raising questions about water consumption in the driest state in the country, electricity demand, environmental impact, and what residents receive in return.

Political Party Polarization Has Replaced Real Representation

Nevadans across the political spectrum are frustrated elected officials don’t represent the people who elected them, and polarization has crowded out everyday concerns and made compromise impossible.

Nevadans Who Raised Their Voice

This data reflects participation since The Nevada Forum launch on March 11 to May 22, 2026, plus a short pre-launch window.

Our outreach efforts aimed to include every demographic in rough proportion to the state population. At the conclusion of the voting round, some groups were still underrepresented in our participant pool, including non-white Nevadans and younger (age 18-29) Nevadans. To support top issue selection, we conducted additional analysis that confirmed their top priorities strongly aligned with the three dominant themes that emerged statewide: rising cost of living, housing costs, and education quality.

Age

30%25%20%15%10%5%0%
18-29 | 6.2%
30-39 | 9.36%
40-49 | 12.93%
50-59 | 17.61%
60-69 | 27.51%
70+ | 26.4%
18-29
30-39
40-49
50-59
60-69
70+

Political Lean

Very Conservative
Very Conservative | 10.77%
10.77%
Conservative
Conservative | 29.5%
29.5%
Moderate
Moderate | 28.23%
28.23%
Liberal
Liberal | 16.43%
16.43%
Very Liberal
Very Liberal | 9.18%
9.18%
Not Sure
Not Sure | 5.9%
5.9%
0%8%16%24%32%

Race / Ethnicity

White
White | 71.73%
71.73%
Prefer not to say
Prefer not to say | 9.54%
9.54%
Hispanic or Latino
Hispanic or Latino | 7.43%
7.43%
Black or African-American
Black or African-American | 5.13%
5.13%
Asian
Asian | 2.97%
2.97%
American Indian or Alaska Native
American Indian or Alaska Native | 1.73%
1.73%
Middle Eastern or North African
Middle Eastern or North African | 1.03%
1.03%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 0.44%
0.44%

Methodology

Every result in this report was produced by a transparent, repeatable process. Here’s exactly how it worked.

For more information, check out The Nevada Forum’s website, which includes project background and our privacy policy.

Disclaimer: The Forum is a demonstration project designed to test a new approach to public engagement using multiple digital tools. The data reflects input contributed by participants who choose to engage in the process. As we adapt the design to foster broad participation, we are actively reviewing data to improve accuracy and reduce duplication. This is not a formal research study, and while we strive for rigor, some errors or inconsistencies may occur.

What’s Happened and What’s Ahead

More work lies ahead to shape the future of Nevada. Here is where we will go next.

Hover over a step to read the full description.

1

Identifying the Top Issues (CLOSED)

2

Community Conversations (SIGN UP NOW)

3

In-Person Civic Assembly

4

Engagement and Advocacy

Next Step: Realtime, Small-Group Conversations on the Top Issues

Starting in June 2026, Nevadans are invited to join Community Conversations (register here), small-group discussions focused on the top issues identified through the digital engagement process outlined in this report. Here’s how we’re taking your votes forward as conversation topics:

Issue #1: Rising Cost of Living

According to contributors in our first phase, housing, health care, and other household expenses are all putting the squeeze on Nevadans. Many Nevadans are asking whether work, household income, and public support create enough coverage for basic costs, emergencies, and savings. The rising cost of living appeared in three of the seven top-voted issues and will advance into Community Conversations as a broad area of exploration and problem-solving.

Issue #2: K-12 Educational Resources, Outcomes, and Accountability

Contributors in our first phase raised concerns that K-12 students may not be getting the academic support, classroom conditions, staffing capacity, funding transparency, and accountability needed to succeed. State data show recent gains on some measures, but many students are testing below proficiency in core subjects, and chronic absenteeism remains high. This Community Conversation explores pathways to strengthen the K-12 experience in Nevada.

Issue #3: Growth, Water Scarcity, and Long-Term Supply

Contributors in our first phase cited several interrelated concerns about water scarcity and supply in Nevada: Colorado River supply uncertainty, groundwater stress, growth, large users such as data centers, rural and tribal interests, and ecosystems. In this Community Conversation, participants will weigh options and tradeoffs around water reliability, affordability, growth, rural and urban fairness, economic opportunity, tribal and ecosystem interests, and long-term stewardship.

Issue #4: State Politics and Polarization

Contributors in our first phase raised concerns that go beyond any single election or party: many feel that elected officials are less connected to everyday residents, that partisan conflict crowds out practical problems, and that compromise has become harder to sustain. In this Community Conversation, participants will explore the systems, incentives, and habits that shape representation in Nevada, and identify potential pathways to strengthen connections between elected leaders and constituents.

How to Join Community Conversations

Deliberative Community Conversations begin in June 2026. Small-group conversations are forming across Nevada — and your voice belongs in the room.

The Nevada Forum · nvforum.org

The Nevada Forum