It's disturbing and heartbreaking to hear about crashes on our roads here in the Las Vegas area. Before this batch of currently elected people, it was clear the city, county and metro Vegas built roads to move people in cars as fast as possible without understanding or accounting for the walkers and people on bicycles using the same roads. So these days, policy is only now changing to include other road users besides drivers and it's typically shaped in response to bicyclists and walkers getting crashed into by drivers and killed/injured.
Based on what I have seen around in the places I have lived in like metro New York, South Florida, Tampa Bay, Denver and Seattle, City of Las Vegas Government and Clark County, Nevada are at least 20 years behind building roads with protected lanes, separate trails and bicyclist-walker networks where safe and complete roads actually connect to make routes for pedestrians and those on bicycles who are using bicycles for transportation and commuting purposes .
The problem is that policy is driven here by reaction -- reacting to so many people killed/injured by drivers and not by progressive/preemptive construction of paved trails, protected bike lanes etc. Walk Bike Tampa put it very well: "It says a lot about our society when people injured in traffic crashes must publicly share painful stories just to justify basic safety improvements, while opposition centers around preserving the ability to drive fast through residential neighborhoods. No one should have to suffer serious injury before safer streets are considered worthwhile."
For example, we need a paved trail or protected bike lane from downtown to the Strip, which is an obvious connection. But the city likes to build trails along highways like along the 215 beltway and a current project along Summerlin Parkway. The city and RTC have received federal money to pay private engineering companies to come up with even more walking/bicycle plans that typically never get implemented. This is costing metro Vegas bigtime because our dangerous roads are one factor among several (under-funded education, health care personnel shortage) that led WalletHub to conclude, "Nevada is ranked the 4th worst state (No. 47) to raise a family, driven by low rankings in education, child care, and safety, ahead of only Mississippi, West Virginia, and New Mexico."

