Enterprise Park Ordinances - Playgrounds & Pools

Parks and Public Spaces Nevada 4 Minutes Read · published March 01, 2026 Flag of Nevada

Enterprise, Nevada parks are managed by Clark County Parks & Recreation and public pool safety in Enterprise falls under the Southern Nevada Health District for environmental health oversight. For local park rules, maintenance standards, and facility rentals consult the Clark County Parks department Clark County Parks & Recreation[1]. For public pool and spa permitting, chlorination and inspection requirements see the Southern Nevada Health District pool program pages SNHD Pools & Spas[2].

Overview

This article explains how playground inspections and pool chlorination are addressed for parks in Enterprise, Nevada, the departments responsible, typical compliance checks, and steps to report hazards or request inspections. Where the county or district code supplies exact penalties, the text cites those provisions; where a specific fine or deadline is not published on the cited official page, the article states that the amount is not specified on the cited page.

Penalties & Enforcement

Primary enforcement is shared: Clark County enforces park rules and permits, and the Southern Nevada Health District enforces public pool health and safety standards. The controlling local rules and procedures are set out in Clark County ordinances and SNHD program rules; see the county code and district pages for controls and procedure references Clark County Code (Municode)[3] and SNHD Pools & Spas[2].

Enforcement combines county park staff, code enforcement, and SNHD environmental health inspectors.
  • Fines: specific monetary fines for park rule violations are not specified on the cited Clark County parks pages or the SNHD pool pages; see cited sources for procedure and contact.
  • Escalation: first, repeat, or continuing-offence escalation ranges are not specified on the cited pages; enforcement commonly proceeds from notice to corrective order to administrative action per county code.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: closure orders, written corrective actions, temporary suspension of facility use, and administrative hearings are available remedies on environmental health and county enforcement tracks (details on cited pages).
  • Enforcers & complaints: park maintenance and reservations contact Clark County Parks; pool health complaints and inspections are routed to SNHD environmental health—see Help and Support / Resources below for direct contacts.
  • Appeals & review: appeal routes are handled through county administrative processes and SNHD review or administrative hearings; exact time limits for filing appeals are not specified on the cited pages and must be confirmed with the enforcing office.
  • Defences & discretion: enforcement officers retain discretion for reasonable excuse, corrective plans, or conditional permits; permit or variance processes may apply where published by the county or SNHD.

Applications & Forms

The Southern Nevada Health District publishes pool plan-review and permitting guidance and application forms for public pools and spas; fees and submission instructions appear on the SNHD site SNHD Pools & Spas[2]. For park reservations, facility rental or special-event permits contact Clark County Parks via the department page Clark County Parks & Recreation[1]. Where a specific fee or deadline is not listed on the cited page, the article notes that it is not specified on the cited page.

Common Violations

  • Unmaintained playground surfacing or damaged equipment leading to safety hazards — typically subject to corrective orders.
  • Improper pool disinfection or chlorine level monitoring — SNHD may order closure or remediation.
  • Operating a rented facility without a valid reservation or permit — may result in fines or loss of booking privileges.
Report hazards promptly to reduce liability and help prioritize inspections.

Action Steps

  • To report a playground hazard contact Clark County Parks through the department page listed below.
  • To report pool water quality or request an SNHD inspection use the SNHD pool program contact and complaint channels.
  • If you operate a public pool, submit required plan-review and permit applications to SNHD before opening; keep records of chlorine logs and maintenance.

FAQ

Who inspects playground equipment in Enterprise parks?
Clark County Parks is responsible for routine maintenance and coordinates inspections; safety complaints can be submitted via the Clark County Parks contact page.
Who enforces pool chlorination and public pool safety?
The Southern Nevada Health District enforces public pool and spa health requirements, including chlorination standards and inspections.
Are specific fines published for park or pool violations?
Specific monetary fines for park or pool violations are not specified on the cited county or SNHD pages; contact the enforcing office for fee schedules.
How do I appeal an enforcement action?
Appeals follow county administrative procedures or SNHD review processes; exact time limits are not specified on the cited pages and should be confirmed with the enforcing office.

How-To

  1. Document the hazard: take photos, note exact location, and record date/time.
  2. Contact the responsible agency: submit the complaint to Clark County Parks for playground issues or SNHD for pool water quality concerns, using the official contact pages below.
  3. Request inspection: ask for an inspection and provide evidence; request an inspection reference number.
  4. Follow corrective guidance: if ordered to remedy, complete repairs or submit a compliance plan and keep records of maintenance and chlorine logs.
  5. If sanctioned, file an appeal: ask the enforcing office for appeal instructions and any time limits; submit appeals in writing as directed.

Key Takeaways

  • Playground safety is managed by Clark County Parks; report hazards early.
  • SNHD enforces pool chlorination and issues corrective orders for water-quality violations.
  • Exact fines or time limits are often not published on the cited pages; contact agencies for details.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] Clark County Parks & Recreation department
  2. [2] Southern Nevada Health District - Pools & Spas
  3. [3] Clark County Code (Municode)