Western High School Class of ‘71

Western High School Class of ‘71

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This page is for the WHS alumni, Class of ‘71. Post your stories and pictures of our days at Western.

03/24/2026

Happy Birthday to our ‘71 classmate Liana Roetter-Turello!

03/16/2026

The Class of ‘71 reunion committee has officially declared the celebration of our 55th WHS reunion on September 25 & 26, 2026.
On Friday the 25th, we will have the “WHS Class of 1971 Icebreaker”. The fun begins at 4:00 PM and will be held at the Parkway Tavern, 9820 W. Flamingo (just west of the I-215). Appetizers will be provided, a no host bar.

Saturday the 26th, things will kickoff at 5:00 PM. We have planned a wonderful dinner, DJ, Karaoke, Bingo, and of course dancing. The event will take place at the Las Vegas Golf Club, better known to us as Muni Golf Course, 4300 W. Washington.
Here’s the breakdown :
5:00-6:00 No host cocktail hour
and bingo game.
6:00-7:00 Italian Dinner
7:00-9:00 Dancing / Karaoke
No host bar

We are still in the process of working out the costs for everyone as we want to make this completely affordable for all who wish to attend.

Hotel room rates are currently higher than in the past and for us to reserve blocks of rooms would cost us a very high fee. So our suggestion for those of you who will be attending from out of town, would be to check out these sites on the internet: Expedia, Hotel.com, Travago, Booking.com, or possibly go to the actual hotel web page. We’re sure that you’ll probably get a much better rate.

Please check out this “Western High School Class of ‘71” page, as we will update everyone about costs and activities. If you are in contact with any of our classmates, please be sure to let them know about the reunion. Many are not on social media and we would not want them to miss out on the upcoming reunion.

Until next time, remember this:
“ONCE A WARRIOR, ALWAYS A WARRIOR !!!”

Your 1971 reunion committee.
🎉🥂🥃🍷🕺🏻💃🏻 🎤 🎶

02/18/2026

Attention Lady Warriors !

Please text Cindy or Rhonda for Address! 702-469-0622- 702-286-8688

11/27/2025

Happy Thanksgiving to my Warrior classmates!!
Jake Gutierrez ‘71
🦃🥧🍗🍂🍁😊

05/30/2025

Many people have requested to join this page, “Western High School Class of ‘71”. However, only those former classmates of Western High School in Las Vegas, Nevada, will be accepted. Please do not request to be a member of this group if you do not meet this requirement. You will be denied. Thank you.

Administrator

05/29/2025

Congratulations to our ‘71 classmate David Robeck for his outstanding work! A true Warrior!

Las Vegas Weekly
May 29, 2025

BRIDGING THE GAP: HOW ONE LAS VEGAS FACILITY IS HELPING WITH NEVADA’S MENTAL HEALTH CARE CRISIS

Bridge Counseling Associates, formed in 1971, is the oldest nonprofit providing individual and family counseling in Southern Nevada. But when David Robeck took over as its president in 2014, the organization’s future was in jeopardy.

“It was about to fail; it had just terminated the entire leadership and no other agency wanted to merge with us because we were in such bad shape,” Robeck says. “It was important for me to go out there and make sure that we had a better reputation.”

Robeck proceeded to bring Bridge Counseling back from the brink by moving into a 46,000-square-foot facility on McLeod Drive in 2019 while nearly doubling its total staff to about 80. Between that building and a smaller outpatient center on Alta Drive, it has served more than 20,000 clients since he took the reins. Robeck plans to continue building its infrastructure and staff until the organization reaches capacity.

His efforts are one of many adjacent pieces of Nevada’s push to expand its underwhelming mental health care landscape. According to Mental Health America’s 2024 report, Nevada ranks last among all states on a composite score that factors in a variety of metrics like the prevalence of substance abuse, suicidal thoughts, insurance coverage gaps and the state of its mental health workforce.

There’s been strong bipartisan recognition of the need to fortify the state’s mental health resources, with the most prominent recent example being Gov. Joe Lombardo’s May 15 introduction of Senate Bill 495, or the Nevada Health Care Access Act, in the Nevada Legislature. The lengthy proposal calls for a $25 million annual fund to combat workforce shortages, with an emphasis on bolstering its graduate residency programs. It would also create a new Office of Mental Health under the Nevada Health Authority, which would be tasked with streamlining access to health care offerings like Medicaid.

The provider gap is a longstanding concern. According to the latest data from County Health Rankings and Roadmaps, a University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute program that tracks health trends across the United States, Nevada had one mental health care provider for every 376 residents in 2024, while Clark County’s rate was 391-to-1.

Nevada lawmakers are looking to address this shortage through Assembly Bill 163, which would enter Nevada into an agreement with 37 other states that allows licensed professional counselors in any of those states to practice in other member states. The bill drew support from more than 100 mental health providers in Nevada in early hearings.

“It’s hard to keep clinicians. This is difficult work that we do. These are people who are facing life-changing problems that we’re able to help them with,” Robeck says. “For us, it helps that we pay salaries weekly, give wonderful benefits and that nobody here is a contractor. And if a client doesn’t show up, you’re going to get paid regardless.”

All employees are certified in skills like CPR and crisis prevention protocol, and have an opportunity to offset up to $75,000 in student loans through a Health Resources Services Administration program. These considerations help Robeck retain the skilled workers he already has, but he’s also made a point to designate specialized rooms where practicum students from UNLV and other universities can learn alongside a licensed counselor.

As it stands, Bridge Counseling’s McLeod facility offers a strong mix of ancillary services, and Robeck—a former banker—left no stone unturned as he transformed it from its former use as a Silver State Schools Credit Union branch. Every space has a purpose, from the Child and Youth Community Treatment Center opened in 2021 to a revamped kitchen space that’s expected to soon serve as a culinary workforce training site.

He credits this sustained surge in resources largely to his nonprofit’s 2017 federal status as a Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic, which he says “gave us a brand new license with Medicaid so that we could do all the mental health and substance abuse treatments in the same location.”

“We see all the time people who are treated only for substance abuse, but those who actually work to identify their underlying mental health issue—what caused them to become an addict—can be sober and clean for the rest of their life because they’ve fixed both issues, not just the symptoms,” Robeck says.

Most of their clients come via referrals from courts or the Department of Family Services, with a large portion of those cases stemming from substance use disorders. Bridge Counseling’s growing residential treatment component, which launched about three years ago and welcomed the addition of 25 short-term psychiatric beds last December, emphasizes a mix of individualized counseling and group therapy sessions.

“These are people who may be homeless and need a place to stay and be stabilized. They’re usually here anywhere from nine days to a full month, and the next step would be going to another agency where they can get more permanent housing,” Robeck says. “Beyond that, if a client is not prepared to go yet—perhaps we’ve dealt with their drug issue and we haven’t finished their mental health issue—they will stay here as long as they need to.”

During their treatment period, patients typically have a one-on-one therapy session and two group meetings per week. They work closely with a targeted case manager who checks in on them regularly and can help them craft résumés and apply for jobs. Because most clients rely on Medicaid, Robeck says Bridge also offers an in-house professional who can facilitate their coverage.

As an adoptive single father of four sons with “special needs,” Robeck is also concerned over an even larger shortage of youth mental health care in the state. On May 9, Nevada’s U.S. Senators Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen and 19 of their peers penned a letter to U.S. Department of Education secretary Linda McMahon demanding answers after the department reportedly cut more than $1 billion in Bipartisan Safer Communities Act federal mental health grants to help schools hire mental health staff.

Those cuts would further hinder an already shorthanded youth mental health care system in Nevada. To do his part to crack down on the issue, Robeck has been preparing to turn a garage in the McLeod facility’s parking lot into a 5,200-square-foot pediatric ward with 16 inpatient psychiatric beds, recreation rooms and an exterior courtyard.

An adjacent plan would add another 28,000-square-foot, two-story multi-family transitional housing building with 52 units and 100 beds. Both proposals recently earned Clark County land use approval, but Robeck’s team is still trying to shore up the $8 million required to make it happen.

While he’d like to see increased funding opportunities for projects like these in the future, Robeck adds that he has noticed Nevada representatives place a “larger focus on mental health” since he began his nonprofit career.

“This is how we get rid of stigma, by recognizing it,” he says. “This is not One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest; this is about helping people rebuild their lives.”

Photos from Western High School Class of ‘71's post 01/16/2025

You don’t want to miss out on this get together ladies!

09/08/2024

In loving memory of our fallen Warrior classmate.
Jeff Liston- WHS Class of 71.
🙏🏼💔🌹🙏🏼

08/30/2024

Attention Lady Warriors!!

08/15/2024

It is with great sadness that the Class of 71, has lost another classmate. Lynda Toddie Ghadery, passed away on Friday, August 9, due to cancer. Services will be held on Friday, August 30, at Davis Funeral Home. Visitation will begin at 9am with service at 11am.
This sad information was passed on to us by her son, Jason.
Rest In Peace fellow Warrior.
🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

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