Nugget Project: The FAQ spin

When I was at the Nugget Advisory Committee meeting last week, a PR person working for P3 Development and the Carson Nugget handed me a list of Frequently Asked Questions about the project.

One thing a complex project like this could really use is an FAQ list. Of course, this list came from those developing the project, so a little spin was to be expected. But I was surprised at how much spin there was.

The biggest whopper came on the last page:

Q. Isn't this just an easy way for the Carson Nugget to get a free parking garage?
A. No, the Nugget has more parking that it needs. The Nugget actually doesn't want a parking garage. Its present parking is the preferred surfaced parking, as no casino customer prefers to wind through a garage....

When I first read this, I couldn't help flashing back to the tale of Br'er Rabbit, "Oh, please don't throw me into the briar patch!"

If that line about casino customers hating parking garages is true, then Nevada is in trouble, since some of the biggest casinos in the state have them.

Perhaps these FAQs were written before the recent change in the weather when the value of a parking garage became very obvious. Being able to park your car inside and walk into the casino protected from rain and snow certainly seems like an advantage to me. Even in the summer, having your car and person protected from the blazing sun seems like a no-brainer.

If the Nugget really doesn't want a parking garage, the city could save $5.7 million and not build one for them. If the Nugget has more parking than it needs, certainly it wouldn't miss that one little section where the library and public plaza would be located, right?

That's possible, but then the Nugget would have problems with parking if and when it moves forward with adding a hotel to that property, which is why it wants the parking garage in the first place. The people who drew up the plans for this project didn't wrap the hotel around the parking garage by accident.

Methinks this is an overreaction to the accusations that the Nugget and its president Steve Neighbors are pushing this project solely to benefit the casino.

I would argue that Neighbors and crew have been guilty of overselling this project as purely philanthropic. Certainly that is a part of what is going on here, but trying to claim it doesn't help the casino arouses suspicions among the skeptical, and erodes trust.

On that note, here is another whopper:

Q. Doesn't the Carson Nugget stand to benefit as the land owner?
A. No one benefits from the land but the community....

The rest goes on to detail how the land is being donated and none of the money comes back to the Nugget.

But certainly the value of the Nugget casino property will be greatly enhanced by turning an old, ugly parking lot into a new library and public plaza with a water feature, and a new parking garage right outside the back door. Add in the hotel and office buildings, and the increase in business and overall value of the casino is very obvious.

Just because the Nugget stands to gain from this project is no reason to oppose it. On the contrary, this project should add value to the Nugget, the downtown area and the city as a whole. That is its goal.

The argument will be if the benefits of the project as presented will go disproportionally to the Nugget at the expense of the taxpayers. Certainly the placement of the $5.7 million parking garage benefits the Nugget almost exclusively. In reality, this is the amount the city would be paying for the "donated" parking lot where the library and plaza would be located, and that's a lot to pay for such a small piece of land.

Is this a deal that benefits all parties? That's a question yet to be answered and added to a FAQ list.

Top Stories

... or see all stories

While the holiday season doesn’t come to an end until the new year, Carson City offers its annual Christmas tree recycling program for those preparing to scrap the family tree until next year.

Nevada Promise Scholarship applicants have one final opportunity to meet the mandatory requirement of attending a financial aid meeting at Western Nevada College.

The evolution of a local yoga education studio will open Monday, Jan. 1 as Carson City Yoga takes aim at community and education, celebrating and supporting teachers, students and community, said Amy Smith Joytir and Mary Kay Raponi in a joint announcement.

Friends of the Carson City Library is hosting an ‘Evening in Paris’ New York New Year's Eve Party on Dec. 31st from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Carson Plaza Event Center, 211 E. 9th Street.

CARSON CITY, Nev. — In an intergalactic outreach campaign, the Nevada Division of Tourism has created a travel itinerary suited to the possible extraterrestrial life forms identified in the $22 million Defense Department program described in a Dec. 16 New York Times article.

The long holiday weekend has ended, but the school district’s winter break has just begun. The Carson City Library invites everyone to participate in their Winter Read-a-thon; cuddle up with a book during these cold winter days. New Year’s Eve is just days away and the annual Black Tie Gala thrown by the Friends of the Carson City Library still has tickets available. Go HERE for more information and to buy tickets.

Ever since Joshua Velazquez became sick three years ago, his family has had two piñatas hanging in the entry of their Carson City home.

Matthew and Kathleen Feshbach owed IRS a lot of money. In June 2001 they asked IRS to approve their Offer in Compromise to settle their 1999 and 2001 tax debts. They owed almost $2 million for 1999 and another $3.2 million for 2001. They sent IRS a check for $200,000 with their offer to settle for about half of what they owed.

The Northern Nevada All Veteran Honor Guard based in Carson City reports it has received more than $3,700 in donations for repairs to its shuttle bus it uses to transport families to and from military funerals. The honor guard still needs help in order to achieve its vehicle repair goal.

Mark your calendar as Jan. 9, 2018 promises to be wild. Sierra Nevada Forums is pleased to present "Western Nevada Wildlife Through the Seasons." From raptors to mountain lions guests will share information you may not have known about wildlife and the region we live in.

Bright eyes and wide smiles by the dozens shined Sunday night as Santa Claus made his way though the capital city after sunset Christmas Eve, carried by patrol vehicles in a caravan led by the Carson City Sheriff’s Office Reserve Organization.

It’s Christmas Day! This morning, I woke up and did a short video about what matters today and every day. This is a holiday filled with grand gestures. However, to me, it’s not the grand gestures we should strive for every day. It’s the simple pleasures of life that spread the spirit of joy, giving, peace, and love year-round.

This Christmas marks six years since I lost a child.

The baby boy didn't die, but I nearly did inside when he left.

He was almost my child, one gavel strike away from calling him son.

I had fostered him from infancy to toddler, a total of 16 months in my care.

Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called Sunday night to a vehicle accident in the area of Highway 50 and Fairview.

SILVER SPRINGS, Nev. — Ring in the New Year with a three-mile, round-trip hike along the Nature Trail at Fort Churchill State Historic Park.

A serene night in Carson City.

A 55-year-old man was arrested Friday for suspicion of felony shoplifting after attempting to steal $228 in merchandise from Walmart, a Carson City sheriff’s deputy said.

Before you break into the cookies, you might want to consider a morning bike ride with Muscle Powered; it won’t do anything for the calories, but it may assuage some guilt. If you’re over 21, then test your luck at the Senior Citizen’s Center. BINGO today raises money for the Meals on Wheels program that feeds home-bound seniors. You’ve got one last chance to see Santa Claus. Find him at the Carson Mall until 5 p.m. and then he’s off for his midnight ride.

Sierra Lutheran High School, along with Carson High School and Douglas High School’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes, were fortunate this past week to receive a visit from Flora Savai, a young lady who grew up in the Mathare slums of Nairobi, Kenya.

As part of a continuing investigation, Washoe County Sheriff’s Office ATAC detectives recently located items they believe to be stolen and are now attempting to locate potential victims.

Here is the Carson City area road report for the last week of 2017, Dec. 25-31. Lane closures or restrictions are expected at the following locations due to road/utility work:

While I don’t work with test tubes or petri dishes, nor do I paint or sculpt, as a horticulturist, I am a scientist and an artist. I am not only a horticulturist, but also a practicing active gardener. If you are also a gardener, you too are a scientist and artist because horticulture is a science and an art.

The rural mountain lifestyle we all enjoy at Lake Tahoe is not isolated from the major urban areas nearby. On a typical holiday weekend, the Tahoe Basin turns into a recreation thoroughfare as tens of thousands of day and overnight visitors who sustain our local economy drive up from the San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento and Reno.

High clouds with periods of sunshine and gusty winds are expected this weekend around the Carson City and Lake Tahoe regions, putting a familiar capper on a likely Christmas without snow in western Nevada.

Three were arrested Friday after officers were dispatched to a north Carson Street casino for a fight involving two couples, a Carson City sheriff’s deputy said.

Nathan Tack, a Bethlehem Lutheran fifth grader, won the school-level competition of the National Geography Bee held this week. His win over 8th grader, Parsa Hadjighasemi, who finished second, qualifies him for a chance at an eventual first place prize of a $50,000 scholarship.

A new senior center will be built in Fernley thanks to the William N. Pennington Foundation, which awarded Lyon County $3 million that was signed off Thursday by the Board of County Commissioners.

If you’re anything like me, there are still plenty of last-minute preparations for the holiday. Luckily the shops and businesses around Carson City are there with open arms. Find something one of a kind at the Carson Mall Craft Fair, drop it off at the Rainbow Girls Assembly #7 gift wrapping booth, and grab lunch while you wait. Breakfast with Santa at the Fox Brewpub serves as a toy drive for area kids and as no-fuss way to get start the day with a full belly. Read on for a weekend full of holiday happenings.

SATURDAY:

Judge Tom Armstrong announced Friday that he seeks re-election to Department I of the Carson City Justice/Municipal Court. Judge Armstrong was elected to the bench in 2012, after he was appointed to fill the position by the Carson City Board of Supervisors in May of 2011.

Winter is off to a slow start, especially in the Lake Tahoe basin, with snow totals well below normal for late December.