Las Vegas Review-Journal

Applicants for Assembly want stadium specifics

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district, and he lost in the June Republican primary.

While almost all eight applicants who the Review-Journal interviewe­d Monday favored a legislativ­e initiative to expand the Las Vegas Convention Center by raising the county’s hotel room tax, they hesitated at endorsing a 65,000-seat stadium funded by another room tax increase.

The revenue would be used to finance $750 million in stadium constructi­on costs over 33 years. The proposed deal would require the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman Sheldon Adelson, Majestic Realty and the NFL’s Oakland Raiders to pay the remainder of the constructi­on costs and any cost overruns.

District 1 applicant Kevin Schmidt, a UNLV graduate with a master’s of public administra­tion, said he worried such a tax increase might hurt tourism.

“Honestly it would take a lot to convince me that this would be a good move for the state,” he said. “We saw during the housing crisis that Las Vegas is not as recession-proof as we believed. Why would we be doing something that would make it easier for people to not come to our city during a crisis or downturn?”

Nathan Atkins, a District 1 applicant with a business leadership background, shared the most positive outlook on increasing the tax, saying it “sounds like a very prudent way of putting this (stadium) together.”

Other applicants did not express support or discomfort with the proposed stadium.

“I am open to conversati­on, to research. I am open to all ideas,” said Kyle Stephens, a District 5 resident of 25 years who applied after Republican Assembly leadership asked him to consider it. “I am there to be available to all sides and to make a clear and concise decision to the benefit of the community.”

Fellow District 5 applicant Ron Coury and District 1 applicant Jo Cato, a former North Las Vegas planning commission­er, also took a neutral stance.

Louis M. DeSalvio, a District 1 applicant and political liaison for Laborers Local 872, said he needed more details before deciding. He ran unsuccessf­ully for Assembly District 13 in 2010 and 2012.

“I like the conceptual idea of diversifyi­ng our economy and putting people to work,” he said. But, “it’s hard to really speculate when I know at the end of the day they’re going to go back-and-forth with this proposed bill draft.”

Henry Wilczynski, another District 1 applicant, said he was on the fence.

“I know there will jobs with the constructi­on, but after it’s done will there still be well-paying jobs?” he asked.

District 1 applicant Stephanie Smith, a former assemblywo­man and North Las Vegas council member, declined an interview on the subject.

District 5 applicant R. Garn Mabey Jr., a physician and former Assembly minority leader, could not be reached for comment Monday.

The Review-Journal is owned by the family of Sheldon Adelson, chairman and CEO of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @ davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

 ?? JASON OGULNIK LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? A man views a sheet showing an impact summary for the proposed $1.9 billion, 65,000-seat, domed stadium during a Southern Nevada Tourism Infrastruc­ture committee meeting Sept. 15 at UNLV.
JASON OGULNIK LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL A man views a sheet showing an impact summary for the proposed $1.9 billion, 65,000-seat, domed stadium during a Southern Nevada Tourism Infrastruc­ture committee meeting Sept. 15 at UNLV.

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