Las Vegas Review-Journal

Council holds off on moratorium proposal

Members ask staff for redevelopm­ent policy

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

The Las Vegas City Council couldn’t get behind a moratorium on accepting plans for golf course and open space redevelopm­ent, but officials want city staff to come up with a new policy that can act as a guide.

Councilman Steve Seroka’s moratorium proposal was aimed at giving the city time to create a broad policy for redevelopm­ent in master-plan and special-use areas that include a golf course or other common open spaces. Such proposals have riled neighbors, but most council members did not want a six-month stop on accepting applicatio­ns.

Mayor Carolyn Goodman recalled the recession’s ravaging of the local economy when she said she couldn’t support a moratorium.

“This is a town that needs to keep growing and attracting at this particular time,” Goodman said.

Some city leaders said the measure is not aimed at a specific developmen­t, but the battle lines re-emerged over EHB Cos.’ developmen­t proposal for the Badlands golf course, with some arguing it targets that closed west valley course.

A new developmen­t policy would apply to the 23 master-developmen­t-plan areas and special-area plans in the city. Most of those areas have common open spaces, and 11 are golf courses.

A majority of the council directed city staff to create a broad policy to guide golf course and open space developmen­t and bring it back to the council in the next six months.

The moratorium proposal sliced the council. Councilwom­an Michele Fiore said she wanted it denied outright, arguing it affects the northwest Ward 6 she represents more than Ward 2, where Badlands lies.

“A vote on this is a vote against Ward 6, and that is not OK with me,” Fiore said.

Even without the moratorium, Fiore and Goodman cast the only no votes among the seven-member council, arguing they should start over.

Golf course closures and redevelopm­ent plans have stirred controvers­y valleywide in recent years.

Opponents of a plan to build homes and apartments on the Badlands course came out in favor of the six-month stop on developmen­t.

EHB CEO and founder Yohan Lowie called the council’s action a “moratorium in disguise.” The City Council approved in February 435 for-sale condominiu­ms for the course’s eastern edge but rejected other proposals to develop other portions of the 250acre course in June and August.

Attorney Frank Schreck, a Queensridg­e homeowner who has opposed plans to build on the adjacent shuttered golf course, said creating a citywide policy will require developers to submit completed applicatio­ns “so no other community has to suffer the way Queensridg­e has had to suffer,” Schreck said.

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