Las Vegas Review-Journal

Council uses eventsfor promotion

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A Tthe end of each Las Vegas City Council meeting, each member announces mostly free events in their ward. Free movies in parks are particular­ly popular.

I wondered how much these freebies cost, particular­ly after a reader complained that Councilman Stavros Anthony, who announced he is running for Congress in 2018 just 10 weeks after he won re-election to his Ward 4 seat, sponsored a Movie in the Park in Desert Shores in July.

A Desert Shores resident wrote in an email, “I got an uneasy feeling that Mr. Anthony might be using City equipment and personnel at taxpayer expense to promote himself within the Desert Shores community. I could even let that pass but now that he’s a candidate for U.S. Congress, the perception and possibilit­y that he is promoting himself on the public dollar doesn’t sit well with me.”

Well folks, they all do it. Except for the mayor. She could host free events, but she doesn’t.

Turns out each council member has a discretion­ary fund of $30,000 per fiscal year and $40,000 for the mayor for a total of $220,000.

It’s a tiny fraction of the city budget, but it’s obvious the money is used to promote the individual politician and create goodwill by providing free movies, free school supplies and free special events to residents in their individual wards.

Mayor Carolyn Goodman was thrifty. In the past fiscal year ending June 30, she was allotted $40,000 and spent only $19,699 for operating and outreach expenses, which include graphics, mailers, mileage reimbursem­ents, office supplies, phone charges, printing charges, postage, subscripti­ons and travel.

Councilman Ricki Barlow had the highest outreach and operating costs at $26,603, and Councilman Bob Coffin’s operating costs were the lowest at $3,650.

Every council member used money for school events, school supplies and movies in the park. There are no written policies about how the funds can be spent.

All accepted donations to expand their discretion­ary fund, except for Goodman, who held no special events.

Barlow funded 12 events, the most of anyone, spending $21,225. He also collected the highest donations at $26,546. His most expensive event was $7,910 for a community field trip for students to Zion National Park.

Barlow said he spends the most because Ward 5 has the greatest need. “Everything I’ve done since I started in 2007 have been for the sake of the community.”

Ward 4’s Anthony hosted 12 events for his $16,091, stretching out the number of events, but spending smaller amounts on each. Movies in the parks, school events and school supplies were his largest expenditur­es.

Anthony defended the events as a productive way for him to meet constituen­ts and for neighbors to meet neighbors. He said that once he files for Congress next spring, he will attend the events, but per city policy “my name won’t be on any materials.”

City records show Coffin spent the most — $29,281 on seven events. His biggest expense for Ward 3’s largely Hispanic district was for school events and supplies — $11,150.

Former Councilman Bob Beers spent the least — $14,896 on seven events and had the lowest donations at $1,530. He’s been replaced by Steve Seroka in Ward 2.

Former Councilman Steve Ross spent $22,714 sponsoring five events — a Cowboy Christmas event, a senior fishing derby, spring fling, and of course, back-to-school events and movies in the parks.

MORRISON

side of that story, and Heidi found a group of people who were really enjoying the challenge,” said Greg Haas, Review-journal assistant managing editor for digital.

“Mixed martial arts fighters inspire people in a way that’s easy to understand through Heidi’s lens,” Haas added. “Maybe you’ve never had the desire to get in the cage, but the people who want to know what it takes have stories to tell.”

The Review-journal also was nominated in the contest’s categories for best daily newspaper website and best redesign/relaunch with 1 million or more unique monthly visitors.

Las Vegas Weekly, a free alternativ­e-weekly magazine, won for the contest’s best weekly or non-daily newspaper website with fewer than 1 million unique monthly visitors.

Contact reporter Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4638. Follow @ Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

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