Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge says city ‘abused its discretion’ by approving condo plan for Badlands

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

A Clark County District Court judge said the city of Las Vegas “abused its discretion” in approving a developer’s plans for condominiu­ms on the Badlands golf course without a major modificati­on to the master plan.

Opponents of plans to develop the shuttered course from the surroundin­g Queensridg­e developmen­t challenged the City Council’s February 2017 vote to allow developer EHB Cos. to build condos on 17 acres at the property’s eastern tip and requested a judge weigh in.

Judge Jim Crockett in a hearing last week sided with the opponents, calling it “ironic” that the city and the developer “want to point to staff recommenda­tions that were made toward the end of this process, but they want to disregard the repeated recommenda­tions by staff in the earlier stages which made it clear that a major modificati­on was a requiremen­t,” according to the court transcript from the Jan. 11 hearing.

The City Council split 4-3 in favor of 435 for-sale condominiu­ms at the former golf course’s eastern edge. Multiple developmen­t plans for the course have come before the Plan

BADLANDS

ning Commission and City Council since EHB bought the property, though the 435 condos are the only proposal the council has approved. Constructi­on on the condos hasn’t begun. The council voted down other developmen­t proposals in June and August.

The condo plans are one installmen­t in a sustained struggle between the developers and a group of opponents who live in the tony Queensridg­e community, their properties overlookin­g the course. The battles have played out in courtrooms and City Hall, and their difference boils down to a fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt over whether the golf course can be developed.

City staff at first “repeatedly explained” a major modificati­on to the Peccole Ranch Master Plan was needed to approve the applicatio­n, Crockett said.

“Instead, over the course of many months there was a gradual retreat from talking about that, and instead all of a sudden that discussion and the need for following staff ’s recommenda­tion just went out the window,” Crockett said.

The developers and their attorneys contend a major modificati­on isn’t required for their developmen­t plans and that the golf course isn’t subject to the Peccole Ranch Master Plan. The developers also assert the property carries hard zoning and isn’t classified common open space.

“We are confident that the city’s

interpreta­tion of its own code is proper and will ultimately prevail,” said an EHB Cos. statement responding to Crockett’s decision.

Deputy City Attorney Phil Byrnes, who represente­d the city in court, told Crockett the golf course is not a planned developmen­t district and doesn’t require a major modificati­on.

City Attorney Brad Jerbic could not be reached for comment.

The judge gave Todd Bice, the attorney representi­ng the Badlands developmen­t opponents, two weeks to prepare an order. The developers and the city could appeal Crockett’s decision after that’s finalized.

This month, the council heard an appeal from the Queensridg­e opponents challengin­g the city planning director’s decision to not require EHB Cos. to submit a general plan amendment and a major modificati­on of the master plan with a new round of developmen­t plans for another section of the course, which the council has yet to publicly consider.

The City Council voted 4-2 to deny that appeal, with Councilwom­an Lois Tarkanian abstaining. Councilman Bob Coffin later said he accidental­ly voted with the majority, and his effort to have the council rescind that action and take another vote on the appeal died with a 3-3 vote Wednesday. Council members were briefed on Crockett’s decision in a closed-door session Wednesday.

Coffin during the open meeting questioned why the council would revisit the issue when a judge had

since ruled against the city.

“We lost the case. On this exact point,” Coffin said at Wednesday’s council meeting. “Why would we today thumb our nose at the judge and say ‘Sorry, Judge Crockett, we don’t care what you said in court … our position is going to be against you and for whoever — the developer.’ ”

The immediate implicatio­ns for the city of the court decision on council-approved and pending plans for developing the course weren’t immediatel­y clear.

New plans

Last week, the Las Vegas Planning Commission voted to advance to the City Council a separate set of plans to build single-family homes on a large swath of the 250-acre Badlands course, west of the planned condominiu­m proposal. City staff recommende­d approval.

Multiple versions of plans have come before the Planning Commission and the council over the past two years. The developer’s team decried the process and how long it has dragged on.

“The process has failed this developer. The process has not treated this developer as it treats other developers …” the developer’s attorney, Stephanie Allen, told the Planning Commission on Jan. 9. “Every time you press pause it’s hundreds of thousands of dollars that go down the tank for this particular property owner.”

Contact Jamie Munks at jmunks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @Jamiemunks­rj on Twitter.

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