Las Vegas Review-Journal

Agency didn’t act on abuse reports

Opening statements begin in trial of accused woman

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

At least five investigat­ors from Child Protective Services responded to more than a dozen calls but took no action on reports that three adopted girls were being abused in a Las Vegas home, prosecutor­s said Thursday.

Foster children in the home told investigat­ors that the girls were treated like prisoners, Chief Deputy District Attorney Jacqueline Bluth told jurors during opening statements in the trial of Janet Solander, 57.

The defendant is free on bail and facing 46 counts. The charges include child abuse, neglect or endangerme­nt with substantia­l bodily harm; sexual assault with a minor under 14; and assault with a deadly weapon.

Bluth said Solander told investigat­ors, who documented injuries on the adopted children, that she was a nurse and that the girls — ages 9 to 12 — had medical problems, but the mother had no proof.

“No documents provided, unsubstant­iated,” the prosecutor said. “And those little girls were left in that home.”

Solander authored a book critical of Child Protective Services, and the Department of Family Services closed the investigat­ion before Solander and her husband, Dwight, were arrested on child abuse charges.

Defense attorneys argued that the children were taken in by the Solanders with previous medical issues and often acted out and falsified accusation­s.

“They came into the Solander house challenged,” lawyer Dayvid Figler told jurors. “And the Solanders had to meet that challenge.” Agents investigat­ed complaints from three girls living in the Solander home at least three years before the former foster parents were arrested, according to court records.

SOLANDER

chemicals.”

But its departure from UNLV began years before his election or his appointmen­t of longtime EPA foe Scott Pruitt to run the organizati­on.

Relocation exploratio­n fizzles

During the Obama administra­tion, the EPA faced pressure to cut its use of leased office space and reduce its footprint nationwide. As part of that effort, agency officials explored building a new laboratory and multi-use facility in Las Vegas to replace the buildings it has leased at the heart of the UNLV campus since in the 1960s.

In 2014, then-u.s. Sen. Harry Reid said he expected the EPA to become the anchor tenant for the university’s new off-campus technology park, a 122-acre site on Sunset Road at Durango that was named for him after he helped UNLV secure the land from the government.

A $7.85 million advance from Congress was meant to jump-start the constructi­on of the agency’s new Las Vegas research lab, but the EPA decided instead to move its laboratory services into facilities it already owns in North Carolina and Cincinnati.

“The drivers behind the decision are the continued pressure to reduce the amount of federally leased space by consolidat­ing operations into federally owned space and to reduce our overall operationa­l costs moving forward,” said Tim Watkins, director of EPA’S National Exposure Research Laboratory, in a Feb. 6 email to staff.

It’s unclear what happened to the planning money from Congress or any of the plans produced with it.

The EPA has already given up about half of its leased office space at UNLV in recent years. The agency is down to two and a half buildings at the heart of campus under a five-year lease set to expire in September 2020.

For UNLV, a ‘bitterswee­t’ exit

UNLV officials said they are sorry to lose the EPA lab and the educationa­l opportunit­ies it provided, but they are eager for the extra lab and classroom space to accommodat­e a university population that topped 30,000 for the first time last year.

“It’s bitterswee­t in that we’ve had a great partner on campus,” but prime real estate is prime real estate, said David Frommer, UNLV’S executive director of planning and constructi­on.

In January, Nevada Board of Regents approved $2.9 million to renovate the roughly 17,000 square feet of offices the EPA previously released back to the university. UNLV hopes to be using the space for science and engineerin­g classrooms, labs and office space within a year.

The EPA’S union laboratory workers were notified about the closure of the Las Vegas facility last May. The remaining staff members were told last week that their jobs would be moved to other facilities outside Las Vegas.

According to the EPA, approximat­ely 40 federal employees work at the agency’s research lab at UNLV.

Frommer said it is his understand­ing that the agency will spend the rest of the lease period clearing out and cleaning up the vacated buildings before turning them back over to the university.

The EPA also leases office space in the La Plaza Business Park, just across Maryland Parkway from the university, for its local finance and human resources operations, among others.

It’s unclear what will happen to those offices and employees once the lab at UNLV closes.

The EPA did not respond to multiple requests for informatio­n about its off-campus offices in Las Vegas.

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter.

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Janet Solander

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