Las Vegas Review-Journal

Summerlin residents fight dispensary

Planning Commission grants permit, which will go before council

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

While there are a dozen marijuana dispensari­es in the city of Las Vegas, a proposed store near the upscale community of Summerlin has rattled neighbors and set off a fight over the industry’s emergence in the suburbs.

Residents near the planned 4,800-square-foot dispensary, many of whom live in nearby master-planned communitie­s, have expressed concern that it will ruin the reputation of the neighborho­od, attract seedy individual­s and increase crime.

Plus, opponents say, the site isn’t suitable for a store.

“I oppose the dispensary because it is located in the heart of a suburban area where people are raising their children and families,” resident Kimberly Hughes told the city’s Planning Commission on Tuesday. “I believe to put a dispensary at this location will change the whole tone and character of the neighborho­od.”

But city staff have found it to be compatible with existing uses in the area, according to consultant Scot Rutledge,

who represents the applicant, Nevada CRT, LLC.

“Based on the staff report, we feel confident that we meet the city’s requiremen­ts,” he said.

The Planning Commission agreed. By a 4-1 vote, the commission­ers granted Nevada CRT a special use permit Tuesday, paving the way for a permit hearing in front of the City Council in February.

Cluster of stores

In the face of vocal opposition — 16 protests were received ahead of the meeting — commission­ers framed the debate as a not-in-mybackyard struggle.

“We cannot vote to approve marijuana dispensari­es in wards 1, 3 and 5 and say, ‘OK, Ward 2, no, we can’t do that,’ ” Planning Commission­er Donna Toussaint said, though there are no stores in Ward 5.

Toussaint said she voted to greenlight the special use permit to be consistent with approvals granted for dispensari­es elsewhere.

The proposed dispensary would occupy a former pet hospital in a shopping center on the northeast corner of Sahara Avenue and Fort Apache Road, the first such store to be approved in Ward 2.

Nine dispensari­es within city limits are clustered in Ward 3, an urban district east of Interstate 15, according to city data. The other three are in neighborin­g Ward 1 just to the west. There is a pending dispensary on Rainbow Boulevard in Ward 1 that, if establishe­d, would become the first such store west of Decatur Boulevard.

But the planned dispensary bothering Summerlin neighbors would stretch the western boundary even further, a point not lost on commission­ers who worried about dispensari­es concentrat­ed in any one area.

“So when people come and say, ‘We only want these in industrial zones,’ what you’re saying is ‘We condemn the folks that live in Ward 1 and Ward 3 — if you look at it as a burden — to shoulder this burden alone,’ ” Planning Commission­er Jeff Rogan said.

Battle not over

Despite clearing a hurdle Tuesday, Nevada CRT is likely to continue to face the criticism that surfaced during two town halls it held with neighbors before Tuesday’s vote. Though Rutledge said he had identified support for the project through canvassing efforts, Planning Commission­er Sigal Chattah cited overwhelmi­ng opposition to the plan in her dissenting vote.

Councilwom­an Victoria Seaman, who represents Ward 2, pushed back against the proposal Thursday, saying she was disappoint­ed that commission­ers who were not part of neighborho­od meetings ignored public outcry.

“Those folks were not at the town halls,” Seaman said. “Those folks did not do the due diligence in seeing if the area was harmonious with the community, so they passed it.”

Project opponents argued that the proposed dispensary was too close to elementary schools, a child day care, a synagogue and a public library.

But city staff found no such locations were within the required project buffer, which is 1,000 feet for schools and 300 feet for other sensitive uses.

“The applicant is committed to being the best possible example for a dispensary,” Rutledge said, adding that they have listened to neighbors’ concerns.

Beyond considerin­g the special use permit, the council would need to approve a compliance permit and business license before the project is finalized, according to city officials.

Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @SHEA_LVRJ on Twitter.

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