Las Vegas Review-Journal

Adams, city manager, to retire in fall

His final day is set for 65th birthday

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas City Manager Scott

Adams will retire in November after three years as the city’s top administra­tor and more than four decades in local government, he told employees Wednesday.

“You just get to a point where you decide personally that it’s time to hang up the shoes and retire,” Adams said in a phone interview.

He notified city workers that he submitted his notice of retirement and resignatio­n earlier that morning to Mayor

Carolyn Goodman and the City Council.

“After 43 years of work in local government here in Las Vegas and around the U.S., I believe it is now time for me to retire and spend more time with my family and do things that have been difficult given the hectic schedule I’ve maintained as a chief executive over the past 30 years of my lengthy career,” Adams wrote.

His last day will be Nov. 14, according to city spokesman Jace Radke.

Marked on the calendar

Not any one thing will precipitat­e his departure beyond the fact that he turns 65 on Nov. 14, a deliberate exit date, and that he had been considerin­g a near-future retirement for the past three or four years, he said.

And while he acknowledg­ed a perception of friction between himself

and at least some city lawmakers, Adams said he has a “great relationsh­ip” with the council and “it’s completely a non-issue” in his decision.

But before he could comfortabl­y step down, he said he wanted to first ensure the city’s budget was balanced, offering a sense of stability to the city so he could avoid feelings of guilt for leaving. The council passed a $572 million budget in May, balanced in large part by pared-back personnel spending and use of a special fund.

“The rest of the situation we all find ourselves in is an incredible amount of uncertaint­y over what the next one

to three years will bring,” he said.

Sixteen years with Las Vegas

Adams, 64, joined the city in 2004 as the director of business developmen­t before climbing the ranks to oversee urban redevelopm­ent in 2009 and rising to a deputy city manager in 2013, according to his Linkedin page. He became the city’s top executive in July 2017.

In May 2019, Adams was given a new two-year contract, 4 percent pay raise and $10,000 bonus. It is set to expire in July 2021 and, if not for his planned retirement, would had to have been renegotiat­ed before then.

Adams told employees that he believed he had made a “significan­t contributi­on” to the city’s future, particular­ly in the redevelopm­ent of

downtown, during his tenure as city manager and he wished them and elected officials well.

“As a city employee, Scott was my mentor and spent numerous hours working with me as I learned how to navigate my career path,” Councilman Brian Knudsen said in a statement. “My continued investment in economic developmen­t and the developmen­t of the medical district is founded on the time I spent with Scott. I speak for many, and on their behalf, the community is better for his service.”

Times of tumult

Most recently Adams has been the point person on the city’s response to the economic crisis brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic and he has generally received the confidence

of elected officials.

But there have been moments of tumult : He and the council have battled over contract terms, later downplayed to be a simple disagreeme­nt over process, and Councilwom­an Michele Fiore has publicly reminded him of the council’s ability to fire him as she questioned giving Adams too much control.

Adams said by phone that it was important to avoid wading into the politics of city government, noting that city residents “just want the city well run and, when they call (with an issue), they want to get somebody.”

He said he plans to do part-time consulting, the “fun work,” following retirement and to visit his children in different parts of the country — pandemic permitting.

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