Las Vegas Review-Journal

Council sells land for affordable housing plan

- By Shea Johnson

Las Vegas lawmakers on Wednesday agreed to sell 5.5 acres of vacant land for $1 to an affordable housing developer with plans to construct 144 units as the city faces a major shortage of such dwellings.

The City Council voted 6-1 to approve the developmen­t agreement with Community Developmen­t Programs Center of Nevada Inc., a Las Vegas-based company that has built affordable housing in the valley for more than two decades. Councilwom­an Victoria Seaman voted no.

“The need for affordable housing should be self-evident,” said Bill Arent, the city’s director of economic and urban developmen­t. “There’s huge need that is unmet in our community.”

Home prices are on the rise, and Nevada had the largest shortage of affordable housing in the country, according to a 2019 study. The city averages about 1,000 new units annually.

Lisa Morris Hibbler, the city’s chief community

The project is estimated to cost $25 million, according to city documents, with the land provided to the developer at a nominal cost though it was appraised for $1.6 million.

services officer, said that there is an estimated need for 66,000 to 73,000 more units just in Las Vegas and the figure has grown since the pandemic.

The project, which would be constructe­d at 1501 N. Decatur Blvd. in the near northwest part of the city, is scheduled to be done in two phases and completed by 2024. It consists of two four-story buildings and a central clubhouse, according to city documents, and would offer one- to two-bedroom units to people earning between 40 to 65 percent of the area median income.

Community Developmen­t Programs Center of Nevada has 18 months to secure funding, close on the purchase and begin the first phase.

Site of original Wonder World

The project is estimated to cost $25 million, according to city documents, with the land provided to the developer at a nominal cost though it was appraised for $1.6 million.

It is a site — now merely a dirt lot — perhaps best known for having been the location of the first Wonder World Discount Store, built in 1962. There were eventually four locations in Las Vegas until they were taken over by Payless Drug Stores in 1986 and renamed the following year.

The city owns the property through its redevelopm­ent agency, allowing it to offer the land on its own terms, and the minimal price tag is not uncommon for affordable housing projects to make them work, Arent said.

Seaman — the dissenter — expressed concern about the deal, saying she understood the need for affordable housing but that the area also needed diverse developmen­t and 18 months was too long to wait on a project that might not come to fruition.

“My opposition is based on: Is this the right project for this location and is the city getting true value for the property?” she said.

Moral issue, ‘giant math problem’

Councilman Cedric Crear, who represents Ward 5 where the project is planned, said he understood that tolerance had grown thin to provide developers with deals that may not give back the most value to the city, but he argued that this project was not the one on which to make that case.

The project had been in the works for years, preceding most council members, he noted, and the developer — as a related piece to the overall plan —had constructe­d bungalows on the south and west side of the property.

Calling affordable housing a major public policy debate in the U.S., Councilman Brian Knudsen said that the funds the city would receive through selling the land at market value would only be able to build a small portion of the units that were being proposed.

He lauded Frank Hawkins, a former Las Vegas councilman and the executive director of Community Developmen­t Programs Center of Nevada, for his track record building housing in the valley. Knudsen said that the lack of affordable housing was a significan­t reason why businesses don’t come to Nevada.

“For me this has become not only a moral issue but a giant math problem,” Knudsen said, adding that available land, financing, political will, constructi­on and management were the five keys to pushing such complex projects forward.

The design and other project elements will still need to be approved by the council in the future, yet Hawkins was confident in his company’s ability to complete it.

“We take great pride in building in the toughest areas in this valley where nobody else can build, where nobody else can make it work,” he said.

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