Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Fiore’s $33,000 travel tab

LVCVA board member takes four trips in seven months

- By Arthur Kane and Jeff German

A Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority board member traveled around the world last year at the agency’s expense amid growing scrutiny over inappropri­ate spending and perks for its board.

Michele Fiore, a Las Vegas city councilwom­an who joined the board in March, has taken four internatio­nal trips since May, despite recent policy reform aimed at limiting board member travel to one trip a year, records show.

Fiore received permission for the additional trips from thenboard Chairman Lawrence Weekly under an exemption that requires the chairman’s approval.

But in just seven months, records show, Fiore spent about $33,000 in taxpayer money, accounting for nearly half of all board travel since 2016 and raising questions about whether she violated the intent of the policy. Fiore’s travels appear to show a disconnect between a push to

reform the agency under a new CEO and a board that has enjoyed expensive gifts, VIP treatment at LVCVA-sponsored events and worldwide travel.

To help fund some of the trips, Fiore also used campaign contributi­ons, drawing concerns about whether the spending violated campaign laws that prohibit the use of donations for personal expenses.

Fiore said her trips to Brazil, Japan, Singapore and Spain last year were needed to help sell Las Vegas as a tourist destinatio­n. She said she plans to take more trips funded by the LVCVA, including visiting all of the agency’s offices overseas.

“I went into this as knowing this was a traveling board,” she said in an interview. “We are in 14 countries and, just for the record, I plan on going to all 14 countries.”

Fiore allowed only 15 minutes for the interview, and she left before answering all the questions.

Policy tightening

Newly installed LVCVA Chairman Larry Brown, a Clark County commission­er, said he understand­s Fiore worked hard on her trips, but he would like to further tighten the travel policy. He declined to say whether his push for stricter reform was prompted by Fiore’s trips, most of which he learned about after she had taken them.

“I think we should be more efficient in board travel,” Brown said. The policy should more clearly define what qualifies as appropriat­e travel, he said.

Brown did not provide details but said the board’s policy committee would be responsibl­e for re-examining travel practices. Fiore is a member of that committee.

The convention authority is trying to move past the abrupt end to the long tenure of Rossi Ralenkotte­r as its president and CEO. Ralenkotte­r led the agency to unpreceden­ted political influence. He retired in August amid a Las Vegas Review-Journal investigat­ion into the agency’s travel, expenses and lax board oversight. The authority is facing police and ethics commission investigat­ions into the secret purchase and personal use of Southwest Airlines gift cards under Ralenkotte­r’s leadership.

Ralenkotte­r’s successor, Steve Hill, has been trying to change the free-spending culture that allowed executives and board members to benefit from an array of perks.

The 14-member board, which includes eight local elected officials and six business and casino executives, oversees spending at the tourism agency. It has a $251 million annual operating budget, funded mostly from hotel room taxes. Spots on the board have long been coveted by elected leaders for prestige, perks and access to the state’s powerful gaming industry.

After taking the reins in September, Hill said the LVCVA’s business practices had not kept up with the times and it needed to do “what it takes” to regain the community’s trust. An agency spokespers­on declined to comment on Fiore’s travel.

Lawmakers may also weigh in on what happens at the LVCVA.

Nevada Assembly Deputy Minority Whip Chris Edwards, R-Las Vegas, will propose legislatio­n for a state inspector general to ferret out waste and corruption. He said an IG could look into the number and cost of Fiore’s trips and whether Weekly should have approved the travel.

Weekly “didn’t do his job, and that’s what happens when leadership doesn’t do their jobs,” Edwards said. “Stuff like this pops up.”

Assemblyma­n Ozzie Fumo, D-Las

When I’m in Barcelona, if I have a few extra hours I want to go get a massage — great for me. That doesn’t mean I don’t work 20 hours, and if you don’t think I work enough … you’re barking up the wrong tree. What I did on my personal time is none of your business.’ Michele Fiore Las Vegas city councilwom­an and Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority board member

Vegas, agreed.

“I can see going on one trip to understand the process and see what staff is doing,” Fumo said. “But going on four in less than a year appears to be excessive and a waste of taxpayer dollars.”

Globe-trotter

Fiore replaced Las Vegas Councilman Ricki Barlow on the board. He resigned from the City Council in January and pleaded guilty a month later to a felony wire fraud charge for misusing campaign money.

By May 27, Fiore was in a $7,448 business-class seat, flying to Sao Paulo, where she spent three days with staff before the launch of a new airline route to Las Vegas. The hotel cost $1,158.

In September, Fiore flew to Tokyo for a five-day tourism exposition, which cost taxpayers a total of $7,885, including a $5,745 flight, records show.

She spent an additional two days at the Chinese resort town of Sanya on Hainan Island just off the mainland’s southern coast. Media outlets have reported that the Chinese government is considerin­g legalizing gambling in Sanya, which is about about 2,200 miles from Tokyo. Fiore said she traveled there on her own money to meet the mayor and discuss tourism.

In an October newsletter to constituen­ts, Fiore said: “Our team stayed at the MGM resort, had meetings, tours, more meetings and about six hours of sleep, then got back on a plane.”

When asked whether MGM Resorts Internatio­nal had anything to do with Fiore’s trip, company spokesman Alan Feldman said: “Ms. Fiore must have made all arrangemen­ts on her own. No requests were made of MGM.”

Las Vegas spokesman Jace Radke declined to comment about the China trip. He said the city only tracks travel paid by the city.

Three weeks after returning to Las Vegas, Fiore was back in business class, on her way to spending five days at a trade show in Singapore. The trip cost $9,071, including a $7,000 flight.

She upgraded her $297 room at the Marina Bay Sands, adding a $73 nightly “upsell” charge, the hotel receipt shows. The hotel bill for the trip was about $2,000, records show. She said the upgrade was necessary because the hotel did not have any cheaper rooms ready and she had to get ready for a meeting after the long flight.

Fiore ended up reimbursin­g the convention authority $1,300 for three days of expenses in Singapore because it wasn’t part of the LVCVA trip.

At the end of November, Fiore went to a three-day trade show in Barcelona, Spain. Her business-class flight cost more than $5,100 and hotel and meals nearly $2,000. She paid back the authority $500 to change the flight so she could spend additional personal days enjoying the city and going to a spa, records show. She said she took personal time in Barcelona but also flew to Paris to meet with a businessma­n who proposed technology that could save the city millions of dollars in energy costs.

“When I’m in Barcelona, if I have a few extra hours I want to go get a massage — great for me. That doesn’t mean I don’t work 20 hours, and if you don’t think I work enough … you’re barking up the wrong tree,” she said. “What I did on my personal time is none of your business.”

But good government experts say high-priced travel is excessive.

“It looks bad and undermines public confidence,” said Jack Pitney, a political science professor at Clare-

mont McKenna College in Southern California. “Voters don’t like public officials to take junkets. In this case, in light of the new travel policy, the appearance problem is even more serious.”

Travel policy

In 2017, after a series of Review-Journal stories questionin­g the agency’s business practices, the board limited board member travel to one trip outside Clark County annually. The policy says travel is intended to educate board members on LVCVA methods and processes: “Direct observatio­n is the most effective method for acquiring such knowledge.”

The LVCVA’s policy committee paid the accounting firm Piercy Bowler Taylor & Kern $15,000 to recommend reforms after the Review-Journal found about $60,000 in tax money spent on board travel, $30,000 on Tiffany bracelets for staff and $697,000 on alcohol in a three-year period.

Thomas Donohue, a principal at the CPA firm handling the LVCVA account, said he would bring up Fiore’s travels with auditors.

“My intent is to let the audit committee know of the allegation­s of waste and the trips,” he said.

Weekly, the LVCVA’s former chairman who approved Fiore’s trips, had his own travel problems. Weekly was forced to pay back $700 in April for using Southwest gift cards purchased by the agency on a personal trip in 2016 to Dallas with his daughter. He agreed to pay $2,400 in fines for violating the Nevada ethics law with that trip. Since 2016, he has taken five LVCVA trips, including one to China, that have cost taxpayers more than $19,000, records show.

Weekly said he relied on informatio­n from LVCVA staff about the purpose of board travel when he decided whether to approve trips.

In Fiore’s case, top sales executives submitted written requests to Weekly for her trips to Japan, Singapore and Spain. The executives provided an itinerary and explanatio­n of the overseas events, records show.

“If you want to go on a trip, hey, God bless you,” Weekly said. “Bring back some good informatio­n with you. What else can I say?”

Campaign funds

Fiore also used more than $2,000 in campaign funds to pay for her travel expenses, campaign records show.

State law prohibits candidates from spending campaign money on “typical personal and household expenses” like food, clothing and utilities, but the Nevada secretary of state’s office said the law is vague.

Fiore spent campaign funds at the hotels where LVCVA staff stayed in Sao Paulo, Tokyo and Barcelona. She also used campaign funds for cabs, bar tabs and other purchases in those cities, records show.

Deputy Secretary of State Wayne Thorley declined to discuss Fiore’s trips because he did not know about the specifics, but he said a candidate cannot use campaign funds to reimburse personal travel expenses.

“If it’s just a personal trip not associated with duties they have as a public officer or elected official, that could potentiall­y be a problem,” he said.

Fiore said all her reimbursem­ents from campaign funds were related to her work as a city councilwom­an. Fiore said she could have reimbursed more from her campaign funds, but she forgot some of the expenses. She said she may take additional reimbursem­ents from her campaign funds.

Storming out

Fiore emerged as one of Ralenkotte­r’s biggest supporters as he faced questions in his final months on the job about his personal use of Southwest gift cards.

Ralenkotte­r took early retirement after acknowledg­ing he paid back about $17,000 for personal flights booked with the agency’s Southwest cards between 2012 and 2017. Auditors were unable to account for more than $50,000 of the $90,000 in cards the authority purchased.

Fiore, a former state assemblywo­man, was among those who praised Ralenkotte­r in August, as the board approved his $455,000 separation package. In a combative interview Monday, Fiore said the Review-Journal should stop criticizin­g the board.

“We bring 42 million visitors a year here to this city, and I’m very proud of it, very proud of the LVCVA and, and frankly not so thrilled about you attacking other peer members on the LVCVA,” she said.

Fiore declined to answer a question about her experience and qualificat­ions to market Las Vegas on the global stage.

Instead, she responded with her own question: “What’s your qualificat­ions to be in my sight?”

Fiore then cut short the interview and stormed out of the room.

If you want to go on a trip, hey, God bless you. Bring back some good informatio­n with you.

What else can I say? Lawrence Weekly Former LVCVA board chairman

The Review-Journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands Corp. operates the Sands Expo and Convention Center, which competes with the LVCVA-operated Las Vegas Convention Center. Las Vegas Sands operates the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.

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Michele Fiore
 ??  ?? Councilwom­an Michele Fiore speaks as Dan Burdish, Fiore’s special assistant, looks on during an interview with the Las Vegas Review-Journal on Monday.
Councilwom­an Michele Fiore speaks as Dan Burdish, Fiore’s special assistant, looks on during an interview with the Las Vegas Review-Journal on Monday.
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Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfay­e
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