Las Vegas Review-Journal

Residents plead for county rethink

Ex-moulin Rouge site inspires legacy concern

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

A crowd of predominan­tly African-american Las Vegas residents urged Clark County officials Thursday to pull back plans to put a new Department of Family Services building on the historic former Moulin Rouge property.

Speakers pleaded with Clark County Commission­er Lawrence Weekly during a town hall meeting not to let the site that housed Las Vegas’ first desegregat­ed hotel-casino in the 1950s become a new government building.

A judge last month approved Clark County’s $6.2 million bid, which won out over the bids of three other groupsthat­wanttorevi­vethemouli­n Rouge on the 15-acre Bonanza Road site.

“The best way to uphold this legacy is to turn this into something that can empower our people,” Stretch Sanders said.

The Clark County Commission pushed off approving the property purchase when Weekly said he wanted feedback from the community first.

County officials can still walk away from the Moulin Rouge site before a Nov. 29 deadline.

Speakers on Thursday told county officials to find another piece of property for a new Department of Family Services building. The property purchase is on the commission’s Tuesday agenda.

Weekly said he heard a lot of “pent-up frustratio­n, a lot of anger, a lot of hopes and dreams” during the Thursday night session, and he asked the other bidders to detail their financial backing.

Las Vegas Moulin Rouge LLC put in a $8 million cash bid — higher than the county’s offer.

Real Estate Management Services LLC bid $6.2 million for the site. The fourth bidder, Spec Builders USA Inc., bid $5 million plus demolition costs.

The Moulin Rouge’s short but storied run in historic west Las Vegas offered some of the most popular black entertaine­rs of the 1950s a place to stay and play in Las Vegas during a time when Strip hotels were segregated.

Its history earned it a place on the National Register of Historic Places, but the site had fallen into disrepair and is now a series of empty, graffiti-tagged buildings. The city of Las Vegas declared the structures an imminent hazard after fires ravaged them. The site will be razed.

“I’ve been here all my life, and I’ve never seen a place look so bad, and everything is built around it,” Denise Brown said. “We need to bring some of the tourists to our neighborho­od, the way it used to be.”

Anna Bailey danced at the Moulin Rouge during its heydey. She took her daughter and grandson to Thursday’s meeting.

“I was so thrilled maybe we could get the Moulin Rouge back,” Bailey said. “I think it would be good for our morale.”

 ?? Joel Angel Juarez ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto Anna Bailey, 90, right, a former dancer at the Moulin Rouge hotel-casino, sits Thursday with daughter Kimberly Tureaud, 55, left, and grandson Jonathan Backers, 27, center, at Pearson Community Center.
Joel Angel Juarez Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto Anna Bailey, 90, right, a former dancer at the Moulin Rouge hotel-casino, sits Thursday with daughter Kimberly Tureaud, 55, left, and grandson Jonathan Backers, 27, center, at Pearson Community Center.

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