Las Vegas Review-Journal

Deemed hazard, El Cid to come down

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

When the El Cid Hotel caught fire in mid-december, a police sergeant witnessed individual­s jumping out of windows and upward of 50 homeless people living in the ramshackle downtown building.

“Somebody is going to die, and that is unacceptab­le,” Metropolit­an Police Department Sgt. Beth Schmidt told the City Council on Wednesday.

For more than a decade, city code enforcemen­t has reckoned with the vacant Sixth Street structure, and every case has involved transient activity.

The blaze described by Schmidt had been the second in 30 days and the acute threat the dilapidate­d motel poses to public safety has substantia­lly escalated in the past four months.

Since October, police have received more than 100 calls for service to the El Cid and a nearby annex, and there

EL CID Whether the tear-down is ultimately done by the owners or the city, it may not occur as quickly as the city would hope.

have been at least four fires between the two buildings, according to Code Enforcemen­t Supervisor Vicki Ozuna and city data.

“I can’t see a bigger hazard to the downtown area than this building,” Las Vegas Deputy Fire Marshal Rick Rozier said.

On Wednesday, city policymake­rs were clear: The El Cid and the annex will be demolished.

“(The owners) would know that it’s going to happen one way or another,” City Manager Scott Adams said. “Whether they do it or we do it, it’s going to come down.”

Adams had been so disturbed by a consistent wave of imperilmen­t — including fires, drug use, the presence of asbestos and vagrant mischief — that he declared an imminent hazard on Jan. 31 and authorized the two structures to be destroyed. The cost would not exceed $500,000, according to a city staff report, and be paid by the owner.

The City Council ratified his declaratio­n Wednesday, ordering San Francisco-based property owner Good Earth Enterprise­s, Inc., which property records show purchased the El Cid in 1993, to install permanent fencing around the buildings within 24 hours and issuing a city demolition permit to expedite the process.

Timothy Elson, a lawyer retained by Good Earth, sought to reverse any suggestion­s of his client’s apathy: “We agree that these buildings need to come down.”

In fact, Elson said owners Jeffrey and Sophia Lau, who have at least five other properties downtown, were making “significan­t progress” toward a solution. The couple is securing a Clark County permit to perform asbestos abatement in their properties, which must occur prior to demolition, and have ordered permanent fencing.

But for city officials, the actions were too little and too late.

Frustratio­n has been brought to a boil by Good Earth’s unresponsi­veness to code enforcemen­t action and its bare-minimum efforts to secure its properties, they say.

There have been 20 code cases against both buildings since 2006 and there are two recent active cases. Outstandin­g civil penalties for current noncomplia­nce nears $50,000.

“There is obviously a litany, an absolute litany, of ridiculous­ness and lack of attention to this facility by the owner,” Councilman Cedric Crear said.

Councilman Bob Coffin, who represents Ward 3 where the El Cid and annex are situated, castigated Good Earth as “probably the worst kind of absentee owners.”

Whether the tear-down is ultimately done by the owners or the city, it may not occur as quickly as the city would hope.

Brett Hagedorn, the regional manager for Constructi­on Group Internatio­nal, the company as of now that would perform the work on behalf of either, estimated it would require at least four months to rid the buildings of absestos.

That timeline would put the company on track to demolish El Cid and its annex by July, he said.

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

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