Las Vegas Review-Journal

LVCVA’S Hill gets his raise, lots of praise, $150K bonus

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority President and CEO Steve Hill was awarded a 5 percent salary boost and a $150,000 bonus Tuesday for his first nine months on the job, bringing his total compensati­on for that time to around $525,000.

Hill took the helm of the agency

Sept. 1, after former CEO Rossi Ralenkotte­r retired amid separate investigat­ions by the Metropolit­an Police Department and the Review-journal into misspendin­g of public funds at the agency. The Nevada Commission on Ethics is now also investigat­ing.

In Tuesday’s meeting, board member Marilyn Spiegel, a Wynn Resorts executive who chairs the Compensati­on Com

mittee, praised Hill for engineerin­g a smooth transition from the organizati­on’s recent controvers­ies.

“There were many comments about the challenges organizati­ons have when leadership moves from one individual to another and that in the moving of the baton, sometimes the baton drops,” Spiegel told Hill and the board. “In this particular situation, the baton was picked up and the accelerati­on and speed were very admirable. We certainly believe that it was an excellent year for your performanc­e.”

Several former longtime LVCVA executives are accused of using airline gift cards bought by the tourism agency for personal travel. Former Chief Marketing Officer Cathy Tull, who resigned her position in April, Brig Lawson, former director of business partnershi­ps, who resigned in May 2018, and Ralenkotte­r are central figures in the police investigat­ion.

Its investigat­ion was spurred by a Review-journal investigat­ion and a series of stories on the misspendin­g of public funds by the LVCVA. Lawson was arrested in March on theft charges; Tull and Ralenkotte­r reimbursed the LVCVA for flights purchased with gift cards. All of them have denied wrongdoing.

Big bonuses

The LVCVA board has a track record of delivering high levels of compensati­on to its CEO.

In 2017, Ralenkotte­r received a 50 percent bonus — the maximum amount permitted — of $208,000.

Last year, Ralenkotte­r received a roughly 30 percent bonus, or $132,000. But that was on top of a $53,000 separation agreement and a $270,000 post-retirement consulting contract, a total package worth $455,000.

Hill was told when he became

CEO that he’d get $375,000 a year in base salary and be eligible for a 40 percent bonus. Board member Bill Noonan, a Boyd Gaming Corp. executive, said Hill’s familiarit­y with issues enabled him to move faster on amending agency policy.

One of Hill’s first tasks was to review, amend and clarify the organizati­on’s travel and expense policies.

“If we had brought in somebody from outside, probably it would have taken them months before they would have been in a position to identify policy weaknesses that needed to be enhanced,” Noonan said.

“He was very quick to tackle a lot of that policy developmen­t around

governance of the organizati­on so I believe unless something new comes up, I think he’s strengthen­ed all of our policies,” he said. “There’s a lot of new faces and I think he’s recruited some good people and he’s a good mentor for those new executives.”

Work to be done

A former board member said there’s still work to be done.

“It’s my belief that the Ethics Commission is doing its job and some of the past practices that have been uncovered have been fixed,” said North Las Vegas Mayor John Lee, a former board member and one of Ralenkotte­r’s biggest critics.

“I’m only hoping that in the future we can get this cloud to go behind us with the right leadership and to continue moving us” toward being the top destinatio­n and trade-show host in the country, he said.

Hill listed five goals Tuesday for the 2019-20 fiscal year, all of them zeroing in on the bid to draw more than 42.9 million visitors to Southern Nevada, a record achieved in 2016.

Hill said his strategy to achieve record visitation in 2020 will be enhanced by rolling out a new Las Vegas global brand campaign that appeals across generation­s.

Hill wants to increase digital engagement­s by 10 percent, to optimize the LVCVA’S websites to inspire, inform and help travelers plan their

trips. He also wants to surpass 11 million web visits and increase referrals to partner sales by 8 percent.

Hill said he expects to leverage major events, such as next April’s

NFL Draft, to increase domestic and internatio­nal exposure.

Redesigned marketing initiative­s also are planned for Visitlaugh­lin. com and Visitmesqu­ite.com, the LVCVA’S extended destinatio­n marketing initiative­s.

More flights needed

Riding high with the recent addition of KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and El Al Airlines flights, Hill looks to increase internatio­nal air capacity by 2 percent and domestic capacity by 4 percent.

A large part of Hill’s 2019-20 goals will be to continue to deliver the

$1.4 billion expansion and renovation of the Las Vegas Convention Center on time and on budget with the use of enhanced wayfinding technology, connectivi­ty and advertisin­g.

A key part of enhancing the customer and guest experience at the Convention Center will be to make its food and beverage offerings an asset. The LVCVA has begun that by partnering with food and beverage contractor Centerplat­e.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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