Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ The Storey County Commission took a stand against a plan for Innovation Zones.

Self-governance for firm resisted

- By Colton Lochhead

CARSON CITY  The rural county where a cryptocurr­ency firm wants to build a self-governing smart city voted Tuesday to oppose a key part of Gov. Steve Sisolak’s proposal to allow tech companies to create county-like government­s.

The Storey County Commission voted 2-0 on a motion that included direction to county staff to “oppose separatist governing control and carving up of Storey

County,” drawing a line in the sand between the local government and the governor over Sisolak’s proposed Innovation Zones. The third commission­er, Lance Gilman, was not present for the meeting.

According to the latest draft of the proposed legislatio­n, which has not yet been introduced, the Innovation Zones would eventually break off from the local county in which they are located, and become a separate, independen­t government body with the same authority as a county in Nevada, including the ability to impose and collect taxes, form school districts and Justice Courts and provide government services.

“I find the self-governance piece a non-starter,” Commission­er Clay Mitchell said during Tuesday’s meeting.

Sisolak has said that Blockchain­s LLC, a tech firm owned by Jeffrey Berns that bought 67,000 acres in Storey County in 2018, had committed to building a smart city in Northern Nevada that would run entirely on blockchain technology once the legislatio­n was approved.

Mitchell and Storey County Commission Chairman

Jay Carmona Carmona both

said that they support the concept of Blockchain­s LLC’S smart city being built in the county. But the county should have more say in how that happens, and the city should remain part of Storey County, they added.

“Storey County is very capable of serving the needs of Blockchain­s,” Carmona said.

One of the issues is that the master plan does not allow for residentia­l developmen­t in the Tahoe-reno Industrial Center, where the majority of Blockchain­s LLC’S land sits. The plan allows for 3,500 homes in Painted Rock, a smaller section of the company’s land.

Blockchain­s’ proposal, meanwhile, includes plans for 15,000 housing units and more than 36,000 permanent residents.

Carmona said that the lack of residentia­l zoning inside the center is one of the key draws for attracting companies, saying that it helps reduce delays that would otherwise slow approvals for businesses.

Storey County Manager Austin Osborne called the severing aspect of the proposal unnecessar­y, and said that Blockchain­s proposal fits within the county’s master plan for the area, which was approved in 2016, sans the self-governance and building homes inside the industrial center.

Mitchell took issue with language in the current draft of proposal that states that the traditiona­l local government model is “inadequate alone to provide the flexibilit­y and resources conducive to making the State a leader in attracting and retaining new forms and types of businesses and fostering economic developmen­t in emerging technologi­es and innovative industries.”

“I don’t believe this is true. I don’t find that this assertion has merit,” Mitchell said, noting that the county has been successful in attracting big tech companies like Tesla, Google and Switch to the Tahoe-reno Industrial Center. “Somehow these emerging technologi­es and innovative industries have found a way to work within our model.”

For Storey County, being called too slow or restrictiv­e on developmen­t is a rarity, Mitchell added.

“We often taken heat for being too flexible or moving too fast,” Mitchell said.

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