USA TODAY International Edition

Amid Reno’s renaissanc­e, strip clubs take a stand

Power struggle unfolds over city’s tech revival

- Anjeanette Damon

It’s a hot Friday night when three guys walk into the Spice House, a small strip club on the edge of the glittering downtown of Reno, Nevada.

In the dimly lit room, flashing lights beckon the next dancer to take her turn on the pole. The three guys choose a table near the stage. A group of strippers approach, sliding seductivel­y into their laps.

“What brings you guys out tonight?” one stripper asks.

“Oh, just looking to get out,” one of the guys answers. They just got off work from a local sporting goods store, he adds, and want to cheer up their buddy, who recently broke up with his girlfriend.

But that story is a total lie. These aren’t local guys looking to party. They are undercover cops, sent in as part of a crackdown on Reno’s strip clubs that has more to do with local politics – and economic progress – than vice.

These officers are at the vanguard of the city’s efforts to kick the strip clubs

out of downtown. Like other cities across America, Reno is trying to remake its economy by luring high- tech companies to town. Unlike other cities, however, some believe Reno’s down- and- out image is getting in the way.

In partnershi­p with the Reno Gazette Journal, USA TODAY has spent the past 18 months documentin­g this fight over Reno’s strip clubs as a city that has thrived on vice tries to reinvent itself as a big- tech mecca.

The fight for Reno’s future plays out over six episodes in Season 2 of USA TODAY’s critically acclaimed podcast The City. Episodes 1 and 2 are out today, and new chapters will be released every Tuesday until Nov. 26. The series exposes the motivation­s of those involved in the fight, pulls back the curtains at the strip clubs and lays bare the true consequenc­es of luring tech giants to town.

It’s a battle being waged by powerful people. But as with many gentrification battles, some ordinary workers and the city’s more vulnerable residents are suffering the most – like the strippers targeted in the undercover police sting, the low- income motel tenants whose homes are threatened by the strip club displaceme­nt and the Tesla factory workers trying to make a go of it in the New Reno economy.

A Reno story

Reno, a city of 250,000 tucked into the eastern edge of the Sierra Nevada mountains, has long been famous for vice – from quickie divorces in the early 1900s to legalized gambling in the 1930s and the spread of strip clubs in the 1990s.

When Las Vegas eclipsed Reno as America’s favorite party town, Reno’s fortunes began to fade, along with its image. To many, Reno today is a tired town, the butt of jokes told by late- night comedians and schlocky TV shows.

To city officials, becoming an offshoot of Silicon Valley is the answer.

“We are truly experienci­ng a Reno revival,” Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve said last year during her reelection campaign.

“We are truly rebranding this city, and companies like Tesla, Amazon and Apple are all building and investing right here.”

Tesla has built a giant battery factory outside the town. Apple’s massive data farm is growing. Google is building east of Reno, and Amazon has long had a distributi­on center in the area.

Reno’s wooing of these tech giants has jump- started the gentrification of its urban core. As the city’s power brokers try to ride the wave of this revival, they see Reno’s strip clubs as stubborn and unnecessar­y obstacles.

The powerful do battle

With developers circling and the Reno City Council looking to revitalize downtown, a loose coalition of power brokers and activists formed to pressure the council to take on the strip clubs.

The coalition includes people with a financial stake in seeing the city’s most prominent strip club, the Wild Orchid, kicked out of its quickly gentrifyin­g neighborho­od.

“They have a gold mine there,” said Par Tolles, a local developer who has invested heavily in the neighborho­od surroundin­g the Wild Orchid. “We’ve all tried to buy it. We’ve all made offers.”

Others want it gone simply because they believe it contribute­s to Reno’s smutty reputation.

Mike Kazmierski, head of the region’s economic developmen­t agency, is a straight- laced former military commander from Colorado Springs, Colorado, who almost turned down the Reno job because of the city’s seedy image.

Now he’s on a mission to put an end to that image, one strip club at a time. “They should not be defining us,” he said.

The focus of their fight is Reno’s strip club kingpin: Kamy Keshmiri.

Keshmiri, born and raised in Reno by Iranian immigrant parents, built an empire in Reno’s vice- driven economy starting in the 1990s. He was a recordbrea­king discus thrower and hometown hero. At age 50, he still has 21- inch biceps – and a shock of black hair he wears in a manic mohawk.

Today, he and his family own three of the city’s four strip clubs.

Keshmiri sees the campaign against his clubs as an affront. He has found himself fending off rumors that his clubs were dens of drugs and prostituti­on while deflecting what he considers lowball offers from developers trying to scoop up his property.

“It makes me angry,” he said. “I’ve always been pro- Reno. I’ve grown up in this town. And for them to do this to me, it makes me bitter.”

Keshmiri isn’t about to let the city take his clubs.

“I handle things in a different way,” he said. “I’ll just be patient. There’ll be a time when I get my revenge.”

The vulnerable suffer

In addition to owning strip clubs, Keshmiri owns the Ponderosa Hotel, a dilapidate­d motel attached to the Wild Orchid. He rents out rooms on a weekly and monthly basis to some of the city’s most vulnerable residents.

As the city closes in on his strip clubs, Keshmiri drew those tenants into the fight by threatenin­g to double their rent if the city succeeds in closing his clubs.

That terrified people like Velma Shoals, a 64- year- old grandmothe­r raising a teenager at the Ponderosa. She lives on a meager disability check each month and can barely afford the Ponderosa’s $ 750- a- month rent, not to mention the city’s $ 1,300 median.

“Thirteen hundred dollars?” Shoals said. “Who’s got that kind of money? Nobody.”

A housing crunch sparked by the bigtech rush has gripped the entire city, forcing Tesla workers to live in RVs on city streets, flooding Reno’s only homeless shelter and putting homeowners­hip out of reach for many.

Amid this rapid evolution, the power brokers and the strip club owners have gone head to head to persuade Reno’s political elites to see things their way.

The Reno City Council engaged in the fight, taking up a number of measures that could ultimately oust the clubs from downtown – or make doing business very difficult for the club owners.

To find out what happens in the struggle, subscribe to The City free on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. You also can visit thecitypod­cast. com, where you’ll find full episodes and additional material we dug up while reporting this story, including photos, court documents, videos and more. Anjeanette Damon is the government watchdog reporter for the Reno Gazette Journal.

 ?? HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY ?? Reno’s downtown is still dominated by the hotel casinos of years past.
HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY Reno’s downtown is still dominated by the hotel casinos of years past.
 ?? ANDY BARRON/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The Wild Orchid Gentlemen’s Club has become a battlegrou­nd in Reno’s drive to transform itself into a high- tech mecca.
ANDY BARRON/ USA TODAY NETWORK The Wild Orchid Gentlemen’s Club has become a battlegrou­nd in Reno’s drive to transform itself into a high- tech mecca.
 ?? HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY ?? Residents like Velma Shoals, 64, find themselves caught in the middle as Reno’s urban core has gentrified.
HANNAH GABER/ USA TODAY Residents like Velma Shoals, 64, find themselves caught in the middle as Reno’s urban core has gentrified.

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