Las Vegas Sun

September 5, 2008

Metro Police to pitch new digs

Force envisions campus-style headquarters uniting departments, top brass

Thu, Jun 19, 2008 (2 a.m.)

Sheriff Doug Gillespie confirmed late Wednesday that Metro Police will propose building a headquarters in Las Vegas, consolidating for the first time many departments and functions spread across the valley in more than 60 locations.

In making the proposal, Gillespie is attempting something previous sheriffs have tried and failed to accomplish — housing the department’s leadership and its vital units under one roof.

Under the new plan, that roof would be on the northwest corner of Martin Luther King Boulevard and Alta Drive, just west of Interstate 15. The site is currently an empty dirt lot.

Metro officials will reveal their plans at a public meeting Monday before a committee made up of members of the City Council and the Clark County Commission — the two agencies that jointly fund Metro.

One clear argument is that Metro has grown from 400 staffers in 1973 to 5,000 as of two years ago. Without a centralized headquarters, Gillespie and his predecessors have argued, they have been hampered in attempts to run the department effectively.

A new headquarters would unite, for example, the crime lab, several detectives bureaus and the top brass, who are currently in offices they have outgrown on the seventh floor of the Las Vegas City Hall tower downtown.

“I am confident. I believe this is a worthwhile endeavor,” Gillespie said in an interview after being called by the Las Vegas Sun. “I believe that from a financial standpoint the proposal makes sense. From an efficiency standpoint, the proposal makes sense.”

Gillespie said some of the funding would be in the form of savings from lease payments being made to house Metro units across the valley. However, taxpayers would have to bear much of the remaining costs.

He wouldn’t say how much Metro thinks the project would cost or how much additional public money it would require. Gillespie said he knows that in these tough financial times, he will need to convince the public this is a good, and necessary, project.

Metro’s Fiscal Affairs Committee will meet at 2 p.m. Monday in the Las Vegas City Council chambers.

City Councilmen Gary Reese and Larry Brown serve on the committee, as do Clark County Commissioners Susan Brager and Chris Giunchigliani. MGM Mirage executive Bill McBeath is committee chairman.

Gillespie said renderings of a possible new headquarters will be shown, and more information will be released about the proposed project’s specific designs. He did say that rather than a single large building, the headquarters would comprise several buildings, with a “campus-style” approach.

“This is not going to be a Taj Mahal; this is going to be a very practical office complex,” he said. “I think the offices we have should depict the level of professionalism that we have within our organization, but then again, we realize these are tax dollars.”

According to Las Vegas Finance Director Mark Vincent, Metro has more incentive than ever to be looking into a new headquarters.

That’s because the city is in the beginning stages of developing a proposal for a new City Hall, several blocks away in downtown.

City leaders have offered the current City Hall building to Metro if the city ends up moving, but Metro has said it is not big enough and does not suit the department’s needs, Vincent said.

“They’ve always argued that (a new headquarters) would save them in lease costs, and otherwise help them gain efficiencies, which makes sense intuitively,” Vincent said.

Discussion: 3 comments so far…

  1. Sheriff Doug Gillespie should get back to us when they know what this project would cost and how much is going to be saved by not paying leases all over town.

    I agree that they should be in one building, makes things more efficient but no more open check book projects should be approved or thought about.

    Costs and facts go a long way with the tax payers when trying to get people behind you on something as major as this.

  2. Does anyone else see the outrageousness of this "request"? The State has no money, the county and city claim to have no money and the police chief thinks that this is the time to start building a new building? Are you kidding me? And no, the brass does not have to all be together. Most of them are at City Hall. What we need to have is deconsolidation of the "power structure". What about more stations in neighborhoods with some of the brass headquarterd their so that they can keep an eye on the rank and file. There are cars, faxes, phones and even teleconferencing in this century. There is no need for a campus full of brass. Community policing is the best. Growing up in NY, there were plenty of police stations. Kids knew the cops and this was in the 80's. Its time to for a return to neighborhood stations and if we must build, then it should be for the benefit of the community and not for the brass. and Vegaslee is right. Where are the numbers in all of this.

  3. I have to agree that community policing is the best way to go especially in a city like Las Vegas. The cops should be happy with expanded digs at the current City Hall.

    If they want more communication between the "top brass" they should invest in telephones, video conferencing, and online options to keep in contact. It would save a ton of money on fuel expenses.

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