Las Vegas Sun

May 6, 2024

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Sam Skolnik

Story Archive

NFL games in city still a long shot
Mayor’s plan must overcome football’s gambling phobia
Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008
The city has come close to getting an NBA team, and still might — if only an arena developer can be nailed down to “turn the first shovel,” as the mayor has put it.
Once a talker, land lawsuit goes silent in settlement
Monday, Sept. 8, 2008
A court case that caused a big public stir several years ago, involving top Las Vegas figures and allegations of elder abuse and cronyism, died a quiet death when the case finally settled late last year.
Vegas Web site garners national award, and trip to Hollywood
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2008
After a couple of near misses, it’s finally No. 1. Las Vegas’ Web site recently was named the best city Web site by a national research and advisory institute, the Center for Digital Government.
984 times out of 1,000, they vote like a Politburo
Members: There’s nothing nefarious about unanimous votes
Sunday, Aug. 31, 2008
The Las Vegas City Council took 1,000 votes in a recent one-year period on issues vital to the city’s future and important to citizens.
City holds out hope for arena downtown
Thursday, Aug. 21, 2008
According to Scott Adams, director of the city’s Business Development Office, the possibility still exists for a sports arena complex, including a casino, on a 56-acre downtown site off Charleston Boulevard.
Ordinance would boost storm water policies
Sunday, Aug. 17, 2008
Since 2005, Las Vegas has been in the cross hairs of the Environmental Protection Agency over its storm water management policies.
Oh, the irony: The former mob lawyer gets FBI support for mob museum
Sunday, Aug. 17, 2008
In 2002, Mayor Oscar Goodman’s suggestion that the historic post office near City Hall be turned into a mob museum caused a minor uproar.
Downtown’s biggest booster unbowed
But economy undercuts Mayor Goodman’s pitch
Friday, Aug. 15, 2008
It’s not surprising that even in the face of a tough economy and several recent setbacks in downtown redevelopment, Mayor Oscar Goodman continues to push the effort on which he’s staked his legacy.
Tag, and you soon could lose your driver’s license
Monday, Aug. 11, 2008
Ricki Barlow does not propose that graffiti taggers have their thumbs cut off on TV, as Mayor Oscar Goodman once suggested.
Want to open a pawnshop? FBI might soon want to know
Friday, Aug. 8, 2008
What do psychics, ice cream truck operators and strip club owners have in common?
Two views of city government, one party
Candidates for Vegas council have distinct resumes, agendas
Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2008
Though they are both Republicans, two very different candidates have emerged in the race to replace Larry Brown, the Las Vegas councilman whose long stint representing Ward 4 could end in a few months.
Signs are dim, but is Vegas’ future?
Experts admit we’re in a deep downturn, but each envisions a rebound — eventually
Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008
For those of us who thought we lived in Boomtown U.S.A., the dramatic downshift in the economy has been unsettling at the least, jarring for many. On Friday, Boyd Gaming paused work on Echelon — eight floors above the ground — until it can figure out how to pay for its $4.8 billion hotel-gaming complex on the Strip. Just that fast, 800 construction workers were sent scrambling for other jobs.


Vegas paper drops sections, not jobs
R-J’s move to cut costs follows price hike
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Having just raised the newsstand price for weekday and Saturday editions by 50 percent, the Las Vegas Review-Journal announced Monday it has eliminated sections of the paper as a cost-cutting measure.
Las Vegas putting slumlords on notice
Friday, July 25, 2008
The Las Vegas City Council is trying to deliver a message to slumlords and owners of abandoned property: We will no longer tolerate you.
Affordable housing didn't stand a chance
Neighbors' opposition, city's process helped doom Vegas apartment project
Friday, July 25, 2008
At its simplest, it was a David vs. Goliath story about a band of scrappy Ward 1 neighborhood activists who came together to fight a former U.S. senator and his client’s proposed affordable housing project — and won.
Local downturn a hiccup or augur of a bleak future?
THE ISSUES: Forecasts for air travel, school enrollment growth and gaming companies might mark the end of Clark County’s boom time.
Sunday, July 20, 2008
For more than a decade, Las Vegas has been the envy of the nation in at least one regard: its explosive growth. Year after year, the region’s economy marched in step with fast-rising gaming revenue. And the population advanced at the same pace. As last year drew to a close, officials announced that Clark County had topped the 2 million mark — 620,000 people had arrived since 2000. It’s a story Nevadans have grown accustomed to hearing. And its repeated tellings have fed the belief that such growth would never end, that Las Vegas was immune from the economic pressures that affect the rest of the country. We may need to think again.
Vegas nears uneasy alliance
Council mulls grant for former member’s senior housing, retail project
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
The Las Vegas City Council is poised to hand $10 million to former Councilman Michael McDonald for a low-income senior housing project, acknowledging his checkered past will cause some to question the deal.
Vegas’ new disaster czar dwells on the bad — for us
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
On any given day, her job might require her to track alerts about possible earthquakes, rampaging fires or flash floods to hit the area. She might be on the lookout for warnings of medical epidemics or even terrorist threats.
Trust overcomes fear
Neighborhood crime subsides as police, mainly Hispanic residents build bridges
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Vianney Hernandez initially regretted her decision to become the manager of the Pine Village Apartments four years ago. The large complex at the corner of Arville Street and Silver Dollar Avenue is in the area known as Pennwood-Arville. In 2004, the neighborhood was filled with drug dealing and prostitution, and suffered more than its fair share of shootings and stabbings.
Mayor says Vegas hurt more than other cities by gas prices
Monday, July 7, 2008
Although mayors across the country for months have been paying lip service to concerns about the fast-rising cost of gas and its effect on their constituents, most are not really all that concerned, Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said at his July 3 news conference.
Rich get richer, little guys lose their shirts
Apex deal benefits Vegas bigwigs but Ponzi scheme cheats 800
Sunday, July 6, 2008
By April 2005, when the deal was inked, the signs of trouble were everywhere if anyone had bothered to look.
City mulls downtown land sale at cut rate
Deal before council would transfer acreage to Lady Luck developer
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Las Vegas officials want to sell downtown property to the new owners of the Lady Luck for tens of millions of dollars less than what the city’s appraisers say the land is worth.
Proposal would create chapel handbiller zones
Monday, June 23, 2008
Call it the Great Wedding Chapel Compromise of 2008.
Metro Police to pitch new digs
Force envisions campus-style headquarters uniting departments, top brass
Thursday, June 19, 2008
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, at a public meeting Monday.
Arts District’s big brushes expected to win approval
Monday, June 16, 2008
The Las Vegas City Council is set to vote Wednesday on whether to give final city approval to the controversy-prone proposal for the Gateway to the Arts District public art project.
Quiet on the northern front
Downtown condo tower mostly empty as revitalization efforts limp along
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
The glossy sales brochure for Streamline Tower, a swanky new high-rise condo building in downtown Las Vegas, includes a photo of a dozen nicely dressed people milling about near the building’s front entrance.
Long-sought supermarket to make life in West Las Vegas a bit better
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
After going without a full-service supermarket since the closure of a Vons in 2004, Ward 5 has a grocery store coming by the end of the year, a Buy Low Market at Owens Avenue and H Street, thanks to Councilman Ricki Barlow and city redevelopment officials.
Economic chill freezes Vegas budget
Mayor Goodman disputes bleak forecast, but sees chance to trim fat
Saturday, May 31, 2008
There are several ways the local economic downturn will affect residents as Las Vegas confronts a budget crunch — one that might not end anytime soon.
To collar costs, Las Vegas will put its eight dogs out of work
Saturday, May 31, 2008
As part of a cost-saving program all city departments have implemented called Performance Plus, the city's canine program has been scrapped.
In varied Vegas, two buildings spark architectural debate
Sunday, May 25, 2008
On the Strip, a giant black glass pyramid sits next to a fairy tale-inspired castle with brightly colored turrets. A faux-Deco rip-off of Manhattan’s skyline stands down the street from respectful if miniaturized copies of the Eiffel Tower and the Arc de Triomphe.
Chapel owners say ordinance is a win-lose
Limits on handbillers would be good for their image, bad for their business, they say
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
The scene outside the Clark County Marriage Bureau in downtown Las Vegas has long been chaotic, a place where aggressive handbillers for wedding chapels often verbally and physically harass one another — as well as happy couples looking for a
License plates can help save history
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Las Vegas is celebrating its centennial — again!
Fremont East shows signs of regaining momentum
After a splashy start, development of the entertainment district stalled
Saturday, May 10, 2008
With great fanfare eight months ago, Las Vegas hailed the rebirth of East Fremont Street with a street party and the lighting of sparkling new neon.
Council finds soft spot for needy
Group may share ‘special events’ funds with elderly poor
Friday, May 9, 2008
Las Vegas City Council members soon may trade in a fraction of their “special events” budgets, typically spent on parties, luncheons and gifts, for something arguably much more important: subsidized meals for thousands of the city’s poorest seniors.
Bizarre allegations come to light
Thursday, Aug. 16, 2007
By now, many of the allegations against District Judge Elizabeth Halverson are common knowledge: that she ordered her bailiff to massage her neck and feet, that she fell asleep on the bench more than once and that she spoke to juries outside the presence of the lawyers in the case.
New law: Let them out of prison
Friday, July 27, 2007
Under a recently implemented law designed to reduce prison overcrowding, the sentences of more than 2,000 felons on probation and parole have been thrown out.
For a 7/7/07 anniversary, love waits in line but doesn't wilt
Saturday, July 7, 2007
They came from all over America this week, thrilled to be sweltering in the relentless heat outside the Regional Justice Center in downtown Las Vegas.
Judges step up feud, courthouse cringes
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
In a growing cascade of court papers and media reports in recent weeks, Judge Elizabeth Halverson of the Eighth Judicial District Court has been accused of the following:
Prosecutors try to block attorney from working on murder case
Monday, May 21, 2007
Prosecutors are demanding that a prominent Las Vegas attorney be barred from representing a defendant in the high-profile Palomino Club murder case, claiming he has a conflict of interest by also representing the defendant's father.
Police test his faith
Monday, April 23, 2007
Metro isn't the only police force that won't let its officers wear beards.
THE SUN INTERVIEW
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Nevada's former U.S. attorney opens up about his values, his work and the political double-dealing that cost him his job
Judges take their shot
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Judges take their shot
Taking cash power out of the judiciary
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Nevada District Court judges and Supreme Court justices are elected every six years in nonpartisan, open elections. A bill recently proposed by Sen. Bill Raggio, R-Reno, would dramatically change the way District Court judges and Supreme Court justices are selected. The bill, currently before the Senate Judiciary Committee, has garnered strong bipartisan support. Following are the differences between the current law, two other plans for change that have been floated in the past and Raggios proposal:
Police saw 'nothing' at house where girl, 7, died
Friday, Feb. 9, 2007
A top Metro Police official said Thursday that the officers who responded to a domestic disturbance call last weekend at a house where a 7-year-old girl was later allegedly stabbed to death by her mother saw "absolutely nothing" that would have mandated they call Child Protective Services.
Battling domestic violence
Sunday, Dec. 10, 2006
The first signs that her boyfriend was an abuser came soon after their relationship began in late 2000.
Gibbons and Mazzeo step up dispute: He issues denial, she hires attorney
Friday, Oct. 20, 2006
Six Questions
Their loss is our gain as police claim the tools of the criminal trade
Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2006
In the last 12 months, Metro Police seized $1,040 from Moran Matias after allegedly finding bags of methamphetamine and powder and rock cocaine in his pickup truck.
Negotiate this: In Nevada it's burglary
Tuesday, Sept. 5, 2006
Last Monday afternoon, Raneisha Williams walked into a 7-Eleven on Atlantic Street, took a $1.79 bottle of Starbucks Frappuccino from the cooler and drank it before heading to the register.