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Rico, Searching for Inner Peace After the Loss of His Brothers

Rico first moved to Reno six years ago, after being told to leave his mother’s home in Turlock, California. Since then, Rico says he has been searching for inner peace during the spiral of life and his struggles with homelessness, following the loss…

Rico first moved to Reno six years ago, after being told to leave his mother’s home in Turlock, California. Since then, Rico says he has been searching for inner peace during the spiral of life and his struggles with homelessness, following the loss of his three brothers.

‘Boring’ Being Outside All Day

“I’ve been in Reno for approximately six years and I would sum up my experience in Reno with patience, pain, and love,” Rico said, when we interviewed him on a recent fall day in the Biggest Little City. 

He was next to a shopping cart full of branches.

“I lost three brothers in six months and I've been f*** up my life,” Rico said, explaining his heartbroken journey. “I moved to Vegas and then moved back here and I'm just starting to get my life back on track.”

When asked how he’s been coping with the death of his brothers in such a short span of time, Rico said he’s been taking it one day at a time. Their deaths, however, have given Rico a fresh outlook on life.

“I remember, before my brothers had died, I was good,” Rico said. “But then after my brothers had died, I just took a different outlook on life. That's when I said, ‘Forget it, I'm just gonna be me all the way.’”

Currently Rico has been staying with some friends, but he understands what it’s like to have no place to sleep at night.

“[Being homeless] sucked because nobody wants to be outside all day,” Rico said. “It gets boring being outside all day, especially when you don't like to bother people.”

Roughly three years ago, Rico says he was sleeping every night in the stairwell at the Wonder Lodge.

Roughly three years ago, Rico says he was sleeping every night in the stairwell at the Wonder Lodge.

Sleeping in a Motel Stairway

“[Being homeless] was rough because I was sleeping in the Wonder Lodge stairway every single night and I would give out my food stamps to everybody inside the Wonder Lodge,” Rico said. “I would give them my food because I like to see people eat and see people happy.”

Despite often giving away his food stamps to others in need, Rico says he always had trust that God was going to see him through.

“I knew that God was going to take care of me, no matter how foolish that may sound to some people,” Rico said. “I know that there's a Higher Power, or whichever name you prefer to put on it. I knew He was going to look out, so I didn't really trip. It worked, too, because I'm still alive and that was like three years ago.”

During his time without housing, Rico attests that there’s enough resources for the homeless. It’s the lack of jobs, or getting to available jobs when you are homeless, he says, that makes it difficult for people like him to get back on their feet. 

“Hell yeah, [there’s enough resources for the homeless],” Rico said. “There's a river where you can catch fish and crawdads. But you have to learn how to catch some of it, but yeah, there's definitely enough resources by far. Definitely no jobs, tho…

“Hell yeah, [there’s enough resources for the homeless],” Rico said. “There's a river where you can catch fish and crawdads. But you have to learn how to catch some of it, but yeah, there's definitely enough resources by far. Definitely no jobs, though.”

Hoping to Get Back to School

In the meantime, Rico says he hopes to soon enroll at TMCC and take classes like psychology, philosophy and languages like Hindu or American Sign Language. Those classes will prepare him, he says, to take on a position as a life coach, aside from his pursuits as an artist. 

“[With that education] I would like to become a life coach, aside from an artist,” Rico said. “I like to rap and I like to draw, because I aspire to be a musician. But then I want to be a life coach, for sure, because I got the answer for life.”

That answer to life, Rico says, is finding inner peace within ourselves.

“[The answer to life] is peace,” Rico said. “[People will find peace] once they realize that peace just comes from within and everything that we have ever been told is pretty much a lie. I just feel like us being animals, which we are and animals being animals, nothing in life is good or bad. Nothing in life is wrong or right.”

For Rico, people should do what makes them happy and brings them peace.

“Life is meant to just be lived in experience and whatever you decide to do and go through in your life, as long as you feel inside yourself that it's right within, it's not wrong,” Rico said. “Whether you're doing drugs or smoking tobacco or having sex right here in the middle of the street, it's only wrong if you inside yourself feel like it's wrong. But for us to be any type of creation and to think that we can societal-ize and put rules and regulations on things is f****d up.”

Rico is still working on getting to where he wants to be, but in the meantime he says the desire for inner peace is what keeps him positive that he’s headed in the right direction.

“I can't always take that advice because I'm stuck on trying to see people progress and do better and fulfill their life in a way that's going to be better for themselves,” Rico said. “But self-peace draws me back into a lot of those areas because I'm just like, ‘You’re gonna get it one day,’ you know?” 

Reporting and Photography by Scott King for Our Town Reno



Friday 11.13.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Controversy Grows over New Proposed Plans for the Lear Theater

LearTheater (11).JPG

A Developer’s Plan Worries Preservationists and Theater Advocates

The fate of the dilapidated Artown Reno-owned Lear Theater, an iconic landmark nestled between West 1st Street and Riverside Drive, overlooking the Truckee River, remains uncertain, with preservationists and small theater advocates now fearful that current plans by a local developer to build apartment buildings around it will take away its character, historical value and community use.

The developer, Ken Krater, has a history of supporting the demolition of downtown vintage Reno motels, adding to the concerns of those in favor of reviving the classical Lear Theater as a place for local classes, performances and events. 

In order to facilitate construction for a luxury complex adjacent to the theater as is Krater’s plan, he is asking for parts of Riverside Drive and Ralston Street to be abandoned by the city of Reno.  In media appearances, Krater has defended his plan as one that will save the theater and provide new housing.  Another group with the Sierra School for Performing Arts which was previously negotiating with Artown Reno doesn’t understand why its own bid was marred down in complexities and eventually dropped in favor of Krater’s.

Artown and Krater Consulting Group were contacted for comment, but referred Our Town Reno to already published press releases and statements. A Facebook page for The Lear Theater run by Artown has little in the way of updates, and still has as its About section this disclaimer:  “As current custodians of The Lear, it is Artown’s goal to steer the future of the building in the most appropriate direction available.”

The area around the Lear Theater has a long public history as well, with some goals never realized.

The area around the Lear Theater has a long public history as well, with some goals never realized.

Plans to Abandon Parts of the Street to a Private Endeavor

During his recent appearance on the local Face the State KTVN Channel 2 television program, Krater, a former traffic design engineer for the city of Reno, mentioned he’s been in contact with the current Public Works director and that street abandonment is in the discussions. 

“We all know that the Truckee River floods on occasion...and there is a desire on the part of the city to put an additional earthen berm along the river to stop the floods,” Krater said. “And so I have been working with the city to see about abandoning Riverside Drive and Ralston Street around the theater. We would still retain bicycle traffic, pedestrian traffic, but all of a sudden the land to the east of the theater out into Ralston Street would be enough land to build an apartment building.”

Krater said he believes abandoning parts of Riverside Drive would also open up the opportunity for an outdoor theater area between the Truckee River and the Lear. 

“By abandoning that street, you would also be able to have this awesome outdoor theater area where you could have theater events on the stage, up on the main entryway, and people sitting on the earthen berm protecting the Truckee River in an amphitheater setting,” Krater said. “So now you get this beautiful indoor community theater, but also an outdoor theater space where several hundred people can come and enjoy outdoor events.”

Alicia Barber, the editor of the Reno Historical website, is not only concerned that abandoning parts of Riverside Drive would be a poor decision, but also believes Bicentennial Park across the street would have to be compromised as well.

“As much as we all want the Lear renovated, everyone should be alarmed at what this proposal would do to the public streets around it,” she wrote to us in an email. “Back in 1973, the Fleischmann Foundation gave the City of Reno an emergency grant to purchase the triangle bounded by Ralston and First Streets and the Truckee River, specifically to prevent that area from ever being privately developed. And now this plan requires the City to permanently close the adjacent block of Ralston Street along with a major chunk of Riverside Drive, the most beautiful drive in downtown Reno, to build luxury apartments there? That’s outrageous.”

The area around the Lear Theater is also now being discussed.

The area around the Lear Theater is also now being discussed.

A Theater with a Grandiose History and Recent Quagmire 

The Lear Theater was completed in 1938 by the architect Paul R. Williams, the first Black member of the American Institute of Architects, for the First Church of Christ, Scientist. According to Reno historians, Luella Garvey, wealthy widow of a Cincinnati steel magnate, provided most of the money to build the church. Anna Loomis, another prominent local citizen, served as chairperson of the congregation’s building committee, selecting the architect.

The structure was recognized on the Nevada State Historic Register in 1982. Seventeen years later, in 1999, the Lear Theater was added to the City of Reno’s Historic Register and the National Register of Historic Places. Loomis family members have been occasionally mentioned as possibly interested in saving the building in their own way as well. 

The building served as the primary worship center for the First Church of Christ, Scientist until 1998.  When the congregation moved to a new church location south of the city in 1998, one of its members, Moya Lear, saw potential in the storied building to serve as a prominent community theater. Consequently, Lear pledged over $1 million that was matched by the community to support the purchase of the building. 

It was then transferred to the Reno-Sparks Theater Community Coalition, a group that was founded in 1993 by fellow congregation member Edda Morrison. The Coalition then took on the name of Lear Theater Inc. and very briefly operated as a functioning community theater.

Theater operations were short-lived, however, as renovation and construction efforts were never completed.  Then in December 2011, the late former mayor Bob Cashell helped facilitate the transfer of the Lear Theater to Artown, the Reno arts and culture nonprofit, which essentially puts on July festivities  in non COVID-19 years. 

Unable to come up with a viable means of renovating the theater over the next six years, though, Artown turned to the community with a request for proposals in January of 2018 to sell the Lear for $1. 


The Failed Bid by the Lear Development Group

In 2018, Randi Thompson, who at the time was on the board of the Sierra School for Performing Arts, helped put together a development team called the Lear Development Group which submitted a proposal to purchase the Lear from Artown.  This bid however, as she remembers, kept running into moving hurdles and new complications, month after month. 

“By April [2019], we finally got to a final meeting where we felt we got everything understood,” she said. “[However] the covenants [Artown] had were very restrictive things like if the project failed, they got it back for a dollar, even if we put $14 million into it.”

Thompson acknowledges that her team had no problem with a Right to First Refusal agreement with Artown. But the fact that Artown would get it back for a dollar, regardless of how much money was put into the project, to Thompson was simply unfair. So the Lear Development Group made revisions based on that meeting and sent the new draft of a purchase and sale agreement to Artown.

“Then we got a letter back rejecting our offer and saying, ‘We will never come to an agreement,’ and [Artown] stopped negotiating with us,” Thompson recalls. “We requested follow-up meetings and it took about a month before their board members met with our board members and they really gave us no significant explanation.” Thompson says Artown didn’t understand how her team was going to utilize new market tax credits to facilitate the Lear Theater’s renovation. 

“They just didn't understand how we were going to build it,” Thompson said. “They didn't understand new market tax credits, so we walked away from the table very frustrated. We had invested over $12,000 in consultants to get us to that point. So now our development team has continued to meet as a group and we're all still very interested in it, frankly.” 

The Sierra School for Performing Arts (SSPA) offers theater classes, primarily for Reno’s youth. They put on youth theater productions and a musical every year. They were hoping for the Lear Theater to become a sort of home-base for SSPA, by having an office downstairs and a props and costume repository that would also be available for other theater groups in Reno.

“We wanted [the Lear] to become the community repository for props, costumes, set-making and to make it available to all of the theater groups in the community,” Thompson said. “There's enough room downstairs with about 9,000 square feet that we would have adequate storage for set-making and to open it up to all the theater groups. So it would truly be a place that's available, just like the Pioneer Theater, in that anybody can rent it.”

Although the Pioneer Theater is available for groups to rent, the smaller community theater groups simply can’t afford it. Therefore, Thompson says, the Lear Theater would fill a much-needed niche in Reno’s performing arts community.  According to Thompson, much like Krater’s current plan, abandoning part of Riverside Drive was a part of their proposal for the property as well.

“Part of our plans were to essentially abandon Riverside Drive and create an entire outside plaza from Bell Street to First Street where that Riverside just makes that turn and you could literally go down and get married by the river on a beautiful plaza,” Thompson said. “That could be an outdoor concert area. You have [Bicentennial Park] right there that could be tied right with it. So you'd have this beautiful walkway with a park, with a place to go pick up a coffee and go sit by the river. It would just make a really cool centerpiece of downtown.”

The Need for Community Theater Remains 

Nettie Olliverio, a founder and board member of the Reno-Sparks Community Theater Coalition and Lear Theater Inc. for 11 years, was heavily involved with previous fundraising and renovation efforts for the Lear. She also still wants the Lear Theater to become a fully-functioning community theater and performing arts center.  

“For such a long time, we needed a rental facility for performances that is not in the casinos and that is smaller than the 1,500 seats that are at the Pioneer Center,” Olliverio said. “Our other options are either University resources, which are University-centric and hard for outside performances not related to the University to get.”

Olliverio states that the size, structure and historical significance of the Lear suit it perfectly for community arts in Reno. “The size of the venue is so necessary for the continuing arts and culture in our area,” Olliverio said in an interview with Our Town Reno. “So with the historic aspect of the Lear, with the fact that it was created by a Black architect and is structurally sound, when our organization had it, we had an engineer do some core-testing of it. It was built to the old LA-earthquake standards, which were higher than ours at the point in time that it was built. So it's structurally very sound and it's just, it cries to be finished and have people in it.”

The Lear Development Group intended to have collapsible, fold-down seats in the theater, much like how things are done at the Little Reno Theater.  “[Collapsible seats] is a very state-of-the-art way of doing theater seating to pull the seats out and then you could put down dinner tables for [patrons] while watching a theater production,” Thompson said. “So we were looking at a 300-350 seat venue to really host a broad range of events from plays to ballets, to film festivals, concerts, weddings, nonprofit fundraisers and corporate events. It would really be the heart of performing arts and the downtown area and truly follow through with what Moya Lear's vision, which was to have this great theater right downtown, while honoring Paul Revere Williams and his beautiful work.”

Thompson and her development team were also exploring the idea of a food and beverage operation within the theater, as well as an outdoor cafe along the Truckee River.

“But we knew that you couldn't just operate it like the Pioneer Theater and that you needed to have full amenities,” Thompson said. “Apparently, that's what Artown thought we were creating was a restaurant but no, we were creating a food operation to support special events and support the theater. We'd love to do a mystery dinner or actually be able to have dinner and watch the theater. So we wanted to truly make it a great dining and entertainment experience.”

More Details of the Krater Proposal

When Thompson heard of the possibility that Artown was in discussions with Ken Krater of the Krater Consulting Group, a developer who had visions for luxury apartments as a means of financially renovating the Lear, she penned an op-ed for This Is Reno in May of 2020 and brought to light the details of the sudden fall-out in discussions between SSPA and Artown.

A few weeks later in early June, Krater and Artown conducted a press conference announcing their new plans for renovating the Lear.  It appears the apartments were originally proposed to be underneath the Lear Theater, with the theater itself above it. Those plans, however, seem to have shifted according to the more recent appearance by Krater on KTVN’s Face the State in September.

“A theater [alone] doesn’t generate enough revenue to be able to finance renovation of the theater and so I always thought in the back of my head that we need to figure out some sort of revenue-generating source that can complement the theater,” Krater said during his appearance. “So essentially what I came up with is the idea of building a beautiful apartment complex next to, but not attached to the theater, because obviously apartments are in high demand.”

Thompson, however, has multiple concerns regarding the idea of apartments at or next to the Lear Theater. One of which is that she’s concerned that by the time the proposed apartments generate enough revenue to finance the Lear’s renovation, it could be too late to save the Reno landmark. 

“If we had been offered the ability to build this, we'd be mostly through construction by now and probably be opening by next spring, as our proposed deadline was by 2021,” Thompson said. “I don't know if the Lear can even survive this, ‘Let's wait until Ken Krater builds apartments.’ I'm just shocked at how there was such a role reversal and Artown put our feet to the fire to make sure that we built a community art center available to everybody, period.”

Dreams of a Revived Lear Theater Community Art Space Persist


What will eventually become of the Lear Theater remains to be seen, and dreams that would satisfy both preservationists and local culture proponents persist, but these seem to be fading away as the years tick on and restoration still isn’t happening. 

“I know that there are a lot of people in our community who have invested both emotionally and financially in the building over the years in the chase to turn it into an entertainment resource,” Olliverio said. “I would love to see it become a performing arts center that has the commodities that one needs to be able to perform well for theater, for dance, for music: the appropriate lights, sound, stage and dressing rooms; but also flexible enough that it is a good resource for the community for weddings, lectures, a screening of an indie film or an orchid show or just those things that bring a community together.”

“The quality of your art only reflects the quality of your community and right now we're still struggling,” Thompson said. “This has proven that it is more important now than ever to provide a space that is affordable, but not just a place to go and do one thing. You could come in and have a cup of coffee and then go see a theater. You could go have dinner and watch live theater. We don't have anything like that in Reno.”



Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno







Tuesday 11.10.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Khalid Ali, Alleging Discrimination Over the Loss of His Old Motels

Ali says he is now focused on trying to find out exactly why he lost the three motels he previously operated, pointing to fires, discrimination and overzealous code enforcement. Alex Woodley, the Assistant Director of Neighborhood Services for the C…

Ali says he is now focused on trying to find out exactly why he lost the three motels he previously operated, pointing to fires, discrimination and overzealous code enforcement. Alex Woodley, the Assistant Director of Neighborhood Services for the City of Reno, who also has duties as code enforcement manager, instead blames mismanagement which led to code violations, dangerous safety issues, a criminal case which was later dropped and mounting financial problems.

From Owning a Motel to Driving a Cab

Nowadays, Khalid Ali can be found driving a cab around the streets of Reno. It’s an occupation he’s had to rely on to pay the bills, ever since, he says, he was essentially forced to give up his motel business.

“I want to shed some light on these three motels, two of which mysteriously caught on fire,” Ali said. “The end result is that the city decided to go after me and shut down my motels.”

The former owner of Everybody’s Inn, Ho Hum Motel and the Desert Sunset Motel alleges he was discriminated against due to his Pakistani origins and forced by the city to give up each of his motels. This version is disputed by Alex Woodley, the Assistant Director of Neighborhood Services for the City of Reno, who also has code enforcement manager duties.

“I know he's made claims of his ethnic background and it had nothing to do with that whatsoever. It had to do with the quality of life that he was providing and services that he was providing for the tenants,” Woodley said. The city official also said the fires were minor chapters in a long-running downward spiral of the three properties.

After arriving in Reno in 1978, Ali spent years working in the casinos before buying his first motel, Everybody’s Inn, in 1994. He later acquired Ho Hum in 1999 and Desert Sunset in 2000, respectively.

After arriving in Reno in 1978, Ali spent years working in the casinos before buying his first motel, Everybody’s Inn, in 1994. He later acquired Ho Hum in 1999 and Desert Sunset in 2000, respectively.

Disagreements over Blame

Ali says he paid off both Everybody’s Inn and Ho Hum ten years after their original purchase in the 1990s and in 2000, and was on his way to paying off the Desert Sunset before a series of fires and interactions with Reno code enforcement changed the course of his business, and life, forever.

The first fire, he remembers, occurred at Everybody’s Inn back in 2014. According to his recollection, the Reno Fire Department later determined that a baseboard heater malfunction was the cause of the fire. After the fire, however, Ali says the city would not allow him to re-open half of his motel. 

Then when a second fire occurred at the Desert Sunset in 2016, the Reno Fire Department ruled that “arson could have been suspected,” but then he alleges they did not go further into any type of confirmation. Ali believes he may have been the target of hate crime. We contacted Tray Palmer, a city of Reno official in charge of fire prevention, to get the files on these two fires, but did not get the information in time for this article.

Ali says in the last years of his ownership the city repeatedly used tactics like coding violations to make running his motel business financially impossible. Although Ali says he worked to meet every alleged violation, but he ultimately could not keep up.

“The city used these government agencies like [Occupational Safety and Health Administration] OSHA, the court enforcement, the health department, the police department, all these agencies as an excuse to harass me and my business,” Ali alleges. “They're fining you for things like some water that is leaking and all kinds of jokes like that. They hurt us financially so we cannot stay in the business and that's what they did to us.” 

As detailed in captions below throughout this story, the city official Our Town Reno spoke to, Woodley, pointed to more serious allegations, from violence to prostitution to a total lack of following safety codes at the motels to becoming a “slumlord.”


At Everybody’s Inn, Woodley says he noticed there were “two 55 gallon drums with flammable material to heat up the water. It was a hazard, something that could have blown up. So at that point we had to require the closing of the motel. My understanding is that he had a partner and between him and the partner, I guess they got into a dispute and the partner wasn't willing to invest any more money and the property was condemned. “ Ali said this was a temporary solution that was being fixed after another tank was allegedly stolen.

Everybody’s Inn Motel still stands in Reno but it’s fenced off and out of use, as more and more motels are being bought out or auctioned off and bulldozed away. “We had a lot of problems,” Woodley a city official told Our Town Reno in an interview. …

Everybody’s Inn Motel still stands in Reno but it’s fenced off and out of use, as more and more motels are being bought out or auctioned off and bulldozed away. “We had a lot of problems,” Woodley a city official told Our Town Reno in an interview. “The city of Reno was receiving many complaints from tenants. We had criminal activity occurring there. We had to do an entire inspection of the property and there were so many problems. We had a storage room, which was converted into a living space with no bathroom. We had an individual living in there. I think she was paying a much lower rate on rent, but it was not approved living quarters. As a matter of fact, it didn't even have a window … so if there was a fire or anything that would have been a disaster.” Ali told Our Town Reno it was the maintenance worker who was using the room, and only staying there when he had been needed for work late at night.

Mounting Coding Violations and Suspicious Fires

Ali says he recalls a time he was once fined $7,000 by OSHA for one coding violation and then another $1,000 for another coding violation right after that. On top of that, Ali alleges the court enforcement agency fined him thousands of dollars through court hearings.  

Eventually, two of Ali’s properties, Everybody’s Inn and Ho Hum Motel, were declared under court receivership, meaning that the court now owned the properties and they were put on the auction block.

“The thing is, when these motels catch on fire, needless to say some of these motels went to the auctions,” Ali said. “But I don't see why these properties go to auction when you don't owe any money.”

Ali says his late wife, a Jewish-American woman from Philadelphia, warned him that he likely would be treated differently as a Muslim-American in a post-9/11 world. Consequently, after his last purchase in 2000, Ali decided not to pursue any other motel properties, instead focusing on the three he already had.

Ali notes that although fires do happen in buildings and structures, a lot of these motel fires in Reno have happened at locations run by people of Indian and South Asian origin.

“Fires do happen, but the thing is I've been noticing is that a lot of fires in downtown Reno are mostly fires happening with Indian-region people who are the owner of these motels,” Ali said. “So the problem is that right after September 11th, we feel that basically it's a systemic racism against us as Indian or Asian people, especially. They're trying to go after us and eliminate us and the end result is that once they caught on fire, then some of these motels were simply completely shut down and never opened again.”

Woodley says he has personally assured Ali the situation of his motels had nothing to do with his origins. “We have a stance that no matter what your socioeconomic status, everyone in the city of Reno has a right to live in a clean and safe rental property,” he said in his interview with Our Town Reno. “We require, and we will cite, property owners that are not maintaining their property, but are benefiting from the rent that they're charging their tenants. So that's how we got involved with this. Normally our code enforcement cases, they typically last 30 to 60 days, the cases we had with him, they lasted for years. “

Motels which are often the first or last resort of housing for some have steadily closed down, as city council members have talked of the need to fight blight as well as saying motels are not good for long term living solutions. “We had multiple uni…

Motels which are often the first or last resort of housing for some have steadily closed down, as city council members have talked of the need to fight blight as well as saying motels are not good for long term living solutions. “We had multiple units that had to be condemned and he was required to bring them up to code,” Woodley said of the Desert Sunset Motel. “We later on had individuals that were squatting in there and we were arresting individuals and pulling them out of the property. At some point he [Ali] was living on the property, keeping it secured. And we came to find out through investigations and interviews with the occupants that they were paying him cash. One individual claims that she had an arrangement with him with favors and we had to go out there with the police department because she was trying to attack him with a knife. She was trying to stab him … turns out that she had been arrested for prostitution.”

Steadily Declining Availability of Motel Rooms and Accusations of Slumlords

Motels, like those once owned by Ali, are put on auction then typically go to developers who go on to utilize the property for their own projects. Consequently, the number of motels and rooms available to the Reno population has dropped dramatically. 

“At one time there were 24,000 people living in 93 motels across Reno,” Ali said. “Now, because they keep on shutting down these motels I don't think there’s even 13,000 rooms left outside that people can rent and live in like a decent human being.”

Ali admits that motel rooms may not always be in the best shape. But he’d rather see the city offer the landlords and motel-owners a low-interest loan to improve the property, rather than hand their properties over to developers via auctions. 

Ultimately, however, Ali believes that the city just wanted him out of the motel business altogether.

“My wife told me after September 11th that the city position is that they don’t want me in the business,” Ali said. “So what can I do? [The city] is the judge, jury and executioner. So where do you think we stand as a people?”

Above, an official notice of violation sent by the City of Reno concerning the Desert Sunset Motel.  After being informed we were in contact with Woodley, Ali forwarded us this email (cut and paste below) which he said was sent by his wife to the Re…

Above, an official notice of violation sent by the City of Reno concerning the Desert Sunset Motel. After being informed we were in contact with Woodley, Ali forwarded us this email (cut and paste below) which he said was sent by his wife to the Reno-Sparks Convention Authority several years ago, trying to find another party to help them in their interactions with Reno. “This is Khalid Ali, wife, Earlene. I have had numerous conversations with Joe Henry. He stated to me that he will not give Khalid a license or a permit for the motel. He will offer to me or Khalid, sister. please understand I am disabled and in a wheelchair. Joe Henry also stated that Khalid would not be allowed on the property. I think he has gone way beyond his authority. At this point in time, RSCVA has lost 9 months of revenue needlessly. This seems to be a personal agenda of Joe Henry to get Khalid out of business any way he can. no one was in danger when the fire started. It was not next to the rooms. If he had to close down a portion of the motel, I understand that. But not the entire motel. We have continually been required to have the electrical system checked. Each time”

The Last Days of the Desert Sunset Motel

Woodley has an entirely different take on the last motel Ali owned, the Desert Sunset Motel.

“There were unstable platforms for the second floor where people were walking on,” he said. “There were unstable stairwells that, I mean, if you walked on it, it was wobbly. We had situations of doors not being sealed. Like you could see daylight through the room. We had toilets and sinks, they weren't secured to the floor. We had infestations of bugs. We had let's see, what else, lack of appropriate caulking around the window seals. We had doors that were being closed with a padlock, like not even a regular door with a door handle deadbolt. We had an actual padlock, so the person would leave their room and they would put a padlock on the door. And then when they would go inside, they would padlock the door. So you can imagine if you had a fire or something, someone needs to get out of that room, they would have to go find the key, unlock the door, their padlock. It was a very unsafe situation.”

Woodley says the whole situation ended with Ali facing a criminal case against him. “The property had no electricity,” he said of the final months of the Desert Sunset Motel. “The property had no gas, so no one was supposed to be in there period. So we had to go out there on multiple occasions to secure the property. We actually ended up, because of the fact that all of our administrative process didn't bring to fruit, any kind of compliance, we actually ended up pursuing a criminal case, for lack of a better term, some we'll call it, for being a slumlord.”  Woodley says the charges were in abeyance and then dropped as Ali eventually sold the property.

Ali instead blames losing his business on systemic discriminatory practices that permeate through American society.

“We all know what happened recently to George Floyd because the whole country rose up, but that's just one example,” Ali said. “[My experience] is a very small example because race is a big issue and unfortunately, we seem to be very helpless and we need to do better than that with where we are.”

Ali says he had done everything the city had asked him to do after the fires, even paying over $150,000, he alleges, in fines so that he could reopen his Desert Sunset motel.

“The [Desert Sunset] fire happened mysteriously and the city, although I spent $150,000 by way of city code enforcement, I was told it, ‘Just put up lipstick on the pig,’” Ali said. “Which is another way of saying that I lost the $150,000 over there and I had no way of [getting my money back] because they refused to let me open the motel and stay in the business.”

With motels like his being put out of business, Ali points to the rising homeless population on the streets of Reno as a result. “We always claimed that we represent the poor lifestyle of the homeless people. We tried to accommodate you for $20-$25 …

With motels like his being put out of business, Ali points to the rising homeless population on the streets of Reno as a result. “We always claimed that we represent the poor lifestyle of the homeless people. We tried to accommodate you for $20-$25 a night, $425-$500 a week. Now the bottom line is these big developers are coming in from out of town, declaring us as the slumlords and that they're the new Messiah.”

Accessible Housing Being Taken Off the Block

Motels have been used for decades as housing for those without good credit or with criminal records or elders not wanting to deal with complications of utilities or having more than a simple room.

“These [motels] were havens for the homeless people,” Ali said. “We never claimed that we were representing the rich and famous lifestyle [as motel owners].”

Ali thinks it’s the wrong approach, to bulldoze so many motels, even though city council members will complain of bed bugs, and the presence of prostitutes and drug dealers.

“We need to make sure these motels can stay in business because rent is no longer affordable,” Ali said. “Rent is rising to about $1,000-$1,200. The Reno Gazette Journal reported that renters are giving an ‘F’ as far as the rent costs in Reno goes. Housing prices are going up, everything is going up, but the wages are not there to back it up. So as the saying goes, ‘We cannot squeeze the blood out of turnips,’ and these people are suffering a lot because of it.”

The way that Ali sees it, he was treated differently also because the city favors large corporations and developers over small businesses like his.

“As a business owner, I feel like I was given no say in whatever the city does,” Ali said. “Unfortunately, the city became judge, jury and executioner and the end result is that I lost everything. If Tesla walked in, they would have been given big tax cuts and gone to the bed for them, saying they can build this and build that.”

Ali has been holding on to documents hoping justice for him will prevail.

Ali has been holding on to documents hoping justice for him will prevail.

Millions Estimated in Losses, Calling for a Commission

In the end, Ali says he lost all of his properties for a fraction of their value, which he claims to be at around $1 million each.

“Unfortunately, we knew from the beginning that we were going to lose it and that's what eventually happened anyway,” Ali said. “So basically our losses are $3 million from these motels and we think that the city has to do better than that. We should be able to recover the money somehow, but the bottom line is we have no money in the system.”

Ali is now calling for a human rights commission to come together to get to the bottom of what happened.

“We went through four or five lawyers that we hired and we got nowhere,” Ali said. “But if you have a suit under some kind of commission of human rights, I think we can go somewhere to put our grievances because financially, it is not possible for us to keep on going back to the court system and spend literally thousands of dollars. The end result is you going through bankruptcy.”

Ali believes a human rights commission is necessary, particularly because motel owners won’t speak out on the discrimination and problems like the ones he faced. 

“When [motel owners] try to say something to [the city] about it, they retaliate against us,” Ali said. “We have to make a living too, and we cannot go on like this.”

As a Pakistani-American having lived in America for over 40 years now, Ali’s experience with the American public has been largely positive. He just wishes the bureaucratic system would treat him equally as well.

“My experience with the American public has been a very positive experience,” Ali said. “The American public are really good people. So my final message to the community is that they should be rising. They should be going to city councils meetings. If the big developers are coming in, then needless to say, where's the fair share for the minorities out here?”

Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Monday 11.09.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Tony, "I'm Fine" along the Truckee River

Tony says unlike others without stable shelter he survives with very little and prefers to be mobile to quickly adapt to new situations.

Tony says unlike others without stable shelter he survives with very little and prefers to be mobile to quickly adapt to new situations.

After losing his job working for temp agencies, Tony has been living along the river for two years now.

“It's been pretty good,” he said of living outside. “I just don’t like people,” he said of avoiding shelters.

He does have friends in the tent community, and was about to go shopping at Walmart for someone who had given him money for some survival supplies, as nights get colder and colder.

He says he tries to find harder to access spots not to bother anyone or to get booted in police sweeps.

”They go on the other side of the river, where all the parks are, so the police kind of leave us alone here,” he said. Unlike many others living in their tents, Tony says he keeps very little so he’s able to quickly adapt to any situation that may come his way.

He says some of his neighbors sometimes try to go into local shelters on cold nights, but have to wait hours and sometimes get turned away, so many give up even trying.

“I’m fine,” he said when we asked for final words.

Reporting by Gracie Gordon for Our Town Reno


Friday 11.06.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

The River Stewards, a new Washoe County Day Labor Initiative to Help the Homeless

“I'm blessed this morning and just happy to be here with you guys and to clean up this river, keep it clean,” Byron, who is without stable shelter, said of getting paid for a morning of cleaning up the Truckee River. The  Louisiana native has been i…

“I'm blessed this morning and just happy to be here with you guys and to clean up this river, keep it clean,” Byron, who is without stable shelter, said of getting paid for a morning of cleaning up the Truckee River. The Louisiana native has been in Reno for 30 years, but recently fell on some hard times.

“Working on the Inside … for Reno’s Image”

It’s the day after the Election, with results still uncertain in Nevada, but a clear blue sky overhead. Byron is part of a small crew with trash bags going around tent encampments picking up litter and making the surrounding areas cleaner. Newcomers who join the cleanup crew are encouraged to do so with gift cards, and a weekly lunch with plenty of tips and motivation from local homeless advocate and coordinator of the River Stewards program Grant Denton.

Byron has been inspired now to do his part on a regular basis as well. “I have pride in where I live,” he said. “My area is clean. I talk with my neighbors and we kind of got all on the same page and kept all our areas very clean now.”

He understands people who aren’t homeless and aren’t living along the river complain about the trash, but he hopes this program will help.

“I know that you know, all this garbage out here, it looks really, really bad for our community, but I'm working on the inside to try to change that for you guys, just for our image and for Reno's image, Nevada's image,” he said.

Grant Denton, formerly homeless himself, coordinates the program and also helps with the cleanup.

Grant Denton, formerly homeless himself, coordinates the program and also helps with the cleanup.

Grant Denton, the Coordinator

Grant Denton, well known locally already for his Karma Box project of neighborhood donations, and morning workouts for women in recovery, draws from his past Las Vegas experiences with homelessness and drug addiction.

As yellow and orange leaves floated down the river, this week, we wound our way through the willows and rocks. As we pass tents, Denton stops to talk with the person inside and offers them a trash bag and the opportunity to join his crew. The River Stewards program, which is only in its fourth week, empowers the homeless population with the opportunity to give back to the greater community. They have already collected and disposed of over 350 bags of trash. Denton has a group of four regular homeless workers who come out five days a week to clean up trash left behind by the homeless community. 

As we step over crumbling concrete and loose rocks, Denton explains the difference between what he calls a camp and a site. Camps are single tents with one or two people whereas a site in his lexicon is several camps in one area, a hyper-local community. When the culture and social dynamics shift, sometimes people will suddenly abandon the site, leaving everything behind. We are heading to one of these locations Denton had identified previously.

“We'll get four volunteers,” Denton explains as a volunteer picks up trash nearby, “and have them come out and help us clean up the river for four hours a day.” He then gives them a $50 gift card for them to use for food, clothing, or other essentials. At the end of each week, Denton takes the group out to eat at a local restaurant giving them a sense of what life is like outside of the homelessness bubble.


The River Stewards program is funded through a grant from the Truckee River Fund, which is financed through water service fees.

The River Stewards program is funded through a grant from the Truckee River Fund, which is financed through water service fees.


A Grant Funded Program to Lead by Example


Denton says he wants to also help shift the culture around trash the homeless have, by regularly handing out trash bags and encouraging people to place them near a road when full. He has a donated golf cart he uses to collect bags of trash. “It is no different than bringing the trash bin to the curb on trash day,” he said.

Leading by example, his morning workers “are mirroring the behavior that we want, that any community would want.”

We reach the site to be cleaned and the volunteers immediately spread out and start picking up trash. There are two tents that are still occupied, one by a lady in her fifties who offers to help and takes a bag from Denton.

“Meet them where they’re at,” he says, “and then challenge them.”

Denton understands an obstacle he faces is understanding current dynamics which for people without stable shelter can change from day to day, even hour to hour. He understands homeless people can be service resistant, meaning that they may not want any outside help or have no trust remaining for any outsider.

“This group shows up, they understand the impact they have,” Denton says as he picks up a plastic bottle and places it into a large trash bag.

“This program carries so much value. They’re living on the river in a tent, but they have purpose. That’s what is important,” Denton said.

“This program carries so much value. They’re living on the river in a tent, but they have purpose. That’s what is important,” Denton said.


Consistency is the Key


Pulling from his own experiences in rehab, he knows that in order to really change an individual you have to be consistent. “That's paramount in anybody changing their habits,” he says, “when I was a drug addict the reason I kept relapsing was because heroin always showed up for me, heroin is very, very consistent. Alcohol does exactly what it's supposed to do.” Utilizing this idea of consistency, Denton has his regular workers show up every day and has already seen improvements.

Denton also views the River Stewards as a stigma reduction program. When the public sees the homeless cleaning up the river, the dialogue changes, he says, and Denton wants them to be seen not as a liability, but rather as potential assets for the community. When this dialogue changes, and the stigma is reduced, Denton believes we will be moving in the right direction.


He’s also trying to find housing for some of his regulars in a low-income housing complex in Sparks. That would be a dream for Byron.

“You want to be established again, just like, you know, in days past where you had a nice car,” he said. “What I think that really caused a lot of his homelessness is high rent. The rates are so high, it's doubled, you know, people with fixed incomes only get 700 bucks, you know, and how can I survive? And we just have to learn as a group of people, you know, just to live a little bit more respectfully clean, fully, you know, to get everything accomplished,” he said of his goals, keeping his faith in God and in his country.

Reporting by Richie Bednarski and Scott King for Our Town Reno

Thursday 11.05.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Matt, Comparing Different Shelters and Fearing Being Homeless Over Winter

Matt (1).JPG

“[I want people to know] that not all homeless people are bad.”

Matt, who said he recently had an accident and is now in a wheelchair, unable to work right now.

A Divorce and an Accident

Matt has been living in Reno for several years now, having come over from California after going through a divorce. His father lived in Reno and encouraged him to get a fresh start in the Biggest Little City.

“I came from California because I had a divorce and it didn't do me well,” Matt said. “My dad lives out here and he told me to come up to Reno. I was working in retail for awhile and had an accident, so right now I'm not able to work. I'm looking forward to going back to work and I'm feeling better every day. Once I get back to work and back on my feet, I want to give back to them.”

Those that he wants to help, he says, are those who have found themselves in the situation he is currently in. Currently confined to a wheelchair due to his recent accident, Matt has recently been out of work. Throughout the summer, he was part of the homeless population that stayed in the Reno Events Center as the COVID-19 pandemic overtook the nation.

“The Reno Event Center was an interesting experience,” Matt said. One of the biggest concerns he had with his time at the Reno Events Center, he says, was the lack of concern or consideration workers there had for people like him just trying to get …

“The Reno Event Center was an interesting experience,” Matt said. One of the biggest concerns he had with his time at the Reno Events Center, he says, was the lack of concern or consideration workers there had for people like him just trying to get some sleep.

From the Reno Events Center Back to the Record Street Shelter

Matt had many complaints about staying at the Reno Events Center when the Record Street shelter was limited due to COVID-19. He alleges some of his stuff got stolen and that staff would watch movies on their phones.

“The people that are watching us sit there and just talk like, ‘Oh, it's daytime, no problem. No one's sleeping around,’ instead of trying to keep it quiet,” Matt said. “But we're there to sleep and get some rest so that we're not out here on the streets sleeping. So there's a lot of problems [like that] with the system that they could be fixing.”

Matt is grateful that after the Events Center closed as a shelter, he wasn’t placed at the temporary big tents shelter farther down East Fourth Street. Instead, he’s been staying at the VOA shelter on Record Street.

“I'm disabled right now,” Matt said. “They let the disabled people stay [at the Record Street shelter] instead of walking two miles to the big tent down Fourth Street. [The Big Tents shelter] is about two miles away and it'd be too much of a journey [for me].”

Having been homeless for almost a year now, Matt has already noticed a difference in how certain agencies treat the population they’re serving.

“The VOA could be more polite and more helpful,” Matt said of staying at the Record Street shelter. “Catholic Charities is the only one that helps out. They helped sign me up for food stamps, which was very helpful. It gives me a little bit of money…

“The VOA could be more polite and more helpful,” Matt said of staying at the Record Street shelter. “Catholic Charities is the only one that helps out. They helped sign me up for food stamps, which was very helpful. It gives me a little bit of money to get something from the store, but I can't really go shopping because I can't cook anywhere, so that's been difficult.”

Grateful for Catholic Charities but Not for Early Mornings in the Cold

Matt genuinely appreciates the support he’s received from St. Vincent’s and Catholic Charities, saying they are doing the best they can to support people without housing.

“St. Vincent's gives us lunch and Catholic Charities gives us clothes,” Matt said. “They also have food boxes, which a lot of us can't take because you have to cook the food, so it's kind of hard. We don't have any place to cook food, so there's some things we can’t take from there. But other than that, they try to help us as much as they can.”

He also recognizes other area groups that have come out to support him in his time of need.

“There's a couple churches and good people come around to hand out sandwiches and feed us, which helps out because meals are few and far between,” Matt said. “Breakfast is like a stale donut and yogurt in the morning, so that's not much nutrients to get you through [the day].”

One particular challenge of the Record Street shelter, particularly as it gets colder in the mornings, is the fact that they force people out of the shelter at 6:00 a.m. and won’t allow them to come back until 9:00 at night.

“I was here last winter and at 6:00 a.m., they're kicking us out when it’s like 17 degrees outside. So we have to sit out until 9:00 p.m. at night. So it's very difficult and rough,” he said.

Oftentimes, Matt has to spend his day at what the homeless community commonly refers to as “The Pit,” a sitting area just outside the shelter.

“[During the day I go to what] we call ‘The Pit,’ but they call it ‘The Veranda,’” Matt said. “It's just a place to sit and we go out there and sit and freeze. St. Vincent’s had a warming center last winter where we were able to go in and get coffee for a couple of hours.”

When told of the ongoing discussions at Reno City Council about a proposal for a new shelter at the Governor’s Bowl Park, Matt believes that would be a good idea to see implemented.

“All right, I think it's a good idea because we could use a new shelter that's more updated than the shelter we have,” Matt said. “[The current shelter] is sort of run-down and they don't really keep it up. So a new shelter would be a blessing,” he …

“All right, I think it's a good idea because we could use a new shelter that's more updated than the shelter we have,” Matt said. “[The current shelter] is sort of run-down and they don't really keep it up. So a new shelter would be a blessing,” he said of possible plans to convert the baseball field.

Fearful of Winter but Not of COVID-19

In the present moment, Matt is primarily more concerned about the approaching winter than he is about anything else, including his potential exposure to COVID-19 on the streets.

“I'm not worried about COVID, if I get sick, I get sick,” Matt said. “I mean, I live on the streets. I have a pretty good immune system so I don't let it scare me. I just got to live life day-by-day and see what happens. If I happen to get sick, it’s just my time. But with COVID going on, it has made everything a lot more difficult.”

Having survived one winter without shelter already, he’s not looking forward to having to go through it again. So Matt is taking steps now to prepare for the winter, particularly if they’re forced outside for most of the day like they were last year.

“I'm worried about the cold,” Matt said. “I'll be seeing Catholic Charities to see if I can get some more clothes and just bundle up. But my main concern is when they throw us out in the morning when it's that cold outside, I'm worried then.”

Until then, Matt is biding his time until he’s healthy enough again to work. Once he’s back to work and can find stable housing, he hopes to give back and help those experiencing homelessness like he is now.

“[I plan to give back] by coming down here and donating time and food,” Matt said. “I know people need it. I hope to take collections up and get some clothes down here for people and just give back that way with whatever I can. Any little bit can help.”

His desire to give back and support the homeless community, once he finds stable shelter for himself, stems from his experience with others afflicted by the affordable housing crisis. In his experience, most people experiencing homelessness are working hard to get their life back on track. But because of the few homeless people that act out and act poorly, he believes that label is being placed on everyone living on the streets and in the shelters.

“[I want people to know] that not all homeless people are bad,” Matt said. “There are some bad people out there, just don't take it out on the rest of us because it's the same people that act up and make us look bad. Yet, they treat us all like we're that person and I want people to see us as people, not just homeless people that are out here to leach.”

But in order for the issue of rampant homelessness and lack of affordable housing to really improve, Matt acknowledges that something needs to be done about the growing disparity between housing and incomes.

“ A lot of us are trying to get on our feet and I know people that get Social Security but they still can't even afford a place around here,” Matt said. “So that's what I really hope for is that they can make affordable housing because although the pay-rate wage around here is way different in California, it's just as expensive to live in Reno as California. So I really wish something [would be done] about that problem.”

Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 10.27.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Diana, Homeless since Childhood, Leading a Simple Life

Diana, 46, spends her day completing a number of tasks like collecting wood for her small, well-maintained campfire and panhandling for money. She is “very grateful every single day for that, for the community that helps me.” A former military wife …

Diana, 46, spends her day completing a number of tasks like collecting wood for her small, well-maintained campfire and panhandling for money. She is “very grateful every single day for that, for the community that helps me.” A former military wife with one son, 20, and a former employee in shelters herself, says “she’s been on both sides of the spectrum,” and doesn’t mind living outside.

A Routine Keeps Her Busy and Sane

As the morning rush hour rumbles overhead, Diana listens to the radio as she prepares a cup of hot chocolate over a small campfire. She says she has been homeless for over 30 years. “You know, at this point in time in my life, especially with the way everything is in the world, it's just, I have a routine, it's easier,” she said.

Diana has been in Reno for a little over ten years. She enjoys the city but says the people make it hard to live here, saying that “being homeless, people are very judgmental.” A routine keeps her busy and her mind occupied.

Being hypoglycemic, Diana must eat every few hours and spends this money on food, batteries for her radio, trash bags, and other odds and ends. “I just wish sometimes there is a way I could show them what I get,” Diana said of people who give when she pandhandles. She pointed out that when she is panhandling, or “flying a sign” she tries to keep what she has purchased nearby so people can see she isn’t buying alcohol or drugs. 

Diana enjoys being outside and finds comfort in knowing our ancestors existed for millennia living outdoors. “I just want to look at people and go, whoa, where do you think your ancestors used to live? You know, I mean, we didn't have houses and condominiums and all that forever, you know?”

She finds comfort in the rhythm of gathering supplies and keeping an organized camp. Her possessions were all bundled nicely in a few plastic totes that tuck away inside a large blue plastic rolling shipping container, the kind you might see holding luggage in the belly of an airplane.

Deanna Camp.JPG

Not Disneyland Though 

“Go home and [be] with your parents and go to school,” Diana wants to tell the younger homeless people she meets. Having been homeless since she was “eleven and a half,” she says, she does not want the younger folks to live the way she does.

Living in Washington, north of Seattle, Diana briefly worked at a Gospel Mission helping the homeless. She finds it strange and somewhat offensive that “richer people in the world are taking camping to a different level where they buy camping stuff and then camp in their backyard. And it kind of feels like they're mocking our situation,” while their camping is glorified, and her survival camping is criminalized.

When asked about the upcoming general election, Diana says she is not a regular voter. Having voted in the past and seeing the results play out, like many Americans, she says she has become disillusioned with the political process.

She does not plan to vote this year, “and I know a lot of people get mad at that.” She believes that politicians do not care about people. “There's no for the people it's money [and] power,” she explained and believes the current president Donald Trump is “a businessman and we're not a business.” She does pay attention to politics by listening to the radio but believes government does nothing to help those most in need, “I don't have a desire to be part of that craziness.”

“I'm sorry for the other flyers that are irresponsible and drunken rude and pee on the highway and do all that other stupid stuff. I'm so sorry I cannot apologize for them enough. But not all of us are like that some of us are honestly just waking u…

“I'm sorry for the other flyers that are irresponsible and drunken rude and pee on the highway and do all that other stupid stuff. I'm so sorry I cannot apologize for them enough. But not all of us are like that some of us are honestly just waking up everyday trying to survive trying to do what we've got to do and just come home,” Diana told Our Town Reno reporter Richie Bednarski. Photo by Scott King.

“We’re Not All Living Garbage”

Diana wants the community to know that not all panhandlers and those without stable shelter are parasites, as some people say to her face or on social media.

“That we're not all what you see by your eyes, we're not all living garbage we're not all you know uneducated, irresponsible lazy people. We’re good for a lot of us have good hearts.”

She is hopeful people can “look past the other people [who] are doing wrongs just like people look past wrongs in a regular community and see the people for who they are and maybe take the time to come talk to us. ”I'm not out there to try and make anybody's life difficult but I do want the community to know that there are those of us out there that are so very appreciative of their help and if it wasn't for them we wouldn't we wouldn't be able to live, so thank you."


Reporting and Photography by Richie Bednarski for Our Town Reno

Thursday 10.22.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

HopeSprings, a New Bridge Housing Project Still Faces Financial Hurdles to Open

These tiny homes on land donated by the city of Reno in 2017 are empty but Northern Nevada Hopes aims to have people living inside by early 2021. When it opens, HopeSprings, located on East Fourth Street, will provide 30 individual housing units and…

These tiny homes on land donated by the city of Reno in 2017 are empty but Northern Nevada Hopes aims to have people living inside by early 2021. When it opens, HopeSprings, located on East Fourth Street, will provide 30 individual housing units and feature a community center with wraparound services to help people in need of transitional housing. Residents will be expected to stay in the four to six month range, but fundraising for the project remains a concern. Photo by Scott King.

Wraparound Services On Site

“We've got 30 tiny homes that are 92 square feet each,” Chris Fegert, Philanthropy Partnerships Manager at Northern Nevada Hopes, said during a recent tour. “Then the big community center is over 3,000 square feet and has all the other services: bathrooms, laundry, showers, kitchen and lockers. There's also offices where individuals can have private meetings with primary health care providers, a behavioral health care specialist, a therapist or access group therapy. These [facilities] were very intentional in how they were designed.”

The tiny homes themselves will have a twin bed, a nightstand and a dresser inside. Each of the units will be equipped with air conditioning and heating, while also featuring donated art work from Nevada Fine Arts. The tiny homes will be complete with a small porch, deck chair and storm door to provide a personal, home-like feel for residents but accessing the community center and other services will be key. 

“Our CEO, Sharon Chamberlain, lived on the streets as well,” Fegert said. “She said that when she was experiencing homelessness, she felt invisible and isolated. So when I say these houses were intentionally created, it’s because we don't want [the residents] to stay in their [tiny] home. We want them to be in the community center and interacting with each other. We'll have all different types of services available while they're here learning new skills,” Fegert added. “Like resume building, for instance. Many residents will be working and saving their money so when they move out, they will potentially have their first month’s rent and a deposit.”

The HopeSprings campus will be a dry and drug-free campus. However unlike most shelters, residents will be able to keep their pets, with a small dog park set to be built on the West side of the property.


Nevada Hopes has been hosting tours for media and local officials as the opening of the tiny homes village draws nearer but has been delayed due to fundraising shortfalls.

Nevada Hopes has been hosting tours for media and local officials as the opening of the tiny homes village draws nearer but has been delayed due to fundraising shortfalls.

Easy Access to Quality Health Care

Aside from job search and resume-building services, cooking classes will also be offered for residents at HopeSprings. The property will have a community garden and fruit trees, and residents will be able to utilize the community center’s kitchen to prepare their own meals. A barbecue and fire pit will also be featured on the property behind the community center’s two roll-up garage doors.

Inside the community center, on-site laundry services will be available as well as lockers for individual residents. Although the property itself will be fenced in and have 24/7 security on-site, the community center and all its amenities will be accessible via a fob key that residents will be given. 

For Northern Nevada Hopes, they believe they are in a unique position to take this more holistic approach in supporting the homeless community in Reno.

“Northern Nevada Hopes is a primary care medical clinic and a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC),” Fegert said. “So on-site at Northern Nevada Hopes on East Fourth Street, we have primary health care, behavioral health, case management, a pharmacy and a lab. So we have all these different resources for an individual who is disenfranchised.”

According to Fegert, 25% of the patients seen at Northern Nevada Hopes are experiencing homelessness. With a bridge housing project like HopeSprings, some of these patients will be able to receive that primary care and other services, all in one location. 

“[Hopesprings] allows them to get all of their needs met on one campus,” Fegert said. “That's important because folks that maybe don't have a vehicle, have a large family, or are working per hour and need to see a primary care doctor, go to the pharmacy or get lab work done might otherwise miss a full day of work to do that. So this allows that person to access both healthcare and also housing.”

In order to stay at HopeSprings, Fegert said prospective residents will have to undergo an intense vetting process to ensure they will be a good fit for the community and its programs. “[Prospective residents] will go through some deep questionnaire…

In order to stay at HopeSprings, Fegert said prospective residents will have to undergo an intense vetting process to ensure they will be a good fit for the community and its programs. “[Prospective residents] will go through some deep questionnaires of what their housing has been in the past,” she said. “What are their addiction issues? What do their family life and relationships look like? We will look at the person as a whole and then we can establish if [HopeSprings] is going to be a good fit for that person.”


Extensive Screening for “Good Fits”

Part of the screening process will include so-called “motivational Interviewing” to determine what a prospective resident’s goals will be for the end of their temporary, transitional four-to-six month stay.

“Not everyone that's living on the streets is indeed motivated and willing to do the work,” Fegert said. “This program here is a 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM program. So they really have to be motivated and have to be emotionally and mentally ready for this.”

With a bridge housing project like this, there will be significant financial benefits for the community and its taxpayers, as well. 

“Homelessness not only affects the homeless individual themselves, but it also is affecting our taxpayers who help fund jails, hospitals, social services and shelters,” Fegert said. “According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, chronically homeless individuals often cycle in and out of our emergency departments, inpatient hospitals, psychiatric centers and detox programs and that results in a high public cost averaging about $35,578 taxpayer dollars each year.”

Consequently, Northern Nevada Hopes estimates that for each person staying at HopeSprings for each four-to-six month period, the taxpayer cost will go down from $35,578 to about $14,226 per person. With the difference being about $21,000 saved in taxpayer costs and if HopeSprings moves 60 people through the property each year, an approximate amount of $1,281,000 in public costs will be saved in the community, according to her calculations. 

A bridge housing project like this will not only save taxpayers’ money, but also lengthen the life expectancy of those experiencing homelessness.

“Research shows that homelessness directly affects health,” Fegert said. “The average life expectancy for someone that's experiencing homelessness is 50 years for a man and 43 years for a woman. That's an average of 27 years lost per person. So not only is this important for saving our taxpayers and saving our community money, but we're giving people their lives and their dignity back.”

Our mission aligns with that of HopeSprings and I see it as a duty, a responsibility and an obligation that we have to help these individuals to get back on their feet,” Eric Schmacker, CEO of Silver Summit Health Plan who recently traveled from Las…

Our mission aligns with that of HopeSprings and I see it as a duty, a responsibility and an obligation that we have to help these individuals to get back on their feet,” Eric Schmacker, CEO of Silver Summit Health Plan who recently traveled from Las Vegas to see HopeSprings in person. “This community provides them with an opportunity where they can recover, have some privacy, recuperate and learn new skills.”


Still in Need of Funding

Although the tiny homes are now complete, the community center and the rest of the property are still undergoing construction, with the goal of HopeSprings being completed and taking in residents by early 2021.

To support that fundraising effort, Silver Summit Health Plan in Las Vegas recently made a $100,000 donation to HopeSprings. With an anonymous donor who pledged to match every donation up to $400,000; Silver Summit’s donation meant getting closer to the final fundraising goal, with $1.6 million out of a needed $2.5 million already reported to have been raised as of last week.

Schmacker attests that at Silver Summit, an FQHC like Northern Nevada Hopes, they understand the influence stable shelter can play in determining an individual’s health.

“FQHCs see a lot of Medicaid members and take care of them from a clinical standpoint,” Schmaker said. “So we know that it's not just about providing immunizations or caring for a wound that an individual has, but that there's also social determinants of health. One of the determinants being housing, so this project hits right at one of those social determinants of health and helps these individuals get back on their feet by providing them that housing.”

When asked about his biggest takeaways after a tour of the property, Schmacker was impressed by the dichotomy of both community and privacy that HopeSprings will offer residents. 

“It has a community area where food will be served, where individuals can congregate and they can create relationships,” Schmacker said. “But it also has space where they can get away and have some privacy as well. It really has a home feeling to it and a community type of feeling to it, and that's what struck me.”

Fegert and Northern Nevada Hopes are excited that HopeSprings can be one piece of the puzzle to address the affordable housing crisis, but acknowledge that much more needs to be done.

“Homelessness is a big problem across the nation,” Fegert said. “We have had two times the increase in homelessness since 2009. We know that one in seven Nevadans live below the federal poverty line and COVID will exacerbate this as well. This is just a start and we need more of these bridge housing projects to help individuals succeed in getting off the streets.”


Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno






Monday 10.19.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Rose, Unable to Hear or to Access Housing after Being Evicted

Rose, 60, says she has been camping with her dog since she became homeless three years ago.

Rose, 60, says she has been camping with her dog since she became homeless three years ago.

Evicted and Now Out on the Streets

Rose’s troubles with stable shelter began after she and her roommate were evicted from the place they were renting several years ago.

“[My roommate] didn't pay his half for the rent, so we both ended up getting evicted,” Rose said. “Now that there’s an eviction on my record, a lot of people don't want to rent to me.”

Since then Rose, who is hard of hearing, has barely been getting by on the social security and food stamps she receives. “But Social Security can’t afford me to get a place to live in by myself,” Rose said. “I do get food stamps, $17 a month.”

She’s been looking for affordable housing that fits her budget, but even when she might find something, her search recently got more difficult, she says, after her cell phone was stolen.

“People just steal telephones around here and it’s terrible,” Rose said. “You go buy one for $128 bucks and a week later you don't have your phone anymore,” Rose told Our Town Reno.  Photo by Richie Bednarski.

“People just steal telephones around here and it’s terrible,” Rose said. “You go buy one for $128 bucks and a week later you don't have your phone anymore,” Rose told Our Town Reno. Photo by Richie Bednarski.

Looking for a New Cell Phone

Rose says she’s tried to apply for a so-called government Obama Phone, but has been told she makes too much to qualify for one. Having a phone is crucial for her to search for affordable housing and other resources, particularly because she is hard of hearing and relies on the messaging that cell phones provide.

“When I keep getting my telephone stolen from me, they can't get a hold of me or text me and stuff,” Rose said. “So it’s like I’m stuck here.”

Rose doesn’t mind being hard of hearing, though. In fact, she enjoys it as a means of keeping to herself.

“I don't have to hear the bullshit, but if I want to know what's going on I'll find out,” Rose said. “I wore hearing-aids back when I was three years old but by the time I was 19, I gave up because the hearing aids would make a bunch of noise and I wasn’t even hearing what people were saying.”

So she says she mostly enjoys spending her day with her dog, a chihuahua-mix who she takes to a nearby park from time to time. 

“I’ve had him for two and a half years, since he was a puppy,” Rose said. “My brother bought him for $150 and he became my dog. I want to have him certified as a therapy-hearing dog. He'll bark at you, but he hasn’t bitten anybody.”

When it gets cold at night, Rose has her dog stay with her brother to stay warm at night. So when she doesn’t have her dog with her, Rose enjoys watching her hometown Chicago Bears play at the Diamonds Casino. 

“I’m originally from Chicago, Illinois, so I’m a White Sox and a Bears fan,” Rose said. “Oh, that Bears game last week, I couldn't believe they lost. I sit and watch the games over there at Diamonds and they bring me hot chocolate or coffee.”

“I’m originally from Chicago, Illinois, so I’m a White Sox and a Bears fan,” Rose said. “Oh, that Bears game last week, I couldn't believe they lost. I sit and watch the games over there at Diamonds and they bring me hot chocolate or coffee.”

A Survivor Finding Simple Pleasures


For Rose, it’s times watching sports at a casino with a warm drink in hand that she’s just grateful to be alive. Back in 1993, she says she was involved in a car accident that nearly took her life, leaving her with head trauma and a collapsed lung. 

“In 1993, I was run over and dragged by a pick-up truck,” Rose said. “I didn't get anything [financially] out of it, but the hospital bill was paid. I just thank God every day to still be here.”

When asked about the upcoming election, Rose confirmed she was a registered voter but wasn’t interested in discussing the topic.

“I’m a registered voter and a Democrat, I’m not Republican,” Rose said. “But that's not a good thing to talk to people about: religion or politics.”

She just wants to be left alone, she says, to enjoy her own company, which is why she avoids staying at the local shelter.

“I'd rather be right here, just me and my dog,” Rose said. “The shelter's just not a nice place to stay, I’m sorry. I’ve been there before and things get stolen and some people aren’t fit to be with other people, so I’ll be alright right here.” 

For Rose it’s nothing personal, it’s just who she is. 

“I really don't want anybody to know about [my experience], but that's me personally,” Rose said. “It's better to be left alone. You don't speak to them, they don’t speak back.”

Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Friday 10.16.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Lily Baran, Helping Organize a People's Summit for more People Power

Lily Baran recently teamed up with Reno native Erika Minaberry to organize a “People’s Summit” at Miguel Ribera Park with several dozen organizations taking part to better collaborate, motivate each other and share ideas. “We are feeling strong in t…

Lily Baran recently teamed up with Reno native Erika Minaberry to organize a “People’s Summit” at Miguel Ribera Park with several dozen organizations taking part to better collaborate, motivate each other and share ideas. “We are feeling strong in the fact that we have built a community, and...we can help each other because you know, no matter who is the president, we should all know what’s going on in our community,” Baran said.

Building Some Community Power Before the Unpredictable Election

Lily Baran, a performing arts professional turned activist, describes her and Minaberry’s idea behind creating the recent leftist fair in a Reno park as a way to “get all these organizations to try to help social justice things and community things. And we just thought that this would be a good way for all of us to actually talk to each other and build some community power before the election to not feel hopeless and helpless after the election.”

Baran says she wanted to help non-profits and other groups coordinate with each other and form a collaborative environment where a free market of ideas would flow.

“It was like ‘hello.’ We’re creating this space. If you would like to join: here’s a form to fill out and B.Y.O. (bring your own) table, and we will be there. It’s important because that’s the future we want to move to.”

Working in an open environment, the organizations and participants developed ideas of “how to help each other, how to form mutual aid and coalitions to make sure that we can continue to function because we are the only ones who care about us.” 

For Baran, the key to Reno forming a more robust community is to embrace our differences and understand that the community can have a more significant impact than those in public office. “I’m really proud of Reno. I’m really proud of like, seeing al…

For Baran, the key to Reno forming a more robust community is to embrace our differences and understand that the community can have a more significant impact than those in public office. “I’m really proud of Reno. I’m really proud of like, seeing all these different people, like Reno Burrito Project … all these people are really coming out and showing up and supporting each other. And it feels as if, even though our city officials and other governing bodies aren’t really doing everything they could, the community is finding its power, and that is much better.”

Neighborhood Power


The creation of A People’s Summit was an idea that had inhabited the minds of Baran and Minaberry’s for a while. “It got to a point where there were so many non-profits that I was like, ‘We have to figure this out. Like we have to get to know everybody and everybody has to know who’s here,’” Baran said.

Barab believes Reno has potential and that a “better Reno is possible.” Building a healthy support system of like-minded groups, she says, is a significant step. Assembling neighborhood power by maximizing efforts in delivering education, mutual aid, and a welcoming environment is crucial, she adds.

As Reno continues to change and rebrand, Baran stresses that the community needs to stick together more than ever.

“I am hoping that right now, more of us are actually like putting truth to power and putting action into motion for office because Reno is unlike other cities I’ve lived here long enough to know that it is very possible to change. It is very, very possible that we can take our government and our city and make it work for people.”

As more and more tables popped up and curious Reno residents who had heard of the event through social media showed up, distributing materials and discussing ways to curb the steep ascent of housing costs, how to help the unsheltered, how to push for police change, and how to make Reno greener, the initial goal of the informal outdoor summit had been met.

Reporting by Gracie Gordon for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 10.14.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Nightingale, Flocking to Support Others for Radical Change

“Love seems pretty radical to me,” Nightingale said of joining PERCh several months ago, and taking part in solidarity crosswalks and other actions. The group plans to broaden its efforts and help those without stable shelter with their laundry.

“Love seems pretty radical to me,” Nightingale said of joining PERCh several months ago, and taking part in solidarity crosswalks and other actions. The group plans to broaden its efforts and help those without stable shelter with their laundry.

A Selfless Group

The idea of “people enacting radical change” has been around years. Now in Reno, it’s actually a formal group of community members whose primary goal is to organize protests and be “here for support,” says Nightingale, a core member of the group known as PERCh, an acronym for People Enacting Radical Change. 

On a recent Friday evening, members of PERCh were at the intersection of Plumb Lane and Harvard Way. They consider themselves a democratically run group that organizes protesters. They lead their own protests, but unlike most other groups who just do their own thing, PERCh will go out of their way to help other groups in northern Nevada.

“We hear about other protests, we'll give them our numbers, you know, as long as it falls under our umbrella of things that we support as a group,” Nightingale says as a few more protesters arrived on the scene.

Also unique to their methodology, PERCh utilizes social media to spread information about protests but doesn't promote themselves through social media.

Nightingale took out a gun at the protest, but of the plastic kind to disperse bubbles of joy.  “Sometimes we’ve gotten a lot of honks and support and in other places [it] generally tends to be kind of like a 50-50 kind of thing,” she said of public…

Nightingale took out a gun at the protest, but of the plastic kind to disperse bubbles of joy. “Sometimes we’ve gotten a lot of honks and support and in other places [it] generally tends to be kind of like a 50-50 kind of thing,” she said of public reception of the protests.

Solidarity Crosswalking

Since April, PERCh has also been doing “solidarity crosswalks,” explains Nightingale. “Right now we’re doing it in solidarity with Black Lives Matter.” These mini-protests now happen once a week at different intersections throughout Reno and Sparks, and used to happen more often.

“It’s only for two hours and we try to have it finished before the sun goes down,” Nightingale said of the current iteration. Cars go by and mostly honk in protest, but there have been many cases of intimidation, animosity and counter-protests as well.

Nightingale talked about members being stalked, having a gun pointed at them, and counter-protesters showing up in their faces, yelling at them drunk, in one of their early protests in South Reno. These incidents were all defused but it did cause PERCh to slow down and alter their tactics for the safety of their members. They have now decided to be at a new location for every protest. 

But change doesn’t happen when people give in to pressure. “It’s trying to make that push to inspire compassion for our community,” explains Nightingale. She hopes to keep the pressure and protests up in light of the animosity in order to enact radical change. 

Photo provided by PerCh of other members at a downtown Reno protest.

Photo provided by PerCh of other members at a downtown Reno protest.

Helping Neighbors in Need

PERCh members say they are in the process of also establishing a community outreach program. While the idea is still in early phase, Nightingale says they want to try to “feed our street family” and have “a vision of possibly doing their laundry for them.”

These little steps go a long way at helping our neighbors in need. They are hoping to establish a budget and “be as transparent as possible so that people do donate to us. They can feel comfortable with that.” But Nightingale explains they are not quite ready for donations yet.

Nightingale believes in the benefits of the solidarity sidewalk protests and the high visibility is important for spreading their message. The idea of PERCh is based around “the image of birds [that] are flocking to support.”

This is evidenced through their organization of community clean-ups, supporting other protests, such as the Power and Liberation Movement, who have been holding regular protests in Carson City. Nightingale is fired up about building the PERCh organization and looks forward to the coming months.

“It’s all around very positive,” Nightingale concluded before rejoining others in their celebration of creating rush hour traffic public awareness for change.

Reporting and Photography by Richie Bednarski for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 10.13.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Indigenous People's Day in Reno: ‘The truth is that, for a long time, we’ve been dying.’

One theme to mark Indigenous Day was land reclamation and environmentalism. “Right now, the way that the land is being handled, it’s not just being taken away, it’s being taken away and dismantled,” Everett George, one of the speakers said. Sidewalk…

One theme to mark Indigenous Day was land reclamation and environmentalism. “Right now, the way that the land is being handled, it’s not just being taken away, it’s being taken away and dismantled,” Everett George, one of the speakers said. Sidewalk chalk artists at the Believe plaza in downtown Reno hoped to address both those issues, and more, with their drawings. Photo by Sydney Oliver.

First, A Day of Rage Against Colonialism

The soft but persistent sound of sidewalk chalk scratching against concrete filled Downtown Reno’s plaza yesterday. It intertwined itself with the hum of outdoor voices, chants and rap music played over a loudspeaker, a child’s scooter clattering as it struck cracks along the sidewalk, revving motorcycle engines, and the Truckee River roaring like white noise in the background.

Native Americans and allies gathered Sunday afternoon to color the concrete in support of Indigenous Peoples Day of Rage Against Colonialism. The agenda for the full-day event preceding Indigenous People’s Day included a morning river cleanup, the artistic reclamation of the plaza, and a march on UNR’s Mackay statue later in the afternoon.

“[Rage] may sound like a heavy word, or an intense word,” Avory Wyatt, one of the event planners said. “But this is how we do it, with cleanups, art murals.”

This community-building approach garnered support from a wide array of people. Alongside Native American participants, the event was well-attended by the LGBTQ+ community, AntiFa, local artists, and white allies.

“It’s a way for me to connect my ancestry to today, and show my resistance to colonization,” said Ruby Barrientos, a Salvadoran artist who helped fill the Downtown Reno plaza with sidewalk chalk drawings. “The people that inhabited the Great Basin p…

“It’s a way for me to connect my ancestry to today, and show my resistance to colonization,” said Ruby Barrientos, a Salvadoran artist who helped fill the Downtown Reno plaza with sidewalk chalk drawings. “The people that inhabited the Great Basin prior to the European invasion were the Numa or Numu (Northern Paiute), the Washeshu (Washoe), the Newe (Shoshone), and the Nuwuvi (Southern Paiute),” the Reno Sparks Indian Colony says. Indigenous People’s Day on October 12th to honor Native American peoples was officially acknowledged as a holiday by Reno last year. Photo by Sydney Oliver.

Deep Sobriety

While the day was filled with welcoming eye-crinkles that hinted at smiles shared from underneath masks, it was also touched by deep sobriety, especially during the march on the statue of John Mackay, at the north end of the University of Nevada Quad in front of the Mackay School of Mines.

“The truth is that, for a long time, we’ve been dying. We’ve been dying, and we’re just trying to live, and just trying to thrive now,” Dwight George, one of the event planners, said during a public speech. 

Someone had just turned off the music coming from a portable sound system—audience members listened solemnly, some snapping their fingers or Mhm-ing as Dwight spoke. The relative silence broke for applause as he said, “If anything, we’ve always been here, and we will always be here.”

His twin brother, Everett George, who works at a youth shelter that takes in native children, also spoke publicly. He mentioned how isolated life can be on a reservation. “When I talk to [the kids] about going to a different city, they treat it like I went to Paris,” he said.

“In order to ‘prosper’ in America—you can’t really do that on a reservation,” Everett said. “We have each other, and that is it. We don’t have any other land to return to, we don’t have any other place to go back. This is it. This is it right here.”

Many event attendees donned unique t-shirts. Beside the slogan featured above (“The wrong Amazon is burning. The wrong ICE is melting.”), another event attendee’s shirt read “Merciless Indian Savages,” a direct quote from the Declaration of Independ…

Many event attendees donned unique t-shirts. Beside the slogan featured above (“The wrong Amazon is burning. The wrong ICE is melting.”), another event attendee’s shirt read “Merciless Indian Savages,” a direct quote from the Declaration of Independence. Photo by Sydney Oliver.

The Significance of Marching on Mackay Statue

One line Everett repeated several times: “It’s very weird being Native American.”

Avory also spoke, touching on the upward battle against history that Native Americans face. He gestured to his pocket, and said that, in his wallet, he has a card documenting his native blood. 

“If we’re not more than one fourth native, we’re not native in United State’s terms,” he said. “They track the blood of horses, they track the blood of dogs, but what they don’t tell you, is that they track the blood of natives.”

He also mentioned the significance of marching on the Mackay statue. In the 1800s, miners arrived in Nevada. They profited off of the land, and killed local natives to do so.

Throughout the day, attendees passed around a flyer carrying a QR code for a petition to take down the Mackay.

“The reality is, we drink that water. We literally drink that water,” Orlando OH (above) said while tracing out the raised arm in his sidewalk chalk mural. He was glad to help with the river cleanup earlier in the day, but dismayed at the amount of …

“The reality is, we drink that water. We literally drink that water,” Orlando OH (above) said while tracing out the raised arm in his sidewalk chalk mural. He was glad to help with the river cleanup earlier in the day, but dismayed at the amount of trash event attendees fished from the Truckee. Photo by Sydney Oliver

Reporting by Faith Evans with Photography by Sydney Oliver for Our Town Reno

Monday 10.12.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Annemarie Grant, Turned Activist Against Police Abuse In Her Brother's Name

Annemarie Grant on the left with the light blue mask and wearing sandals was part of September’s protest to support families of those killed by local police. October 8, 2020, marks five years since her brother Thomas Purdy died after being hog tied …

Annemarie Grant on the left with the light blue mask and wearing sandals was part of September’s protest to support families of those killed by local police. October 8, 2020, marks five years since her brother Thomas Purdy died after being hog tied in custody of the Washoe County Jail when he was 38. Holding the banner with her are her brother, Daniel Purdy, and her son, Bryan Grant.

Large Settlements but No Justice

Like on her Facebook Page, Annemarie Grant keeps the focus on her late brother Thomas Purdy, who died October 8th, 2015, after being hog tied while in custody of the Washoe County Jail.  “I fight daily for his justice!” she writes.

“I just share his story as much as I can across social media and to the general public. If I see somebody, you know, I tell them what happened. Everybody I meet, I tell them what happened with my brother ,” she told us in a recent phone interview as she took a break from her work in her home outside Boston.

Following his arrest for alleged trespassing at the Peppermill casino five years ago, Purdy kept telling Sherriff’s deputies at the Washoe County Jail he couldn’t breathe as he tried to fight off restraints, with his hands tied against his back and attached with straps to his ankles. He asked a jail intake nurse to send him to the hospital, telling her: “I can’t breathe, ma’am.” 

An investigation by Sparks PD found no crime involved, the medical examiner ruled Purdy’s death a homicide by "complications of excited delirium," and when contacted the sheriff’s office had no comment on whether any deputies involved faced disciplinary action.  

Purdy’s father got a $25,000 settlement from the city of Reno, a $50,000 settlement from the Peppermill and received a $100,000 settlement from Washoe County over wrongful death lawsuits.

“Filing a lawsuit is the only type of justice that you've got open,” Grant said. 

Grant is grateful for Reno Cop Watch organizing yearly events to support families of those killed by local law enforcement.“They were the first to reach out to me,” she told us. “I feel like they get some hate from police supporters, but they are ab…

Grant is grateful for Reno Cop Watch organizing yearly events to support families of those killed by local law enforcement.

“They were the first to reach out to me,” she told us. “I feel like they get some hate from police supporters, but they are about transparency and accountability, nothing else. Also obviously they promote filming the police, which everybody should be doing. It is a way to protect other people. We all know how hard it is to get the body cam footage released. I view them as a vital resource for the community to be aware of what's going on. “

Suddenly More Attention

Purdy’s death started getting more attention after other inmates died while in custody, and local media started investigations. 

Two months before Purdy’s killing, it was revealed, Niko Smith died in similar circumstances at the Washoe County Jail, which later resulted in a $75,000 settlement. In August 2016, Justin Thompson died after he struggled with deputies at the jail, and a hood was put over his head.  His family got $500,000 settlement and a gruesome video was released.  

“Knowing what my family experienced from law enforcement, when my brother was killed, I feel it's important to speak out and let people know not to get swept under the rug, because people forget,” Grant said of why she’s taken a leading role in the yearly protest to support the families of those killed by local police, as she did this past September.

“I don't want anybody ever to forget what happened to my brother and the two other men up at the jail, as well as the families who have lost people in officer involved shootings. They experienced the same exact type of lack of accountability and transparency. When their loved one is killed, you get a wall of silence from the police.”

She says local media coverage or official investigations which find no criminal wrongdoing from law enforcement add to the hurt. “They criminalize the victim.  I believe it is to sway the court of public opinion.” She says sometimes support from families in similar situations is the only support a family member gets.

“There’s a lot of negative stigma that comes along with being a family member of somebody who was killed by police. So I feel like we need to bounce off of each other and use the strengths of each other because it's not easy to get up and for us to share your loved one's story. Because of the stigma that comes along with it, and because things need to change, I don't want to see more people dying. Someone has to be loud. Someone has to keep speaking out or it will just fade away and get swept under the rug because people forget and I can't let them forget what's happening.”


A screengrab of an image search for Thomas Purdy and Reno.

A screengrab of an image search for Thomas Purdy and Reno.


The Need for Change

In our interview, Grant repeatedly refered to the 1989 Graham v. Connor Supreme Court decision which  established that police actions must be judged by what a so-called ”reasonable” officer might do under similar circumstances. This according to legal analysts gives police wide and ongoing latitude for their actions, whatever they may be, even deadly ones without seemingly any need.  Grant would like to see that decision overturned, or else she says police “will continue to legally be able to get away with killing people.”

Even more attention has been brought to police conduct in the wake of George Floyd’s killing which sparked the current cycle of global protests.

“I think it's long overdue,” Grant said of this heightened interest.  “It’s given families some hope that there are people who are now aware and they don't want this stuff to continue. They see the budgets that's at the police. I believe it's 39% of the 2021 budget is going to Reno police department [according to documents released by Reno Cop Watch]. It gives me hope that with enough backing and pressure on elected officials and the police department and the Sheriff's office, that things can change.”

Where does she get her strength we asked her?

“My strength comes from the families,” she said of the positive power social media and other activists can have in establishing new connections. “I wasn't connected with other families, until about a year and a half, maybe two years after my brother was killed.  I get my strength from them. And, the way that I remember my brother is by spreading the names of other people every day on my Facebook, sharing the names of everybody that was killed during interactions in the United States, at least on that particular day,” she said. 

What about all the negative comments which are seen on social media targeted at those who criticize police?

“I think it's easy to judge from an imaginary pedestal where you believe that you are safe and only criminals are killed by police, but that isn't the reality of it,” she said. “I realized that ignorance is bliss sometimes, and it's easier thinking, ‘these days, things, bad things only happen to bad people. ‘ But that's not the truth.” 

Reporting by Our Town Reno in Fall 2020

Wednesday 10.07.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Zach Cannady, Growing Healthy Food for Our Communities, Sheltered and Unsheltered

Zach Cannady poses in his greenhouse full of produce for the Riverside Farmers Market which is scheduled to begin October 10th at the McKinley Arts Center.

Zach Cannady poses in his greenhouse full of produce for the Riverside Farmers Market which is scheduled to begin October 10th at the McKinley Arts Center.

Growing In Line With Food not Bombs

Zach Cannady is the driving force behind Prema Farm, overseeing a small organic farm in Long Valley just twenty minutes north of Reno.

Along with four employees, he cultivates just over an acre of farmland along with three greenhouses. He estimates his team produce senough food to feed 600 to 800 families in the summer. “I hope to be a hub for inspiration,” Cannady said on a recent Fall day, inside one of his 3,000 square feet greenhouses filled with several hundred seedlings, almost ready to go into the ground for the winter growing season. 

As a pillar of the community, Cannady has been donating food to a local chapter of Food Not Bombs since early April. Food Not Bombs is a group of community members using direct action to build community networks and civilian solidarity through the preparation and donation of nutritious food.

Cannady feels the mission of Food Not Bombs aligns with the driving philosophy of Prema Farms.

“I think that working with them as people and just seeing them in action does a wonderful amount of good. It's really about getting food directly to people that need it and that's why we choose to work with them,” Cannady said. Connecting local food to people in poverty has the potential to make a huge impact. Prema Farm, knowing this, began taking donations online to improve the diversity and amount of donations. 

In the beginning Cannady donated extra seedlings which went to people in need. Soon it became boxes of freshly grown produce. Cannady realized that not everyone has a taste for kale or garlic and began to look for ways to bring in other food.

Through the donated funds, Prema Farm is now able to “purchase certified organic, small farm vegetables through a produce retailer,” he explained. Things like avocados, peaches, and plums, which help boost the nutrition of the food prepared by Food Not Bombs. These wholesome foods help get people facing poverty vital nutrients and support local farms at the same time.

“It really is a perfect scenario and a win-win,” he said.

Prema Farm is a regenerative organic farm growing food year round located just north of Reno.

Prema Farm is a regenerative organic farm growing food year round located just north of Reno.

The Importance of Healthy Food

“You see a total dysfunction mentally and physically and emotionally …” Cannady talks about how chemicals used in food production affects our bodies. He acknowledges that this food is the “easiest to get to homeless people [along with] the by-products of large chemical agriculture.” He sees his work as a way to get organic food to those most in need and the "desire for local food and local produce” as a motivator to continue donating to Food Not Bombs. 

Cannady wants to do more but knows it is not easy. He sees his farm as an educational farm. He hopes to teach other farmers how to grow food in the high desert and in turn increase the amount of local food available here in Reno.

“I hope that in the next year I could relinquish some of my selfishness and just continue to see things in a bigger picture and do things that would be the best for our community,” says Cannady.

He plans to continue the relationship with Food Not Bombs and continue donating food from the farm. Most of all Cannady wants Prema Farm to “give back as much as we can.”

For paying customers, the produce he grows will be sold starting October 9th on Saturdays from nine to noon at 925 Riverside Drive in downtown Reno.

Reporting and Photography by Richard Bednarski for Our Town Reno

Monday 10.05.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Linda, On Avoiding Shelters and Trying to Leave Reno

“I’m homeless; that’s all,” Linda said.

“I’m homeless; that’s all,” Linda said.

After experiencing roughly 13 years of living on Reno’s streets, Linda, 70, says she wants to leave the Biggest Little City. She recently survived a stroke, but says she will not stay in local shelters anymore. “They're not nice. Everybody fights to their teeth. I'm staying out on the streets where I’m safe,” she said.

Although Linda is among the demographic most susceptible to Covid-19, she remains unafraid of the virus. “I'm 100% safe. I have taken the test eight times and negative eight. Now I can leave Nevada safely.”

The unsheltered have been tested more than others in our community.

She says she’s survived fights, thieves, and mistreatment by others, so she is fearless in a way. But she says she does suffer from “loneliness.”

She says people like her gather along railroad tracks, but when the group gets too big, it attracts unwanted attention.

She says she feels she’s one of the “mentally ill,” but has given up on seeking out resources as well. It’s too much of a hassle, she says. She says she burned her hair. Her sentences become incoherent

Where will she go? She doesn’t want to say, but her rolling suitcase seems neatly packed and she’s by the downtown bus station.

Reporting and Photography by Gracie Gordon

Wednesday 09.30.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Campaigning in a Pandemic with Sparks Council Candidate Wendy Stolyarov

With the November elections just weeks away, campaigning is as important now as ever before. A major challenge for this year’s local office candidates, however, is finding creative ways to campaign during the COVID-19 pandemic. One such candidate, W…

With the November elections just weeks away, campaigning is as important now as ever before. A major challenge for this year’s local office candidates, however, is finding creative ways to campaign during the COVID-19 pandemic. One such candidate, Wendy Stolyarov, who is running for the Ward One seat on Sparks City Council, has been conducting her own contact free campaign neighborhood “lit drops.”

Hitting the Ground Running Before COVID-19

Stolyarov’s first foray into city politics was in 2018, when her name was listed on the ballot for Sparks city mayor. At the time, however, her candidacy was primarily a paper-campaign in which she hadn’t done much active campaigning in the community. So when she decided to run for Ward One representative for the Sparks City Council in this election cycle, Stolyarov made sure she hit the ground running.

“Luckily, we started campaigning really early back in September [of 2019] and people had said, ‘Oh, you shouldn't be knocking on doors that early,’ but in hindsight, I'm very glad we did because we had hundreds of fantastic conversations before the pandemic hit,” Stolyarov said. “Of course, now we can't do that kind of face-to-face contact, so we have a fleet of volunteers out here today and we're going to be doing a literature-drop. It’s a no-contact, safe, socially-distanced way of campaigning during the pandemic.”

The primary purpose of her campaign literature-drop is to ensure that voters are informed about her candidacy and where she stands on certain issues, such as striving for housing affordability, good paying jobs and equality. The campaign materials are double-sided: English on one side and Spanish on the other. This way, she says she knows her message won’t get lost on any of the residents in her ward.

“We're just taking campaign literature and putting one piece on every door in the neighborhood and making sure that people know what their options are and are educated about their choices in this election,” Stolyarov said. “If we can't talk to peopl…

“We're just taking campaign literature and putting one piece on every door in the neighborhood and making sure that people know what their options are and are educated about their choices in this election,” Stolyarov said. “If we can't talk to people, at least we can make sure that they're informed. So that's our goal today is just to cover some ground, enjoy this beautiful weather and make sure people know the choices they have,” Stolyarov said as she prepared her socially distanced team of masked and gloved volunteers.

Missing Face to Face Conversations

Although she’s adapted her campaign strategies to the COVID-19 pandemic, she still wishes she could continue having those face-to-face conversations with people in the community.

“The bread and butter of a municipal campaign is normally knocking doors, talking to people, getting one-on-one with them and meeting them where they are,” Stolyarov said. “That helps you understand people by getting into their communities and getting to see them face-to-face and have those really interesting and deep conversations.”

That’s not to say she hasn’t been able to engage. During some of her literature drops, she may encounter residents who are out working in their yard or doing chores outside.

“The most important part of any municipal-elected job is making sure that you really are hearing the community and that you're addressing those concerns. So it has been really nice to still be able to get out here and occasionally have those conversations. It's just not what it would have been in a normal year,” Stolyarov explained.

Another way she has adapted her campaign to the COVID-19 pandemic has been relying on phone-banking and text-banking, which she admits isn’t nearly as effective with low-response rates. But to counteract that, Stolyarov has also been hosting a series of community conversation videos, inviting stakeholders in the community to speak with her about their concerns. 

“We did [a community conversation video] on racial equality, making sure that the Hispanic and LatinX community is heard here and there will be more [videos] coming,” Stolyarov said. “So while we can't necessarily have those face-to-face one-on-one conversations at the doors, now we can at least interview stakeholders in the community. The next one should be coming out in the coming week or so and each one of these is targeted at a specific area or issue that Sparks has struggled with in the past.”

Since the onset of the pandemic in March, Stolyarov has learned a lot about how to engage the community in creative ways that facilitate citizens supporting each other. This includes updating a slick website, which makes clear her priorities.

Since the onset of the pandemic in March, Stolyarov has learned a lot about how to engage the community in creative ways that facilitate citizens supporting each other. This includes updating a slick website, which makes clear her priorities.

Helping People Out During a Campaign

Stolyarov has also turned her campaign into a vehicle for assisting people in need.

“When the pandemic hit, we switched to doing community welfare calls,” Stolyarov said. “Whatever [their needs] might've been, we were then putting them in contact with those resources and encouraged people to engage in mutual aid. Our first mailer for the campaign was a mutual aid card, which you basically put your name on and stuck it on your neighbor's door offering to help. I got a lot of phone calls from people who had received those and said that it was such a sweet idea and were going to reach out and help their neighbor and see what they can do in the community.”

She says this also made her realize the positive influence of community building, rather than pretending to be an individual savior.

“I think too often we idolize political figures and expect them to save us and really as a community, it's up to us to save ourselves,” Stolyarov said. “So any tools I can give our community to help them lift themselves up is a big step in the right direction. So I'm proud of what we've been able to do, even with the pandemic.”

“This is the most important election we've ever had to vote on and when you go to the ballot box or whether you're mailing in your ballot or whatever it is, do it early,” Stolyarov said. “Early voting starts on October 17th. You should be getting yo…

“This is the most important election we've ever had to vote on and when you go to the ballot box or whether you're mailing in your ballot or whatever it is, do it early,” Stolyarov said. “Early voting starts on October 17th. You should be getting your ballot the week of October 2nd, according to the registrar, so as soon as you get it please act on that and let’s get through this.”

Secondary Challenges and Surprise Endorsements

It hasn’t been only the COVID-19 pandemic, however, that has brought challenges for her campaign.
“[Another challenge has been] the wildfire smoke, I don't think any of us expected that and it has made literature dropping a challenge too,” Stolyarov said. “I don't want to subject volunteers to unhealthy air quality. So if the air is bad, I won't make people go out and walk because it's not right.”

Despite the challenges her campaign has had to take on in the past year, there have been some pleasant surprises, too. Stolyarov recently received an endorsement from the Local 1265 Sparks Firefighters Union, even though she’s running against a Sparks City Council incumbent, Donald Abbott.. 

“In terms of positive surprises, I think the endorsement of the [Local 1265 Sparks Firefighters Union] is the biggest one for me,” Stolyarov said. “But it's because the Sparks Fire Department really does feel unheard right now when it comes to their needs and their ability to care for our city and make sure that they have the resources they need to make sure the entire city is protected while our firefighters are able to come home safe.”

Going bilingual is one of Stolyarov’s strategies to have a wider reach in her campaigning.

Going bilingual is one of Stolyarov’s strategies to have a wider reach in her campaigning.

Issue and Equality Oriented

Moving forward, Stolyarov says her campaign will continue coming up with creative ways to engage with the community. One of the biggest issues she’s focusing on is housing affordability, particularly with the wave of evictions she says is imminent due to the prolonged effects of the pandemic.

“Especially with the pandemic, [affordable housing] is more imperative now than ever before,” Stolyarov said. “So when [mass evictions] hit, where are all of those people going to go if our housing prices and rent remain as high as they are right now? Rent has gone up by 50% in the last five years and wages have remained relatively flat. So one of my biggest goals on city council is to find ways we can work with zoning reform ways we can implement inclusionary zoning in order to bring down that cost of housing.”

Additional issues Stolyarov wants to shed light on are workers’ rights and protections and equality for all of Sparks’ citizens.

“My other two big issues are workers' rights and protections, which are again, more imperative than ever in this pandemic and equality in the city of Sparks,” Stolyarov said. “When I talk about equality, I'm not just talking about LGBT equality, which is important for me because if elected I would be the first queer council person. But also accessibility in the city by making sure that when we offer a city council meeting, we really are making it accessible to everyone.”

Some ways Stolyarov envisions making city council meetings accessible for everyone is by offering them in Spanish, or at least by making a translator available.

“The [city council meetings] are never offered in Spanish and we don't offer translators even though a huge proportion of ward one is Spanish-speaking only or you speak Spanish as a first language,” Stolyarov said. “So we should offer more city services in Spanish. Our website should be offered in Spanish and that's a very basic one that Reno and Washoe County both do as a matter of course. How can you participate in your government or in your community if you are being cut off at every turn from access?”

Whatever the outcome come Election Day, Stolyarov said she’s proud of her team’s effort.

“This is my first real political campaign and it has been an adventure,” Stolyarov said. “It's a wild year to run for office and I wouldn't trade it for anything. It's been a fantastic learning experience and whatever happens in November, I feel like we have been able to do a lot of good for the community.”


Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 09.29.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

New Shelter Ideas Under Review at Reno City Council

Members of the Reno City Council meet over Zoom to discuss homelessness in the region. The video call was livestreamed for the public on the City of Reno’s website.

Members of the Reno City Council meet over Zoom to discuss homelessness in the region. The video call was livestreamed for the public on the City of Reno’s website.

A Current Lack of Shelter Space with COVID-19 Spacing

Of Washoe County's 973 people experiencing homelessness, according to an official pre-COVID count  in January, the county's current emergency shelters can only accommodate about 714 of them.  That’s a clear lack of shelter options, especially if the number of people experiencing homelessness is seen as an undercount, as most activists who work with people living on the streets would attest.

This comes as the main shelter on Record street has been spaced out due to COVID-19 protocols. The new Our Place shelter for women, seniors and families is also turning away some women due to restrictions. And the big tents on East 4th street remain just a temporary emergency shelter, which replaced the Reno Events Center serving the homeless community at the outset of the pandemic.

In response, Acting Assistant City Manager Arlo Stockham said in a City Council meeting this week that he is pushing for a more permanent solution: building winter-ready shelters at Governor’s Bowl Park. Plans for the site would include two 22,400 square foot sprung structures with more room for "future expansion" and a "flex area." 

Some activists have complained the proximity to major highways off of 7th Street downtown is not ideal or welcoming, but plans seem to have been set in motion.

Four examples of sprung structures were featured in Stockham’s presentation. Stockham used this image to demonstrate what a new shelter at Governor’s Bowl Park might look like, touting their relatively inexpensive building costs and durability.

Four examples of sprung structures were featured in Stockham’s presentation. Stockham used this image to demonstrate what a new shelter at Governor’s Bowl Park might look like, touting their relatively inexpensive building costs and durability.

Where to Find the Funding?

During its Zoom-broadcast meeting Tuesday, the Reno City Council took a close look at Stockham’s presentation, even though according to the acting city manager, there’s still no “formal agreement” on its funding. 

The county’s CARES (Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act) funds were touted as a possibility. According to official documents, the Washoe County COVID-19 emergency pot of money “may be used for medical and public health needs, payroll expenses (for employee services substantially dedicated to mitigating or responding to the public health emergency), economic support, secondary effects and other costs reasonably necessary for government functions.” In August, government documents stated Washoe County was getting over $20 million with an additional $46 million for Reno and $19 million for Sparks, money which all expires at the end of the year.

"We need a permanent long term solution,” Reno Vice Mayor Devon Reese said in support of Stockham. “And if that solution costs us money, it costs us money."

The Governor’s Bowl land belongs to the state and could cost over $2 million. Building the shelter could be in the range of $6 million, according to documents presented.

The Northern Nevada Continuum of Care counts the region’s homeless population once annually. Council members find it useful, but lament that its data, recorded once in January, leaves much to be desired in the later months of the year. Activists rep…

The Northern Nevada Continuum of Care counts the region’s homeless population once annually. Council members find it useful, but lament that its data, recorded once in January, leaves much to be desired in the later months of the year. Activists repeatedly say they believe these counts are useful, but always miss many people who avoid the process entirely.

Questions and a Sales Pitch

Ward 2 Councilwoman Naomi Duerr pressed the issue of holding more counts, suggesting a second count be conducted later in the year. People experiencing homelessness are more likely to be outside and counted, she said, when the weather is less severe.

There are fears COVID-19, which has sent unemployment skyrocketing throughout Nevada, has created more homelessness amid an ongoing affordable housing crisis.

Ward 5 Councilwoman Neoma Jardon wondered why most shelters typically force people out early in the morning during cold months. Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve stressed the importance of providing adequate services in the new shelter. If the operation is going to be long term, Schieve believes, the city needs to be "thinking bigger and broader."

If “bigger and broader” is the mayor’s goal, Built for Zero’s presentation at the meeting appeared to offer a path toward achieving it. "Ending homeless isn't impossible,” Built for Zero representative Dana Searcy said. “It's already happening."

Built for Zero is an organization run by Community Solutions, a New York City-based non-profit, operating in more than 80 communities that approaches solutions to homelessness from what it says is a data-driven perspective. By gathering information on every individual experiencing homelessness in the region, the community can receive “tailored solutions for individuals and a clearer picture of the system as a whole,” according to the Built for Zero website.  

Built for Zero, according to Dana Searcy, is only part of the solution to eliminating homelessness in the communities it serves.  “The initial work of Built for Zero is about setting foundations,” she said. “And that does take time to realize.”

Built for Zero, according to Dana Searcy, is only part of the solution to eliminating homelessness in the communities it serves. “The initial work of Built for Zero is about setting foundations,” she said. “And that does take time to realize.”

Reporting by Ian Cook for Our Town Reno





Wednesday 09.23.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Community Concerns Rise Over Relationships Between Developers and City Council

Lakeridge (17).JPG

“Of course City Council members will say they are not biased …”

Sharon Weiss, head coach of the Lakeridge swim team

A Former Sports Club Thought to Be Saved, Now Gone

The property where the Lakeridge Tennis Club formerly stood, on the corner of Plumas and McCarran Blvd., has become both a wasteland and a trigger point for rising concerns about the relationship between developers and members of the Reno City Council. Campaign donation disclosure forms show developers involved in controversial projects with unexpected twists and turns, including Lakeridge, have given incumbent city council members, seeking to keep their seats, thousands and thousands of dollars in election cycle money.

The Daybreak project is a well publicized case. Less so is the dooming of the Lakeridge Tennis Club, which was sold last year to Reno Land to be redeveloped with a Newport Beach, California-based company called Lyon Living. Together, according to campaign disclosure forms, the two entities have given $15,000 in campaign contributions to Devon Reese, Oscar Delgado and Neoma Jardon, all incumbents trying to keep their City Council seats.

Initially, Reno Land’s purchase of the property seemed to be a saving grace of sorts, though, for those wanting to save the club. Original proposals brought forward by Reno Land to the surrounding community and Lakeridge club members indicated that the struggling club would be revitalized. 

“[The Lakeridge community] was really curious to know what Reno Land had in mind when they made this proposal at the public meeting, so there were about 200 plus people at the meeting and they shared their vision for what the tennis club could be moving forward,” said Sharon Weiss, the head coach of the Lakeridge swim team for the past 30 years.

“[Reno Land’s vision] was to develop half of the property with some infill, meaning they would bring in some 150 apartments on the western portion of the property. Then on the other half, they would revitalize the club knowing that it was an iconic …

“[Reno Land’s vision] was to develop half of the property with some infill, meaning they would bring in some 150 apartments on the western portion of the property. Then on the other half, they would revitalize the club knowing that it was an iconic property and had clubs for the community. So they came in like they were saviors [of the property],” Weiss said of initial hopes.

A Zoning Amendment Easily Brought Forward


In order to bring in apartment units to a portion of the Lakeridge property, a zoning amendment from the city council was required. Since Lakeridge was originally founded as a planned community, a specific zoning map was implemented. Therefore, Reno Land needed to change the Lakeridge Tennis Club zoning status from a specific plan district (SPD) to community commercial (CC). 

“Since the only way that [Reno Land] could move forward with this revitalization idea was to change the zoning, [the community] believed and supported them and almost no one went to the city council meeting to express concerns about them changing the zoning,” Weiss said. “So they appeared like it was all good and the plan was in the works.”

At the city council meeting on September 23, 2019, Reno Land’s request for a zoning amendment to the property was passed unanimously by the Reno City Council. Outside of concerns expressed by Councilwoman Naomi Duerr, whose ward includes the Lakeridge property, councilwoman Jenny Brekhus was the only other member of city council to raise questions in the meeting regarding Reno Land’s proposal for the property.

The discussion and voting for the zone change in question begins at 1:28:00 in video above.

Was a Bait and Switch Maneuver Used?

“Of course City Council members will say they are not biased, but a review of the City Council Meeting about changing the zoning for Lakeridge Tennis Club shows a very different possibility,” Weiss wrote in an email correspondence with Our Town Reno. “How is it that an iconic property with the history of Lakeridge Tennis Club is presented for a zoning change to the City Council, yet only a single member other than Naomi Duerr has any question? How is it that there is very little discussion on the motion to change the zoning for the whole property, even though the developer is suggesting that they only want to develop a portion of it (while maintaining the rest)? It wasn't until I went back and watched the meeting that it seemed like minds were made up... It's hard to trust that there is a level playing field,” she concluded.

After the zoning amendment was approved, Weiss says Reno Land’s interactions with community and club members suddenly stopped. So Weiss, whose nonprofit, the Lakeridge Swim Club, was dependent on the two pools that were part of the Lakeridge Tennis Club property, reached out to Reno Land because she had a particularly vested business interest in Reno Land’s proposed revitalization. 

In April 2020, just weeks before Reno Land’s purchase of the property became official on June 1st, word went around the community that Reno Land had changed their proposal for the property entirely. 

“I never heard from them after I wrote to them and sent them my bio and an explanation of my program and what we do,” Weiss said. “I called their offices and I never heard back. So I thought it would be business as usual this Spring, but then they came forward with the site plan for 350 apartments for active adults 55 and over, with an explanation for their rationale was that as a result of COVID, this club that's already in trouble will inevitably close and [the property] should be for housing.”

Weiss says she and other members of the community she’s spoken to believe Reno Land used a ‘bait-and-switch’ tactic in order to gain community support, before changing plans. Tennis players in the community have been exchanging emails and conversations at still existing tennis courts, expressing similar concerns.

“They basically baited the community, they baited the planning commission, they baited everybody because on their application for the zoning change, every question all has to do with revitalizing the club,” Weiss said. “Their whole initial application for the zoning change was all about revitalizing the club, so there wouldn’t be any changes or any problems with traffic and everything's going to be great. [The property] is going to be in existing use and it's not that big of a deal because all we're doing with changing the zoning is changing colors on a map.”

“Members were actually still paying dues late into April, when [Reno Land] put their site plan out and they were talking about how, ‘As a result of COVID, the club is no longer financially viable,’ but the billing cycle for the club wasn’t complete …

“Members were actually still paying dues late into April, when [Reno Land] put their site plan out and they were talking about how, ‘As a result of COVID, the club is no longer financially viable,’ but the billing cycle for the club wasn’t complete so there's no way they can make a claim like that,” Weiss said. “My [swim] team had paid 100% of our dues for March. So members of the club were still paying and still happy to pay to keep the club afloat while it was closed due to COVID. So that's actually not a true statement for them to make that the club is dying.”

Appealing the New Plan which is Then Suddenly Dropped Before the Election

Once the new site plan was revealed, several community members got together as an appellate group to appeal the new plan. 

“We all got together and started looking at the proposal on their original application. We looked at all the planning commission and city council meetings and just started taking each issue one at a time,” Weiss said. “We had a hearing in June with a neutral hearing examiner who heard our case via Zoom. We went one at a time and went piece by piece to address the issues in the case and the hearing officer ended up ruling in our favor in July.”

Reno Land consequently appealed the ruling, as did Weiss’s appellate group simply, she says, to remain a part of the conversation. At that point in the process, the appeal was set to return to city council for a ruling. To prepare for the city council ruling, Weiss and her group assembled further findings to strengthen their case. But just hours before the hearing, Reno Land withdrew their appeal.

“Just a few hours before we were supposed to present our case to the city council, the developer withdrew their plan and didn't really offer any explanation,” Weiss said. “They simply said, ‘We're withdrawing our application for the 350 units, and we will be back in the next couple months with a new plan.’ So we still have all of our findings and what's tricky about this is that there's important information for the city and there's a lot of learning that needs to happen with this case because the city made a lot of allowances for the developer already.”

To notify of plans suddenly changing, Garret Gordon, a lawyer representing Reno Land Inc., released a statement to acting City of Reno community development coordinator Angela Fuss, which read: “We are withdrawing the Application prior to final acti…

To notify of plans suddenly changing, Garret Gordon, a lawyer representing Reno Land Inc., released a statement to acting City of Reno community development coordinator Angela Fuss, which read: “We are withdrawing the Application prior to final action by the Reno City Council, but fully intend to re-submit an updated Application in the coming months. We look forward to continuing working with you and appreciate all of the time and effort you and your staff spent to process the application.” The statement and withdrawal came ahead of the November 2020 election, in which several city council incumbents are facing re-election. Devon Reese, who was appointed to the at-large seat in 2019, is seeking to keep his seat as well. Reese and two other re-election candidates have each received $5,000 from Reno Land and $10,000 from Lyon Management.


A Political Rival’s Take Amid a Quick Tear Down

Eddie Lorton, a local businessman who is running for the at-large City Council seat against incumbent Devon Reese, also believes the city of Reno has been too accommodating to developers. 

“I guarantee since [city council] took all the heat and it's an election cycle, that the developer was called and told to stand down for now because there was an outcry in the community,” Lorton alleged. This could not be independently confirmed.

Requests for comment submitted to Reno Land, Lyon Living and the election campaign for Devon Reese for this story went unanswered. Campaign contribution reports for Reese show he received $5,000 from Reno Land on June 1st. They also show Reno Land gave $5,000 to Oscar Delgado’s campaign effort on June 1 for his run for Ward 3, and $5,000 to Neoma Jardon’s coffers on June 16th for her re-election run for Ward 5.

The three have also received $10,000 in campaign contributions from the Lyon Management Group, which according to its website includes Lyon Living.

Councilwoman Brekhus responded to our query for a comment on what might have happened with this emailed information: “As this was an appeal, the City Council sits quasi-judicial, like a judge would,” she wrote. “In those instances, contact with parties related to the issue is not appropriate.  All information sharing is required to be in the public meeting under due process considerations.  For this reason, I refrain from contact when matters like this involving are pending.  So I did not have any contact with Reno Land or their paid team during this period.”

According to Weiss, Reno Land submitted a demolition permit to the city the same day their site plan review was approved on May 15th. Less than two weeks later, she said, despite existing appeals against the site plan, the city issued Reno Land their demolition permit to start tearing down the standing building, tennis courts and the swimming pools on the property. Messages to Reno Land and Lyon Living to get confirmation of this timeline went unanswered.

“They pulled a fast one especially since [the community] didn't even notice the property was being demolished until it was too late,” Lorton said. “Once [developers] get their approval, they do the bait and switch and will go back to the table 50 times and it's never for the city's advantage. It's always at [the city’s] detriment, so I don't know why [the city council] keeps renegotiating these things.”

“Many citizens believe that it was not appropriate for the city to issue a demolition permit until the appeal process was completed, so it's really disappointing to see that the city had chosen to do that,” Weiss said. “It doesn't seem right that if a case is in appeal that any permit, whether it's demolition or building, be given until the appeals process is over.”

The property is now sitting idle and destroyed until a new plan is announced.

The property is now sitting idle and destroyed until a new plan is announced.

The Case of Daybreak Reno and Views of Another Challenger



Lorton also cites Daybreak Reno, a developer owned by Newport Pacific Land Company, which have also both made significant campaign contributions to same members on the Reno City Council. The controversial Daybreak project would bring nearly 4,000 housing units to an undeveloped plot of land in a floodplain in Southeast Reno. According to campaign contribution documents, Newport Pacific made maximum campaign donations of $10,000 to Oscar Delgado and Neoma Jardon. In the case of Reese, according to a News 4 media report, it indicates he’s received $24,500 from three different entities linked to the project.

The three Council members who received donations from Daybreak-involved developers, Reese, Delgado and Jardon, voted to approve the Daybreak project in September 2019. Previously in November 2018, Delgado and Jardon, who were at that point already elected members of the Reno City Council (Reese was appointed to fill the vacant at-large seat in 2019), initially voted against it. That vote prompted the Daybreak developer Newport Pacific Land to sue the city.

Delgado and Reese released statements to media indicating the campaign contributions were not a conflict of interest and that the money did not influence their votes.

“Developer money is an outsize influence on city council — impacting city priorities, council agendas, and greatly distorting electoral politics and public trust,” Rudy Leon wrote to Our Town Reno via Facebook Messenger, summarizing how she views the situation. Leon is running against Delgado for the Ward 3 seat.

“The city should be putting as much attention to social issues (such as housing precarity, homelessness, mental health, public health epidemics, and quality of life) as developers. But what incentive is there for incumbents to pay attention to issues which lack the big money developers bring to campaigns? Individual resident donors really can’t compete,” Leon wrote.

Delgado, Jardon and other City Council members, besides Brekhus, did not respond to emails to give us statements on the record about these donations and the controversial development projects. Requests for comments by Daybreak Reno and Newport Pacific Land Company for this article also went unanswered.

In the case of Lakeridge, Lorton says he wants the developer and city council to go forward with the original plan. “Reno Land did buy the property and their original plan was approved, which got through the right way,” Lorton said. “I would have ne…

In the case of Lakeridge, Lorton says he wants the developer and city council to go forward with the original plan. “Reno Land did buy the property and their original plan was approved, which got through the right way,” Lorton said. “I would have never wanted the tennis courts torn down, and let alone we hardly have any pools in this area and quality of life issues matter. But now it's too late to take it back and rebuild it, but that was really unfortunate for that to happen to our community. So now though, I guess we'd have to go back and approve the original deal.”

The Need to Bring Quality of Life to Reno Residents

More generally, Lorton says he wants to see a better problem-solving approach by the city council to enhance the quality of life for Reno residents.

“If we need to get a pool, we could reach out to foundations and get one bill privately-funded because we have excellent people in our community that would more than be happy if you talk to the right folks,” Lorton said. “Quality of life issues matter like never before. [The city] doesn’t make a lot of money on tennis courts, golf courses or swimming pools; but that's quality of life. That's the good part about living here in Reno is quality of life issues, so we need to expand on that.”

Moving forward, both Weiss and Lorton want the greater Reno community to become more aware and involved in what’s going on in their community.

“The greater Reno community really needs to participate and pay attention to when developers come in with plans, because there's a lot going on that's out of the public view and we really need to stay vigilant,” Weiss said. “Had I had any idea that [Reno Land’s proposed] plan didn't really need to mean much, I would have been at that meeting in a heartbeat. I didn't realize that I was going to have to become a political activist in the middle of the pandemic and try to also save my business at the same time. So the greater community needs to stay vigilant and pay attention when their offers come in with plans because what's happening behind closed doors and what's happening in public is not always the same thing and that's very unfortunate. It puts us in a really tough spot.”

She considers losing the city’s only indoor tennis courts, and two pools, a huge loss to the community, and several swimming and tennis families we spoke to agreed. Watchdog websites have also been keeping tabs on this story, but have not gotten rebuttals from City Council members either.

Reporting and Photos by Scott King for Our Town Reno


















Tuesday 09.22.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Marcus, Put on a Train and Finding the Big Tent Shelter in Reno

Marcus Stewart, 25, who has albinism and is legally blind, had been sleeping at the big tent shelter on East Fourth Street about a week when we met him. He said he moved from Winnemucca to Reno in August, but he says the sun here makes it hard for h…

Marcus Stewart, 25, who has albinism and is legally blind, had been sleeping at the big tent shelter on East Fourth Street about a week when we met him. He said he moved from Winnemucca to Reno in August, but he says the sun here makes it hard for him, and he’s not sure what to do next. He’s originally from Oklahoma City, where he says he might try to get back to.

“It’s humbling.  I came from Winnemucca. It’s hard.  I had nowhere else to go. I was  fighting with my sister in law and I had nowhere else to go. So a great woman bought me an Amtrak ticket, one way, to right here. 

There's good people here, man, then just like anywhere else and there's bad people. No matter what situation, know what you're going through in life, stay humble. It won't last that long. I'm a Christian. So I believe in that, man, God gives his hardest situations and the hardest missions and hardest battles to the strongest.

I came here with just a suitcase and my backpack. The first day I was here, I was walking up and down, walking up down Fourth street,  giving up my clothes to people, just paying it forward. 

I don't really worry about [COVID-19]. It's terrible. I don't wear [a mask] unless I got to go in the store.

[At the tent shelter], there's a lot of elderly people here, veterans too.   And it upsets me, you know? 

My message to everybody, even the veterans, like I said, just be patient man. Just give it time. It says it's got to get worse before it gets better, I’m a firm believer of that. So right now we're at the worst of it, but it will get better in time.”

Reporting and Photo by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 09.16.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Ray Bacasegua Valdez, In Support of Families of those Killed by Police

Ray Bacasegua Valdez, a Yaqui Indian from the Sonoran Desert, is a local artist, art teacher, and the director of the American Indian Movement of Northern Nevada. He said he came without violence and was satisfied the protest stayed that way.

Ray Bacasegua Valdez, a Yaqui Indian from the Sonoran Desert, is a local artist, art teacher, and the director of the American Indian Movement of Northern Nevada. He said he came without violence and was satisfied the protest stayed that way.

Need to Change a Bad Reno Ranking

“We obviously need change,” said Ray Bacasegua Valdez who came out with the American Indian Movement of Northern Nevada this past Saturday to show support for local families who have lost a relative to a police killing. Along with members of Reno Cop Watch and PERCh (People Enacting Radical Change), there were several dozen participants. The families of Thomas Purdy (killed by Washoe County Nevada sheriff’s deputies at the Washoe County Jail in 2015), Johnny Bonta (killed by Sparks PD in 2017), and Kenneth Stafford (killed by police in Sparks in 2013), were present as well.

“We’re also asking for accountability and some reform. We need some change,” Vazquez said. As cars drove by the protest at the Bruce R. Thompson Courthouse and Federal Building, some honked in support.

According to MappingPoliceViolence.org, Reno is the 9th highest city in the country in terms of the number of yearly police killings per capita.

Over 60 people joined the protest on Saturday September 12th.  The Peltier sign refers to Leonard Peltier, whose 76th birthday was on that day.  Peltier is an AIM activist who has been in prison since 1977,  serving two life sentences after bei…

Over 60 people joined the protest on Saturday September 12th. The Peltier sign refers to Leonard Peltier, whose 76th birthday was on that day. Peltier is an AIM activist who has been in prison since 1977, serving two life sentences after being convicted of killing two FBI Special Agents on the Lakota Sioux reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, in 1975. Numerous doubts have been raised over his guilt and the fairness of his trial.

Early Signs of Progress

While Valdez recognizes there is a need for change he personally does not think defunding and removing law enforcement is the answer, as has been the goal of many protesters in the ongoing Black Lives Matter movement.

“I think right now, we’re just in the early stages of a solution,” Valdez said. “I think it starts with our leadership, the leadership of our country and the mindset.” 

Valdez also believes real change will come from the bottom up and from the people. “We don’t want the next generation to carry this hate. We need to stop that,” he said.

He does see some change going in the correct direction.

“The City of Reno removed Columbus Day, it’s now Indigenous People’s Day. That was a big thing,” Valdez said. He also mentioned the recent decision by the Squaw Valley Ski Resort that they will be changing their name as a positive. The resort acknowledged the word “squaw” is racist and sexist and said it would change the name after the next ski season.

Reporting and Photos by Richard Bednarski for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 09.15.20
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 
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