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Blind Dog Tavern Closes in Downtown Reno Shortly After Receiving City Money for Improvements

While the Blind Dog Tavern on N. Sierra St. recently announced it was closing, a local Instagram page raised the concern it had just received money as part of the City of Reno grants program for businesses to improve the appeal of our downtown corridor.  

On its Instagram last week, Blind Dog Tavern wrote: “We regret to bring you the unfortunate news of Blind Dog Tavern’s untimely closing. Our last day of operation was this past New Years Eve. This is unfortunate news, but we do not want this to be a sad situation. Blind Dog Tavern was an absolutely amazing experience for us. We feel honored to have had the opportunity to serve every single libation to every single amazing thirsty person who joined us for a drink or two. Thank you all for your patronage. We hope you had the chance to enjoy this establishment as much as we have.

Cheers to you all!”

Not cheering was the Instagram page which wrote to us:  “just sucks to watch that money get wasted if they just close so quickly after. Maybe money should be to help people not businesses after all.”

In December 2023, Blind Dog Tavern was part of the first round of awardees of the program called ReStore Reno,  “an initiative aimed to reinvigorate and reignite the downtown area by offering matching grants to property owners and business tenants for facade improvements and interior upgrades.”

Blind Dog Tavern was in the tenant improvement category.  Josh Callen, who owns the bar, is also behind Poor Devil Saloon in Midtown and Hideout Lounge on Park Street.

In an email today, Victoria Barnett, a Public Communications Specialist with the City of Reno explained “this portion of the program supported interior improvements to the spaces they occupied. The matching funds for Blind Dog were used to repair damaged ceiling grid and ceiling tiles and replace outdated fixtures with LED lighting. 

Blind Dog completed the improvements in early 2024 and received the 50% matching funds from the City as a reimbursement for the work completed. These being long term tenant improvements, these improvements will benefit existing and future tenants of the space.

Under the Restore program 40 properties and businesses received awards, 13 of which were new businesses. The $1,050,000 awarded in ReStore grant funding is expected to generate $5.7 Million in improvements in the Downtown areas.”

Our Town Reno reporting, January 7, 2025

Tuesday 01.07.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

New Jacobs Tenants Will Sign Document Saying They will be Next to Festival Grounds

The Jacobs Entertainment 245 North Arlington apartments where a motel once stood now has a pre-leasing begins sign.

According to its website, a two-bedroom there goes for $2,400 with a studio priced at $1,500.

The Jacobs attorney Garrett Gordon has indicated people moving into the apartment will be required to sign a disclosure acknowledging they are next to a new future outdoor festival space, sketched out to be able to attract 15-thousand people.

Its conditional use permit is on the agenda for a Ward 1 NAB meeting next week, before going to the planning commission next month.

A city of Reno email detailed its location “on seven parcels generally located south of Third Street, east of Ralston Street, and west of North Arlington Avenue. The site is located in the Mixed-Use Downtown Entertainment District (MD-ED) zone and has a Master Plan land use designation of Downtown Mixed-Use (DT-MU). “

It said “a request has been made for a conditional use permit to allow “Amusement or Recreation, Outside” and “Live Entertainment” land uses to facilitate outdoor festivals, concerts, recreation, and events.”

Gordon has indicated because the new festival grounds is in the city’s mixed-use entertainment district it is not subject to noise regulations for nearby residents, despite some of them already complaining.

The Jacobs lawyer said the new festival grounds will operate during the same hours as the nearby smaller Glow Plaza which has had occasional events since 2022. 

Our Town Reno reporting, January 2025

Monday 01.06.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Downtown Reno Casino Workers Complain of Wages not Keeping Up with City's Costs

File photo by Ariel Smith.

Behind the flashing lights and slot machines lies a different, harsher, reality for many of Reno‘s casino employees, one defined by financial strain, difficult working conditions and longer and longer commutes.

Despite their vital role in keeping this money making industry thriving, current casino workers have their own stories not of big gains but of low wages, long hours, and sacrifices needed to make ends meet. 

As Reno’s cost of living continues to climb, long gone are the days when a hard worker could come to Reno, find a job at a downtown casino and live comfortably nearby, getting their own piece of the American Dream,

“I wouldn’t call it a livable wage. A lot of workers are barely making ends meet,” Haley, a rewards associate for a local casino explained. “Casinos bring in so much money, but a lot of us are still living paycheck to paycheck.”

She shares an apartment with a roommate to manage expenses, a situation echoed by other employees. Jesse, a former fine dining server, host, and busser described relying heavily on tips to cover basic needs. He said tips make up about 80%, if not more, of his overall income. 

Others in customer facing roles, like bartending voiced similar concerns. “If I make enough in tips, I’m pretty steady but as a student, I’m lucky that scholarships cover my tuition. Otherwise I probably wouldn’t be a student right now,” one bartender said of trying to balance work at a casino while trying to get a college degree. 

Another downtown casino employee, a single mother, said she needs other jobs or side gigs to keep her family afloat.

“In 2024, I made less money than ever, just absolutely terrible,” she said.

Casinos light up Virginia Street behind Reno’s arch.

Downtown casino employees say the emotional and physical toll of their jobs can be draining, from managing unruly guests, to working all hours during holidays and constantly shifting schedules.

Jesse noted that while some departments offer incentives like gift cards and holiday giveaways, these perks often feel insufficient when compared to the overall demand of the job. 

“We've got a $30 Walmart gift card, one for Thanksgiving and one for Christmas, but no extra pay for working the holidays,” one bartender at a high end restaurant in a downtown casino said.

“Higher ups get more perks, like free dining, vouchers, and bigger bonuses while we’re just trying to scrape by,” another employee said. 

All those interviewed for this report said a livable wage shouldn’t be too much to ask for, with all they provide.

Reporting by Genevy Machuca shared with Our Town Reno  


 

Monday 01.06.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Jordyn Owens, a Practicioner of Powerful Photographic Journaling, Named 2025 Reno City Artist

Screenshots from the Jordyn Owens website and Instagram.

Jordyn Owens, a born and raised Reno artist,  with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from UNR, “who uses photographic mediums to explore the past, present, and future self” has been named the 2025 Reno City Artist.  

 “Local artwork truly makes our area a special place to live, and we are looking forward to the creativity she will bring to this role,” Mayor Hillary Schieve said.

According to a press release from the City of Reno, during her year long tenure, “Owens will curate an exhibition at the Metro Gallery at City Hall that is slated to run late summer 2025. The

 exhibition will be in collaboration with Of the Sol and feature Reno based Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) artists of all ages.  

The goal of the collective is to foster autonomy, representation, inclusivity, equity, and accessibility for BIPOC artists in an intersectional space of reclamation and revival.”

Her website indicates that “by exploring her inner world, her artwork demonstrates the powerful effects of self-reflection and the impact it has on the evolution of identity.”

She also practices art journaling, writing in a recent Instagram post: “For the past five years, I have written in a journal almost every day. It’s a ritual dedicated to connecting to my inner world. Onto pages, I document the fleeting moments of my life in hopes to capture their essence. Introspection the visual manifestation of my journaling practice.”

“I’m honored to be appointed the Reno City Artist for 2025. Through my artwork, I hope to inspire others to believe in themselves and their dreams,” said Owens.

Our Town Reno reporting, Jan. 3, 2025

Friday 01.03.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Bricks from the Sparks Machine Shop, while Historic Reno Spots Reported At Risk

The City of Sparks and Union Pacific Railroad will be allowing bricks from the soon to be demolished historical machine shop to be picked up starting Feb. 3 at the east lot of Cottonwood Park.  

“It’s a bittersweet moment for our community, as the machine shop has been a historic landmark in Sparks for generations,” Mayor Ed Lawson was quoted as saying in a recent City of Sparks press release. “We appreciate Union Pacific’s efforts to offer the community a chance to retain a piece of history.”

The massive brick structure on Nugget Avenue near I-80, which was built in 1904 by Southern Pacific Railroad, helped Sparks earn its “Rail City” moniker. It remained until now at the site under a now expired land lease, but will soon be demolished to make way for truck parking.  

Union Pacific said the building had safety issues.  A director of public affairs was quoted in the press release as saying the railroad is maximizing “its existing footprint to support growing intermodal demand. The building will be commemorated with a plaque at its former location, and Union Pacific is partnering with the city on a community brick donation.”

According to the nonprofit Preserve Nevada, which has bemoaned this looming demolition, other local historical at-risk sites include the Lear Theater which recently failed to receive any bids to use final ARPA funds for its upkeep.  It was originally designed by the renowned Black architect Paul Revere Williams in the 1930s. Rather than just stabilizing and cleaning the building for less than $1 million, some City Council members are calling for much more grandiose projects in the long unused majestic building costing around $20 million.

The Bethel AME Church at 220 Bell Street, which also has ties to Black history, is equally listed at risk with council discussions to restrict access from nearby streets and alleys due to pending development proposals.  

Our Town Reno reporting, Jan. 3, 2025

Friday 01.03.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Washoe County School District Starts Screening Applicants for Replacement Trustee

Applicants for the open District C Washoe County School District Board of Trustees seat are preparing their five minute spiels in hopes of being named the replacement for Joe Rodriguez, who has new duties after being elected to the Sparks City Council in the last election cycle.

Due to construction at the WCSD Building, a meeting will take place Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Joe at UNR in Room 403 for their presentations.

Other Trustees will then select finalists for interviews scheduled the Tuesday after on the 14th at 9 a.m. back at the WCSD building on 9th street.

Reported candidates in alphabetical order are: Jason Bushey, Felipe Escamilla, Marcus Hodges, Monica Lehmann, Tamara Oswald, Bruce Parks, James Phoenix, Tracey Thomas and Timothy Zysk.

Escamilla has an interesting profile as a public shool advocate and producer for the Khan Academy. Parks and Thomas are well known as Washoe County Republican Party operatives. Oswald might have an inner lane, with nearly 15 years experience as a substitute teacher with the WCSD.

Our Town Reno reporting, January 2025

Thursday 01.02.25
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Several Reno Brar Properties, Including Shut Down Lakemill Lodge, Are Now For Sale

Three motels and one apartment complex, all linked to the Brar family, and Rupinder Investments, including the suspended Lakemill Lodge are all for sale now, according to the LoopNet website.

The Lakemill Lodge on Mill street, listed as a 121 room hotel, with AI looking renderings instead of the motel’s actual pictures, is listed at $15 million.

It was abruptly shut down earlier this year, sending its low income residents to scramble for new shelter, after it was deemed unsafe by local authorities.

“This property is ideal for a complete hospitality conversion, creating a vibrant downtown destination. Additional use cases could include residential or mixed-use applications. The building is available for immediate occupancy or can be delivered vacant to suit a buyer's needs,” the LoopNet listing indicates.

The 63 room Wonder Lodge, which also made headlines recently for too many people inside a room which was then condemned, at 430 Lake Street, is going for a cool $7 million. That listing has a current photo with an AI looking rendering next to it.

The Lucky Motel at 1011 E 4th street, is being offered for $2.7 million.The LoopNet listing indicates “this 23-room motel … generates consistent income with opportunities for modernization to increase revenue potential. Its layout and prime location also position it as a strong candidate for redevelopment for hospitality, medical, nonprofit, or government use.”

Finally their motel-like 26 apartment complex at 2241 E 4th street is also going for $2.7 million, with a similar description as “well-positioned to capitalize on Reno’s economic growth and increased tourism activity.”

Unless new eventual owners keep these going as long term motels, whenever the sales go through, more residents who rely on these cheap accommodations, as a last or first resort out of homelessness, will also be scrambling for new housing.

Our Town Reno reporting, December 2024

Monday 12.30.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Pro-Library Counter Protesters Gather Against Library Protest on Last Monday of 2024

It was quite the scene at the downtown library this morning before its last 2024 Monday 10 a.m. opening, as a group of counter protesters gathered in front of the Center Street location, while ten or so anti-library protesters could be heard saying words such as “socialism,” “communism,” “virtue signaling,” and “garbage.”

One man held up a sign indicating “Fire Dir Jeff Scott Now,” referring to the Director of the Washoe County Library System.  The other side of his sign said “Porn in Library?”

Anti-library advocates have spoken out against drag queen story hours previously held at different local libraries, before these were scrapped due to safety reasons, as well as the availability of certain books.

One library staff with a nervous smile handed out library safety policies and another mingled with the protesters.  One counter protester dressed in black read parts of the Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs.  At his feet, he placed a chalkboard sign which read “Book Banners Aren’t on the Right Side of History.”

Other counter-protesters, some of them dressed colorfully, some with pro library signs, some playing bad music, mingled near the entrance, serving each other hot drinks and greeting each other with smiles as more arrived, noting they had the larger group.

A third group, consisting of unhoused individuals pushing carts full of their belonging, were being told to sit outside the library as it wasn’t open yet.  An Allied Universal security guard working for the library aggressively got into our face with threatening language, after we had gone around the sidewalk filming, saying we weren’t allowed to do so, even though it was on a public sidewalk.  

After being told about this, a library staff said it was because we didn’t have visible journalistic accreditation, which is not needed to film in public.  She then said his conduct was understandable as he was “on edge.”

The early morning commotion comes as pro-library proponents are trying to get Washoe County commissioners to boost the library’s budget after a majority of voters eliminated having two cents of every $100 of assessed property value going directly to the library, as had been the case since a narrow vote had established this funding source thirty years ago.

A petition to “Preserve Funding for Washoe County Libraries” has since been circulated, saying the ballot question had “misleading wording,” while there has been renewed scrutiny on the library’s budgeting.   The property taxes going to the library previously added about $4.5 million to its budget per year, for a previous total of about $17 million.  

“In this budget is 23 library staff, $1.4 million in books (the entirety of our book budget), and $200,000 of our technology budget. This loss will result in a reduction of public services,” Scott indicated in a statement available on the Washoe County Libraries website, concerning the looming loss of $4.5 million if the money is not found elsewhere.

“Over the next few months, I will be putting together proposals on service reductions with my library team and library board. When the Expansion Tax expires on June 30, 2025, those cuts will be enacted. More information will be released as we work through this tough budget,” Scott wrote.  

Our Town Reno reporting, December 30, 2024

Monday 12.30.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Previously Suspended Downtown Reno Eden Nightclub is Delaying its Reopening with More Remodeling

A file photo of when the Eden was still suspended, before it started its remodeling.

After a December 18th City of Reno memo indicated its suspension had been lifted, the downtown Reno Eden nightclub has been remodeling for its reopening.

“We have spent the last few months diving deep into all of the comments, concerns, and even questions about our operations,” co-owner Wolfgang Welch indicated to Our Town Reno.

The reopening has been allowed since earlier this month, but Welch said “remodeling has been a process.”

Welch said he’s taken all the comments he’s seen since the nightclub was forced to shut down in September. 

“Some we agree with, some we don’t, some are easy to digest and some aren’t. All of them are valid and we want our communities to know that we hear them,” he wrote to Our Town Reno.

“We have worked heavily with The City of Reno, Reno Police Department and other entities to ensure that our next phase addresses all comments and concerns in a productive way. Nightlife is vital to any city’s cultural experience and we want to be a positive contributor to that experience. We know that retribution doesn’t happen overnight but we are confident that with the work we’ve done we can change the opinion and outlook of everyone and find that retribution soon.” 

The City of Reno memo indicated that on December 17th, “the Administrative Hearing Officer determined that the licensee has substantially complied with all requirements and that the suspension would be lifted.”  

The memo indicated “the licensee disclosed a targeted reopening date of December 27” but that has now been pushed back.  

An initial Reno PD memorandum in September, said it started noticing “an increase in calls for service” at the Eden location on the 200 block of West 2nd street.  It indicated Eden “was found to be the primary location of a large majority of criminal activity.” 

Changes have now been made to comply with needed safety requirements.

Our Town Reno reporting, December 2024

 

Friday 12.27.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Mother Relieved to Get Child Out of SAI Residential Treatment Center, While Reno Neighbors Face Ongoing Turmoil

Neighboring residents to 2840 Sandestin Drive will soon enter a new year of living near northwest Reno’s SAI residential psychiatric treatment center, which some have a called a nightmare.

It’s not just the neighbors complaining though. A mother of one of the patients admitted to the facility earlier this fall, who wishes to remain anonymous, spoke out against the SAI treatment center calling it “an unprofessional business with such poor, poor communication.”

According to Reno public record reports at that address, 57 calls were made to emergency services from September 2023 to November 2024, ranging from suicide attempts to runaway juveniles.

There were six calls due to suicide attempts from December of 2023 to November, and 11 runaways within that same time frame. 

The Department of Health and Human Services - Division of Public and Behavioral Health defines facilities like SAI, to be “... a facility, other than a hospital, that provides a range of psychiatric services to treat residents under the age of 21 years on an inpatient basis under the direction of a physician.” 

The Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance (HCQC) provides licensing to residential treatment centers in Nevada. In addition to its HCQC licensing, SAI has been accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF).

The mother who spoke to Our Town Reno is based in Nevada and has sent her child to various psychiatric facilities within the state in the last year to try to receive help with their mental health struggles. Sending her child away was one of the hardest challenges she’s had to face as a mother, she said.

After having an unsuccessful experience with a Las Vegas-based psychiatric hospital, she was recommended to have her child see Dr. Dharmendra Goyal at Reno-based SAI Mental Health.

The residential treatment center page on the SAI website does not show the residential home.

The mother says that when she looked up SAI Mental Health, a facility on 5865 Tyrone Rd was shown, which helped her feel assured that her child would be in a safe, secure hospital setting.

After her child was relocated to Reno from Las Vegas, she found out that they’d not been sent to Tyrone Rd, but to a residential home. She says she immediately began feeling weary about inadequate security at the location.

She wondered things like: who was living in the house with her child and the other patients? How many other teens were in the home? Are there security guards? How many doctors are on site?

“They [providers] were shady there… I was never told they were going to a house. I was told they were going to a facility. I found out about it after, when they were already there at that house that I never approved of,” she said.

The mother says her experience with SAI was unnerving and stressful. “I was the one calling most times…One of the times they sent my kid to the ER…and nobody communicated that they were there. I found out because the emergency room called me asking for consent to treat them,” she said.

Then, shortly after her child began residing at 2840 Sandestin Drive, she said she received a call from SAI telling her that her child recently escaped the facility and was nowhere to be found. 

“When they were out and about looking … one of the staff members there told another parent that if they found my child, just to take them,” she said. “Just like that, they gave a stranger permission to take my kid.”

After three days of searching, she says Reno PD located her child on 4th street, in downtown Reno, intoxicated and staying at a homeless encampment. Her child was suspected to have escaped the facility with the help of another patient and was later returned to SAI.

Shortly after this incident, the mother says she relocated her child to a different facility outside of Nevada.

She now shares the sentiments of neighboring residents who want the facility moved. At the beginning of October 2024 she says the property was listed as sold on Zillow, giving her hope other mothers would not have to go through the same ordeals as she did.

After calling the facility and speaking with one of their providers, though, it was confirmed that SAI is still operating there and was undergoing refinancing, but maintained ownership and licensing.

According to the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health, the last investigation of the facility was done in March, as a result of numerous complaints to the treatment center.

The complaints filed with the state have included workers blocking sidewalks with their vehicles, youth heard fighting and screaming, and a runaway trespassing on private property.

Four complaints were investigated that involved alleged patient abuse, unsupervised patients, and lack of proper response to safety threatening scenarios.

It was deemed that the allegations could not be substantiated due to lack of evidence.

SAI has said the house setting offers a sense of safety in the treatment journey of young patients there. The facility’s owner psychiatrist Dharmendra Goyal has said complaints against the facility are false.

Both Goyal and Jeanette Bussey, the CEO of Sai Mental Health, worked at the West Hills Behavioral Health Hospital, which was shut down in 2021 after four decades of operation, prompting them to open SAI Mental Health.

“It was really painful to see the patients with nowhere to go with mental health and substance abuse needs,” Bussey, the former Director of Outpatient Services at West Hills told KOLO News in 2022. “We determined that we needed to open an agency that would hopefully fill some of those gaps.”

According to Reno city officials, group homes such as this facility are allowed in Reno’s residential zoning districts, without the need for a public hearing or public notice.

At the national level, a just passed and signed into law Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act is aimed at preventing any abuse of minors taking place at rehab and other residential facilities. 

"Children across the country are at risk of abuse and neglect due to a lack of transparency in institutional youth treatment programs," Democratic Congressman Ro Khanna said in a statement, leading this legislative effort along with celebrity heiress Paris Hilton. "The industry has gone unchecked for too long. Paris Hilton and other survivors of abuse in this broken system have bravely shared their stories and inspired change. I'm proud to lead this legislation with my colleagues to protect the safety and well-being of kids."

Hilton lived in a series of residential treatment facilities as a teenager, testifying before Congress in June that she remembered being violently restrained, stripped of clothing and tossed into solitary confinement.

The new law just signed by outgoing President Joe Biden is meant to create federal overseeing structures for youth residential programs and the placement of minors in rehab and other facilities. It is also directing the Department of Health and Human Services along with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine to make recommendations about state oversight of these programs. 

Report contributed to Our Town Reno in December 2024

Friday 12.27.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Muha Mafia, Just Released Reno TikTok Unhoused Man Disturbs Some, Fascinates Others

Zachariah Greenberg, a local 45-year-old unhoused man with a 40K TikTok following on his current account The Muha Mafia _muha_mafia_ account, with plenty of Facebook and Next Door detractors finding him creepy, has been making new videos today, after his release from Washoe County jail, following a Christmas Day arrest on an assault charge.

His latest live video today said he had been thrown out of a local mall. 

One person texted Our Town Reno previously that he had been live streaming on Christmas Day, while interacting with a former coworker at Reno Sparks Cab before getting arrested.  Earlier in the day he had made a video showing himself waking up in a sleeping bag saying “Man, it’s 6 a.m. and I’m already faded.”

Our Town Reno has received messages both for and against him in recent weeks, with some finding him funny and full of insights. Others feel he needs help, while some consider him dangerous.

Jamie Hemingway from the Washoe County Library System had previously confirmed to Our Town Reno he has been “temporarily suspended from the library for not following library policy.” We asked for additional details about his suspension which started in mid December but did not get any.  

Internet research also brings up a local road rage incident and shooting a gun into a ceiling, with multiple restraining orders and elder abuse charges filed against him in Orange County previously. 

He had been making TikTok videos from the downtown library for a while.  His other regular spot to make videos, including some with young employees and teenage shoppers, has been at Meadowood Mall.  

We contacted Meadowood Mall, who forwarded us to corporate headquarters, where we left a message but did not hear back.  

“Man this muha has gotten me faded,” is one of his signature lines.  He says he’s received free products from the Muha CBD company due to his TikTok promotions.  A previous TikTok account he ran which is no longer active was called High and Happy Too.  

His signature look is wearing a beanie with the letters UNC, while many commenters call him unc in their comments.

Greenberg often walks around the UNR area, with one recent video saying he wanted to be invited to a sorority party.  He also says he won’t date older women who have deeply disappointed and infuriated him, and wants to date younger women.  Commenters on northern Nevada mom groups also complained of a video in which he was wearing only boxers, and one in which he said he was walking around inside a local school with weed-related products on him.  

Greenberg talks about being unhoused by choice, and documents his daily life, repeatedly going to the mall and walking around different neighborhoods.  In his most recent videos he said jail wasn’t that bad.  “They don’t have the cat food sandwiches anymore,” he said in a Dec. 26th video. 

In a live video from early this afternoon with 2k viewers, he said he got his stuff back, including “his paraphernalia.”

He then got angry saying he could have taken on three security guards at the mall he was at today as he walked away, demeaning their physical appearance.  “Where am I going to get 86’ed next?” he asked. “Where my haters at?”

“UNC chill” a commenter wrote, while he blocked and swore at those sending negative comments. “This puffin gets me coughing,” he concluded after he coughed, while saying he was waiting for his “soccer mom haters.”  

Our Town Reno reporting, December 26, 2024

Thursday 12.26.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Local Student Navigates Risks and Rewards of Chaturbate to Help Pay For Studies

Lydia Huerta an assistant professor of gender, race and identity at UNR says many students partake in sex work in Nevada to help pay for their tuition as escorts, on Only Fans or through Sugar Daddy type websites.

Elijah Reyes recently interviewed one student who provides live-streamed webcam performances on the Chaturbate website. He created a documentary modulating her voice and never showing her face to hide her identity.  

The student says she chose Chaturbate as you can do it entirely on your own, the money isn’t taxed and goes 100% to her, without any cut for the website, which generates revenue from the audience when they purchase tokens using their credit cards.  

She said after being verified she was 18, she started performing on the website last wintermester.

Here are excerpts from the documentary (above), reorganized for clarity, where she explained how she uses certain tags to get views, and how she feels overall about making money from this type of website: 

“Most of the tags are just kind of descriptive of me and what I know will get the most hits. So it's mainly like glasses, petite, 19, stuff like that.

Because the younger you are, the hotter you are, I guess. 

And then I just mainly play video games or paint or play piano. And then I have a menu where they can tip me to do other things. They can pay me in tokens. Each token is worth a nickel, and they can just buy it through CB with a card or whatever.

And the more you tip, the more you get to see, the more I guess, personal I'll be with you. So, like, if you're a high tipper, I'm more likely to do private shows with you where it's just you and nobody else could spy in… 

Then there's also a link to my throne, which is, basically an Amazon wish list, but you can't backtrack to get my address. I like it to be honest. [Viewers are] very responsive. 

You know, it's like, it's a means to an end, means to money. I thought it was going to kind of make me a little bit more self conscious.

But to be honest, it gave me more self esteem. You know? I have men on the internet tell me how beautiful I am and how certain aspects of myself they like or, like, how I don't seem fake in my streams, and I like that. Like, I'm very authentic. I don't do voices and shit.

I'm pretty proud of what I do just because, you know, I'm not ashamed of it. 

If people record my streams and post them in other places, and I find them, I can get them taken down immediately, for copyright and stuff, because it's a huge safety risk to be posting them on other sites where my region blockers aren't on. 

I can block states … and whole countries if I really want to. And that way, people can't see my streams if they're from those places, even with a VPN on. 

Their terms of service is very lengthy, and it's a lot of, like, [what] you cannot speak about, you know, off-site payments, meetups…

If people are [pushy about] your real name, age, birthplace, stuff like that, they can get banned.

And they can't access any personal information from your profile. 

I plan to work, with teenagers, I guess, in the future. And I know that a lot of people in my profession or my future profession will get fired over doing pornography in the past. But I think that's wrong because their private life is their private life.

And even if it's not private, you know, that's not something that you would show the children…

 But I do worry about what, like, my parents would think, but I do my best to hide that from them.

I mean, if they find out, they find out. Positive is you become a lot more open minded. I feel like it definitely helps you kind of mature over things that, like, you know …  young adults would kind of shy away from. Like, nudity, I don't care, to be honest. Like, I'm very I'm a very open sex positive person, and I think that it's very healthy for sites like Chaturbate to exist.”

In other parts of the interview, she focused on the negatives, such as extremely creepy men and even dangerous stalkers:  

“ I'll have fathers who say that I look like their daughters, and it turns them on. Not even, like, stepdaughters either…

And there's also the stalkers. I've had two already.

My first stalker was actually, like, one of the first people who'd entered my streams. They were really cool at first. They gave me lots of money, but they were also very kind, and they helped me out a lot when I was first starting on how to, like, how things worked, what made more money, what didn't, you know, stuff like that. 

And so I let him become my moderator, which meant that he could kick people out. He could promote my room, and he could see, like, tips and, like, what the people who tipped said…

And then he started getting really pushy, saying that I owed him things and such and such. And then he started lying to his friends, saying that I was his girlfriend, and then having his friends come into my streams and kind of, like, yell at me or, you know, degrade me for that when we weren't like that. Also, he was in high school, so that was really weird. And then he got really crazy when I told him, like, back off, please.

And he bought a plane ticket to where he thought I lived. Went, couldn't find me, went back home, and then I said that I was going to a Hozier concert, and he bought tickets and went, and so I couldn't go because he threatened to kill me. That sucked. Well, I blocked him from saying anything, as well as reported his accounts and his old accounts on CB, Instagram, Discord, Snapchat, everything. And, I haven't really heard from him since, so I think it's resolved.

It's been a couple months. 

The second one found my Snapchat, like, my personal Snapchat with all my information … my name, all that, and, threatened to send it to my streams so that everybody would know. 

And through that, he found my Instagram, my parents, my brother, all of that. And it was a 1 in a 1000000 chance that he could've done that, but it still happened and that really scared me. Because, like, you know, my parents and my brother aren't as careful as I am.

He got arrested. I told Chaturbate, and they have a team of lawyers specifically for models who are put in danger, and that kind of stuff.

Trafficking and stalking are really big issues in the porn industry. And so they took him and took him to court for, I think, blackmail and stalking. So that is part of the risk. For me, personally, there aren't many more risks than that just because I don't bring other people into my streams. But some of my streamer friends do.

You know, like, they'll do, like, actual porn, and bring in, like, a man or a woman. And that's way riskier because, you know, they can assault you, rape you, put cameras up, steal, burglary, all that stuff. I'm not a porn enjoyer, believe it or not. I think it's very fake. There's a loss of passion and intimacy.

You know? It's all very staged, and I get why. And I get that, like, you know, like, that's how you have to do it. It's kind of boring to me, which is why when I started streaming, I didn’t want to be that fake person. 

I don't change my voice. Nothing like that. Just to kind of, you know, show people that these are real human beings, not just, like, actors on a TV show.”

Finally, she explained she has been doing less Chaturbate of late, has another job now to help pay for her studies, and that her current passions include skateboarding, painting, sculpting and writing poetry: 

“I think that it's important that people know that, you know, there's other people who are going through the same things, and it's nice to read about that. And I've had a lot of very traumatic experiences that, you know, not a lot of people can even fathom. And, you know, that really, is a basis for a lot of my poetry. 

Can I tell you?

Can I tell you? Spare all the ugliness that spreads across my tongue as I dress in the mirror, how heavy it all feels in my eyes. Speak of the past as if I had never lived in the present nor believe in a future. 

The irony of wanting more and growing less. Contradictory of loving myself and wanting nothing to do with me any longer.

The tipping from the deep end to the high of emotions like a seesaw on the playground. 

Can I tell you just how much these tiny pills help my everything, every day? 

How I will miss people even before they've gone for a time? 

Can I tell you that my love is different depending from being to being? 

I never love anyone like I love my mom, but that doesn't mean I have no love to give anyone else.

I hold a plethora so large that I must customize and categorize it all to fit. 

Say every little thought I feel like it is forcing itself out of my lips even if it's something of no importance. 

Explain how I crave intimacy, but the thought of it is scarier than death to me. 

Sing every song on the radio because I spend every waking hour tuning in. 

Ask all the questions to quench my curiosity.”

Our Town Reno reporting, December 2024

Friday 12.20.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Bridget, Volunteering on the First Night of a Good Neighbors Warming Center in Downtown Reno

“This is the Reno I grew up in, the Reno that supports and cares about each other,” Bridget said.  

Shortly after nine p.m., last night, Natasha, an elderly woman in a purple coat and slippers, holding a flyer for the Good Neighbors Warming Center walked into a side entrance of the St. Thomas Aquinas Cathedral on W. 2nd street, saying she was afraid she would “freeze to death.”

Lily Baran had her quickly sign an intake form and she was shown a cozy room with cots and new sleeping bags.  “Oh!” she said delightfully when she was told there was water, hygiene products and snacks as well.

The mood was caring and compassionate. Baran said she recognized her from a Family Soup Mutual Aid gathering, while they chit chatted about her past.

A half dozen volunteers prepared the reception area, tried out which keys worked for which bathroom and brought in new boxes of supplies from outside. 

“We’ve been discussing having an emergency shelter for a while,” a parishioner at St. Thomas Bridget said.  “So I was really excited to volunteer to help make it a reality.”

Recorded deaths for the unhoused reached a record high of 135 neighbors last year, that number having tragically gone up for an eight consecutive year, despite the Cares Campus being open, which as our recent reporting has indicated some individuals avoid for a myriad of reasons, including a lack of perceived safety to feeling crammed into a warehouse, prison like environment.

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Volunteers decided to take it upon themselves to find churches to have 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. caring sleeping environments for this winter, when discussions with Reno city officials were unproductive. 

The Reno First United Methodist Church, the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd are all on the list for upcoming nights stretching into early March. 

The program in collaboration with RISE which runs the often full Our Place shelter is open to women, families, and single dads with children. 

“I’m just optimistic that we can help provide a little bit of respite for women and children that are on the streets and don't have a place as we get colder and colder each night,” Bridget, a self-described 5th generation Reonite said. 

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“I think it is very much needed. I think if we look at the statistics here in Reno, we have a lot of unmet need for our unhoused community. We just don't have enough beds. So if we can just do this in the winter months, it'll help prevent somebody from possibly dying of exposure.”

Bridget said this church had experience as an overflow shelter during the pandemic, and its rector started NOTS (Night Off the Streets) in Carson City, which operates from November through March on a similar model.

“It's part of our fundamental teachings…love the stranger, clothe the naked, shelter the homeless,” she concluded.

Our Town Reno reporting, December 18, 2024

Wednesday 12.18.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

HeaterBloc Reno Gives Out Tent-Safe Heaters To Help the Unhoused

HeaterBloc Reno is a new grassroots coalition helping the unhoused survive the bitter winter cold.

With average nightly temperatures below freezing, looming large for many unhoused, is the threat of hypothermia and death by environmental exposure. To combat this concern, a new mutual aid group, HeaterBloc Reno, has emerged to provide tent-safe, do-it-yourself heaters to the unhoused community. However, before coming here, the heaters proved their success elsewhere.

“HeaterBloc fostered more connection and collaboration with unhoused neighbors than I’d ever before experienced, and I now know that's crucial to movement work,” Kelsey Corvidae, who founded the group in Reno, explained.

 In 2012, Corvidae had moved from Reno and spent time in Philadelphia and Colorado Springs, where they learned about the heaters and their success in other cities. After spending last year in the harsh Colorado winter helping make heaters with a mutual aid group there, Corvidae moved back to Reno and learned a HeaterBloc group didn’t exist in Reno. So they decided to start it. 

According to Corvadae, “Bloc” refers to an affinity group or coalition, and the heaters are made using a guide which can be located online. The instructions state “The cost of the Copper Coil Burner is around $2.00 each and the Enclosure is about $5 in parts,” making the heaters cost roughly $7 total. 

The items used are mostly household, like a mason jar and copper tubing, and have built-in safety features to prevent fires.

Corvidae says the original guide can still be followed “step by step”, but they’ve made some innovations to it in Reno, such as replacing the dinner plate at the base with one that is 3D printed. They also now soder the coil to the jar lid as opposed to using JB weld.  

For Corvidae, distributing these heaters encourages connection and collaboration with the unhoused community in a way that’s uniquely different from handing someone a meal or single-use item. “The nature of the heater encourages a recurring relationship between the person who makes it and the person who uses it,” they said. 

Corvidae explained how when they first pass one out, they’ll accompany it with a demonstration and safety lesson. This fosters more of a friendship- “When I give someone a heater I offer them my phone number, I ask their name and where they're camping, I try to figure out how I can check in on this person and that starts a connection, a potential friendship,” they said.

When asked about the biggest barriers to reaching those in need, Corvidae was blunt and to the point. They said it is the “City’s endless efforts to disappear those in need, full stop.” They said it's hard to “keep tabs on our neighbors who are forced to stay on the move constantly.”

Furthermore, Corvidae added the people who need the heaters the most may not be able to, or feel safe coming to a “big line downtown.” In response, their group plans to visit camps and distribute all around town directly.

Despite the barriers, Corvidae has experienced the impact of the heaters firsthand. Last month, while doing a distribution downtown, a group of unhoused friends stopped by to chat. One person excitedly told them they recognized the design from a past winter in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and that it had saved their life from the cold then. They were excited to get the word out to their friends that the heaters had arrived in Reno, and volunteered to help. 

Ultimately, Corvidae sees housing as a human right, and thinks that this is too often portrayed as a “fringe-radical view”. The hope of collectives is that “we attract others who know these same basic truths, and can make plans for larger community actions, while [also] making our friends tent heaters.”

With this being a grassroots effort, the local community plays an essential role in ensuring Corvidae’s group is successful. They’re “local on all levels”, and have been receiving support from other mutual aid groups like Hampton House, Biggest Little Food Not Bombs, and Family Soup Mutual Aid to name a few.

If you are interested in getting involved or supporting HeaterBloc Reno, they can be contacted via Instagram @heaterblocreno, email on heaterblocreno@proton.me and accept donations via cash app: $heaterblocreno

Our Town Reno reporting by Dan Mariani

Tuesday 12.17.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

How does the Nevada Cares Campus treat and help those sleeping there?

With concerns from many in the community about why so many neighbors without housing still avoid the Cares Campus, and with recurring accounts we receive of favoritism, racism, unhealthy food, unclear guidelines, drug use, feeling cramped and unsafe from both people sleeping there and staff, Isaac Cancoby recently went around the compound on 4th street to find out more.

He met several people who shared their displeasure, mostly in general terms but with a few specific situations which disturbed them as well.  Overall, the Cares Campus is still described by many as a warehouse with overworked staff. People staying there say they see few of their friends and acquaintances getting into permanent housing, while growing increasingly annoyed at their experience staying and sleeping there. The official numbers back this up.

While unique clients by month have gone down of late from over 1,300 in June to less than 850 in November, so has the “total number of exits to permanent housing,” from 39 in August to 18 in November.   

In an email forwarded to Our Town Reno, Dana Searcy, the County’s Division Director for Housing and Homeless Services, took the time to respond to some of the complaints made by people who say they are currently sleeping at the Cares Campus.

Those people all wished to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals.

One said her ex-boyfriend had a stroke while staying at the Cares Campus and was sent to the hospital. Upon his return, the next day, she alleges staff refused him entry.  

“Typically if a participant goes to the hospital and staff are aware of hospital discharge dates, Case Managers coordinate with the operator staff to have a bed available upon return,” Searcy wrote.  “If a participant leaves campus voluntarily or is checked into a hospital while off campus, we have no communication from the participant, and the participant is absent for 24 hours or longer, their bed will be given to another person and the participant can request a bed upon return; a bed will be issued on a first come, first served basis. If a participant is asked to leave the shelter for violation of policy and is issued a sit-out, the participant can return to request a bed at the end of the sit-out period or can file an appeal to request the sit-out period be removed.”

This person staying at the Cares Campus also complained about unclear rules, which they said keep changing, without clear notices or flyers being delivered.  “Rules are outlined in the Cares Campus policy, which was first available in 2021, edited in November 2022, and has not been updated since,” Searcy wrote back in detail. “As new buildings open there may be operational procedures developed to align with the campus policy. Upon enrollment into any program at Cares Campus, staff review basic rules with participants, and they are offered a copy of the policy if they would like one. Participants sign a waiver at program enrollment, which includes several guidelines they must follow while on campus, which are a summary of the rules outlined in the policy. In several common areas on campus, the rules and associated sit-outs are posted for participants to see. The policy is publicly posted on the Housing and Homeless Services website and participants have been given copies of the policy if they ask staff for a copy.”

One rule several people said had recently changed was about no longer being allowed to bring food or ice inside.  We asked about that specifically in a follow up email but did not hear back.  

Another person staying at Cares Campus said she had over the counter medication taken away from her while trying to get through security and she didn’t understand why it wasn’t allowed and why she was also refused entry.  

“I have gas reflux… I suffer from that, it’s very painful,” the woman said.  “They acted like they did a drug bust and just totally kicked me out…” 

“Every individual entering the Cares Campus must enter through security, which includes the person walking through a magnetometer and personal items being x-rayed through a bag scanner,” Searcy wrote. “If illicit drugs or unmarked pills are found, the drugs or pills are not allowed to be brought on campus and the individual is asked to dispose of the drugs or pills. Participants are responsible for managing their personal medications and are encouraged to keep personal medications on their person in a purse or backpack, or in their storage lockers or storage bins. Personal property is not searched unless the individual abandons their property at the campus, or there is an emergency or legal situation warranting a search. Legally prescribed medications to an individual are not seized. If an individual has medication that is not prescribed to them, it is disposed of properly.”

Others said they didn’t understand why a basketball court was recently added, with almost no one playing, and most of the regular Cares Campus population over 45 and disabled.  Several complained of a lack of resources to change their predicament with minimal interactions with case workers to actually get into housing or receive needed help.  

“On campus Case Management and Behavioral Health help connect participants with resources needed,” Searcy wrote.  “The Case Management and Behavioral Health team focus on trying to connect people with resources off campus in hopes of establishing connections to resources that they will be able to maintain when they move into housing.  VOA provides shuttle transportation to several community services on a daily/weekly basis.  Case Management staff take individuals to DMV and Social Security on a weekly basis. Several community agencies provide outreach at Cares and Our Place.”

Our Place in Sparks, which helps unhoused women, children and families, is often at full capacity, and gets much better overall reviews from those we’ve been able to interview who stayed there compared to the Cares Campus.

Reporting by Isaac Cancoby shared with Our Town Reno

Monday 12.16.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Nevada's Dinosaurs Get Their Due with Paleontologist Joshua Bonde

Joshua Bonde, a citizen of the Te-Moak tribe of Western Shoshone, and doctor of Geology and Earth Science, grew up on a farm in Fallon, Nevada. Friday afternoon, he gave a talk titled, “Nevada has Dinosaurs!” at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno.

 A packed crowd of dinosaur enthusiasts listened and cheered as Bonde shared his knowledge on the topic. With him, he brought a real fossil which he actually trusted the crowd to pass around. He intertwined stories about his personal journey, which has ultimately led to becoming director of the Nevada State Museum in Carson City, as well as other impressive achievements, which include discovering a fossil of the first non-avian dinosaur in Nevada.

The presentation began with Bonde explaining how Nevada is not known as a “Dinosaur State”. This is due to its complicated geology, leaving only slivers of dinosaur aged rock. However, in 1976, the United States Geological Survey reported findings of dinosaur bones in the Silver State, which Bonde said were promptly shipped to a museum on the East Coast. 

Bonde shared how growing up in Fallon, his family would often go on camping and fishing trips around Northern Nevada which gave him a familiarity with more of the remote, rural areas. These of course included Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nye County, which hosts fossils of an Ichthyosaur, that also inspired Bond’s love for paleontology.

 The turning point, however, was when his parents took his brother and him on a trip to Berkeley to see an animatronic dinosaur program. “I was terrified and hooked at age eight,” Bonde said. 

After high school, Bonde would go on to attend the University of Nevada, Reno. For years he worked as a student worker at the W.M Keck Museum which hosts an incredible assortment of minerals, ores, and fossils, amongst other items. “I reorganized everything in there, and got my first chance to go on a fossil dig,” he remembered.

Later on, Bonde would pursue his masters at Montana State University. Under the tutelage of his professor James Schmitt, they would end up on a scouting trip in the Valley of Fire State Park in Clark County 2004. Though they were looking for Cretaceous turtles, they ended up having to drive through a flash flood. Though risky, Bonde said they would end up discovering the first dinosaur fauna in the state, and they would characterize a whole new type of rock in geology, all the while he was trying to do turtle research for his thesis. 

Later on in 2008, Bonde would go on to make his own great discovery. “I wanted to bring something back home, I was always taught that if you leave home you have to bring something back,” he said. “For me this was bringing back the paleontological skills I had developed.”

 This discovery would be the fossils of what he would name the Nevadadromeus schmitti, which he discovered in the Valley of Fire State Park. This would be the first non-avian dinosaur discovered in Nevada, and the oldest of its subfamily. “Nevada is of course because it was discovered here, dromeus means runner, because it was a small fast two legged plant eater when reconstructed with unique femur features, and schmitti was in honor of my professor Jim Schmitt,” Bonde said of the inspiration for the name. 

Bonde has since continued digging, and leads student expeditions having held teaching positions at several of the local universities, including currently as an adjunct at UNR. He shared a story of how his wife who is also a paleontologist and him actually made a discovery the day after their wedding. “We got married at the Fallon courthouse… and what do two paleontologists do after their wedding? We went fossil hunting and found a dinosaur fossil,” he said. 

After Bonde gave his presentation, he took questions from the crowd. One person asked what they should do if they encounter what they perceive to be fossils while out on the trail. “Leave it alone, take a picture, write down the GPS coordinates, and send it to me,” Bonde said. He explained how depending on what it is, it could be illegal to remove, plus you damage the contextual data by taking it out of its place. 

Another spectator asked Bonde if they’re still shipping out all the fossils found in Nevada. Bonde explained as director of the state museum, he has been proud to be part of developing a repository for fossils to remain in state. However, sometimes fossils are still removed for different research purposes and displays, and that’s something he only has so much control over. 

A third question was asked about if Bonde plans to lead any public fossil hunts. He said this is something they have looked into the logistics for, and would like to eventually pursue as a museum.

After the questions ceased, Bonde was greeted with raucous applause.

Our Town Reno photos and reporting by Dan Mariani






Friday 12.13.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Despite Not Being a Candidate in Search, Jackie Bryant Gets Reno City Manager Position

After dismissing a $75,000 candidate search, which didn’t include interim city manager Jackie Bryant who didn’t apply, the City Council yesterday unanimously voted for her to be appointed as the new city manager.

During public comment, former mayoral and council candidate William Mantle called the process “problematic” and said her tenure would be tainted right out of the gate, through no fault of her own.

Mayor Hillary Schieve dismissed such concerns saying “we wanted an experienced leader with a passion for our local community. Someone who is approachable, trustworthy, and solution oriented, and that is Jackie Bryant.”

Bryant becomes the fourth city manager in 10 years, following the July resignation of Doug Thornley in the wake of a This is Reno investigation into improper travel reimbursements for several council members.

The city manager position is arguably the most powerful in the city, which also pays over $350,000 per year, with media reporting it will now increase to $369,000 for Bryant.

Sabra Newby resigned from the position during the pandemic, while prior to that, Andrew Clinger was terminated in 2016 amid sexual harassment complaints.

As time went by in the interim position, Bryant said she became more comfortable being at the top of the city’s administrative structure.

“As I step into this role, I am excited to build on our momentum and continue working together to serve the Biggest Little City and its vibrant, diverse communities,” Bryant said. “My priorities remain focused on revitalizing our downtown, enhancing public safety resources, maintaining the critical infrastructure that supports our growing community, and improving access to housing resources for all who call the Biggest Little City home.”

Bryant who has a background in law and experience in regulatory roles was previously a Deputy Chief of Staff for former Republican Governor and current UNR President Brian Sandoval.
Our Town Reno reporting, Dec. 12, 2024

Thursday 12.12.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Free Lunch Wednesday at the Newman Center: An Offer UNR Students Can't Refuse

With many students at UNR struggling with rising tuition and cost of living, food insecurity and an inability to eat healthy is unfortunately rampant.

Every Wednesday, Our Lady of Wisdom Catholic Church offers a free lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. for all students at the University of Nevada, Reno, at the Newman Center, as part of efforts to help.

This particular event is organized primarily by the Knights of Columbus, a global Catholic fraternal service organization.

One of the event's dedicated volunteers, Rick Goebel, spends each Wednesday greeting students along Virginia Street, inviting them to stop by for a meal.

“Different groups make the lunch each week, but the Knights help with most of it," says Goebel. “Today, the volunteers are from Immaculate Conception Church, and each week, other groups within the diocese contribute food to help.”

A Reno native, Goebel attended Bishop Manogue High School and later graduated from the University of Nevada, Reno. As an alum who attended Our Lady of Wisdom Church during his college years, he felt a personal connection when he was asked to volunteer.

Seeing students gather each week brings Goebel a sense of purpose. “It’s motivational for me to see more and more people come, to witness the organic growth and the good things that are happening here. It’s rewarding to see it grow every week,” he says.

Leo Carew III, the state treasurer for the Knights of Columbus for Nevada, has been with the organization for eight years. Carew emphasizes the organization’s commitment to fostering a spirit of service among young people. “We are trying to give back to the students to let them know it is okay to serve, to say yes in volunteer work,” he says. By encouraging students to participate in these community lunches, Carew hopes to inspire them to embrace volunteerism and the positive impact it can have on others.

Apart from the free lunches each Wednesday, the Newman Center also offers free coffee Monday-Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., as well as a waffle bar each Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.

Reporting and photos by Matthew Means shared with Our Town Reno

Wednesday 12.11.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Downtown Reno Community Fridge Gets Code Enforcement Visit

After a reported complaint and a visit from Reno Code Enforcement concerning a community fridge outside Lily Baran’s home at 638 Elko Avenue, all has been sorted for this valuable and healthily stocked resource to proceed.

“Take What You Need, Leave What You Can!” is its tagline also written out in Spanish.

Cassie Harris, the City of Reno Communications Manager, wrote back to Our Town Reno, saying she was able to track down an update indicating a previous complaint with “concerns including visible junk, trash, debris, outdoor storage, and a structure encroaching on required setbacks.”

Code Enforcement went to assess the situation on November 19th, before sending Baran a courtesy letter asking for corrections by December 4th.

“Upon reinspection by Code Enforcement, the identified issues were resolved, the property is in compliance, and the case is now closed,” the information relayed by Harris indicated.

The fridge has a sign which indicates “together we strengthen our community and redistribute existing resources by providing tools and frameworks to ensure people-supported, ongoing, equal access to healthy food.” It often has inside or next to it fresh produce either purchased or grown in local gardens, as well as canned goods, water, milk, eggs, bread, deli meats, cheese, healthy snacks, baby formula and pet food.

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Any donations or any questions can be sent to the biggestlittlefreepantry Venmo.

Neighbors in need are often seen going to and from this outside location to get healthy food in a convenient, close to downtown, no questions asked, no interactions needed mode of operation. Baran and volunteers restock the fridge to benefit whoever is walking by.

Our Town Reno reporting, December 10, 2024

Tuesday 12.10.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Echo Gill, Bringing Her Lived Experience to Shape Help for Locally Unhoused

Echo Gill and Lawrence Doddson who are members of LEAB pose with Housing is a Human Right tee-shirts.

Echo Gill, who’s spent most of her life in Reno, has gone from being unhoused living in a shelter, to now shaping policy with local leadership. 

She achieves this by serving as a member of what’s called the Lived Experience Advisory Board, which she’s been with since the day it was founded in July 2023, to “provide guidance on homeless services from those who have used them,” according to Washoe County.

Currently, they’re in the process of setting up their latest big project- a Workforce Initiative Project- in collaboration with Two Hearts Community Development and the University of Nevada, Reno. 

Before the project was conceived, Gill’s group reviewed the policies and procedures of the “Northern Nevada Continuum of Care,” which has as its mission “to ensure homelessness is rare, brief, and non-recurring.”

After making some suggestions and giving advice, Gill said the county took action.

“The services aren’t really tied to each other,” Gill said when asked of the main challenges for the unhoused community. “It’s really difficult for people to find what services are out there because our county has a surplus of services. It’s just that the majority of them are unknown.”

Taking advantage of these services was key for Gill and her two kids to get rehoused when she was in the shelter, except it wasn’t as seamless as it could’ve been. 

“It took longer than it should have. We actually received our voucher after we had been in the shelter for six months, but Section 8 had to update all their computers, so it ended up taking about three months for that to happen, then about three more for us to find somebody that would accept the voucher.”

The Housing Choice Voucher program, formerly known as Section 8, “provides assistance to eligible low- and moderate- income families to rent housing in the private market.” Though Gill says those struggling with homelessness do know about these particular programs, it’s the other side of the equation, the landlords, which has been problematic.

“Right now on average, about 50 percent of the housing vouchers go unused, and it’s because they can’t find landlords that are willing to work with [them],” Gill said. 

This is despite the Nevada Housing Authority offering a landlord incentive program, which includes “rent payment stability, regular inspections to protect their property, direct payment into their bank accounts, and other protections beyond the day of move-out.”

Gill believes the landlords don’t want the formerly unhoused as tenants due to the stigmas and negative stereotypes associated with them, such as being destructive and underemployed. Contrary to this, Gill knows many unhoused who actually “have full time jobs”, and says that these stigmas are a dangerous common misunderstanding of their reality.

“There’s a lot of misconceptions about homelessness, especially right now… It takes one missed check and now you’re living in your car with your whole family. It’s not necessarily gambling or addiction issues anymore, it’s more of cost of living issues,” Gill said.  

“It’s the disconnect between the homeless people, the homeless services, and the landlords,” she said, that is causing real issues.

She wishes people understood more of the “why” in how it happens, especially with those chronically homeless. A lot of times Gill says there are mental health issues that go untreated, and if we were to come together as a community, then it would make a big difference. 

“Treating everybody like a human all the time,” Gill said, when asked how people could better support the unhoused. In her own experience, she carried the guilt of being unhoused while being a parent. This really got to her mentally, she says, and she avoided saying she was unhoused or at the shelter while looking for jobs and in casual conversations. 

“You don’t want them to know you live in a shelter because now they’re going to look at you different… it was like a dirty secret,” she said. 

Gill had moved from Reno to Arizona, and was renting a house with her kids and late husband there. When that lease expired and her landlord at the time didn’t want to renew, she desperately tried to remain housed, but despite working overtime, she couldn’t raise enough money to find a new place.

“I was working like 60 hours a week and it just didn't matter. I could not… could not make it work,” she said. 

Gill ended up coming back to Reno, where she spent a year at the RISE-run Our Place shelter. There she said they were “really great” and she ended up “lucky,” not having to struggle to find services because she had a really great caseworker. Besides the support from the voucher and caseworker, Gill shared it was relying on her personal community that got her through that trying time.

However, though it worked for Gill, the system can still be improved. Gill thinks there is a “secretiveness” in services available due to people competing for funding. She thinks we need to step away from that. 

“We need to start sharing with each other more and communicating more. And I think it would turn out to help the people that are experiencing homelessness a lot,” she said. 

Our Town Reporting by Daniel Mariani

Tuesday 12.10.24
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 
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