Station
Casinos Sees a Future Near North End of the
Valley
Station Casinos -- already the
largest owner of casino-zoned land in the Las
Vegas Valley -- recently paid $47 million for
vacant land in North Las Vegas with the intention
of someday developing a hotel there.
Last
month Station bought six parcels totaling about
54 acres at the northeast corner of the Las
Vegas Beltway and Losee Road from Unlimited
Holdings Inc. of Las Vegas.
Station
spokeswoman Lori Nelson said the company intends
to develop a hotel there but said it could take
years for the company to evaluate the site.
"It's
too premature to move forward with any plans,"
she said. "It's still a very undeveloped
area and is not ready for gaming at this point."
Under
Senate Bill 208, a 1997 law restricting the
development of neighborhood casinos in the Las
Vegas Valley, Station will have to jump through
several hoops to obtain zoning.
The
state law would require Station to first obtain
approval from the North Las Vegas City Council.
In order for the plan to pass muster, the casino
would have to be a certain distance from schools,
churches and homes. Beyond that, the company
would have to prove that the resort wouldn't
hurt the region's "quality of life"
and will not be detrimental to the "health,
safety and welfare" of the community, among
other standards.
Either
side can appeal the local authority's decision
to a state Gaming Policy Committee review panel
made up of state regulators and members of the
public.
Nelson
said Station will be prepared to meet those
requirements "when the time is right."
SB208
-- which has only been tested twice -- is responsible
for blocking plans by both Station and competitor
Boyd Gaming to build suburban hotels.
In
March 2001 the state review panel overturned
a North Las Vegas City Council decision that
would have allowed Station to build a casino
at the Craig Ranch Golf Course. Similarly, the
review panel voted in 2000 to stop Boyd from
building a casino in a Spring Valley neighborhood
in southwest Las Vegas that had been approved
by the Clark County Commission.
In
both cases, surrounding residents mobilized
to stop the casinos by appealing to the review
panel.
"They
were well organized, they passed around the
hat and they showed up in force," said
Chuck Gardner, a Las Vegas attorney who represented
residents against Station's proposed Craig Ranch
casino.
SB208
makes it difficult for gaming companies to fight
local opponents because it establishes a "fairly
high standard based on subjective elements,"
Gardner said.
Station's
parcel is just a few miles from the Aliante
master planned community, which features a piece
of land that is zoned for a casino.
Experts
believe that Station would be the likely developer
of the Aliante casino with landowner American
Nevada Co. American Nevada is owned by the Greenspun
family, who also own the Las Vegas Sun. American
Nevada previously partnered with Station to
build Green Valley Ranch Station. American Nevada
contributed the land for the property and, through
the Greenspun family, maintains a 50 percent
interest in the property.
Nelson
declined to comment specifically on the Aliante
opportunity, and officials with American Nevada
could not be reached for comment.
In
September, Station sold 34 acres near the southwest
corner of Craig Road and Martin Luther King
Boulevard to developers for $18.4 million. The
land now contains a restriction on building
a casino because Station allowed the right to
build a casino on the land to expire.
Station
intended to develop at the nearby Craig Ranch
Golf Course site instead because it was farther
away from homes.
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