New Rules to Tackle Size of Neighborhood Casinos
Las Vegas Sun
By Launce Rake
LAS VEGAS -- The Clark County Commission on
Wednesday directed county planning staff to draft a new ordinance
that would specify how big a neighborhood casino can be and what
design elements it can have.Such off-Strip hotels have become
big business in residential areas, but their growth has spawned
concern and at times vehement opposition from neighboring homeowners.
Recent battles have focused on Station Casinos' plans for new
hotels on West Charleston Boulevard and Durango Drive. Commissioner
Lynette Boggs McDonald said a 1998 state law defines where new
neighborhood casinos can go, but lacked specificity on how those
casinos should look. "What we seem to have to deal with repeatedly
at this level is what a neighborhood casino should be," she
said. Boggs McDonald, until last year a member of Station Casinos'
board of directors, asked planners to convene a stakeholders group
that would include citizens, representatives of the gaming industry
and of the Clark County School District and Regional Transportation
Commission to come up with design recommendations to bring back
to the board. She said the county also should take those recommendations
to the Regional Planning Coalition to be shared with the neighboring
cities. "I believe this issue truly is valleywide, and if
we could get input from our municipal neighbors, that would be
very valuable," she said. New Commissioner Tom Collins, at
his first zoning meeting, worked on the state law that determined
where the neighborhood casinos would go. He supported the new
ordinance. He said legislators thought they were allowing casinos
much smaller than some of the resort-sized hotels going in now.
"A neighborhood casino is definitely not a resort at the
magnitude that's been allowed," he said. "A neighborhood
casino is a small, little joint with a few extra machines."
The commission asked for the return of the recommendations in
90 days.