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David W. Friedman's avatar

There is so much I could suggest, but I'll start with housing and landlords. How can Reno accurately determine how much new housing should be allowed if they don't tally how many vacant units exist?

A vacancy tax that requires quarterly tallies of vacancies, and that includes Airbnb, then we can accurately see what remedies are required.

The pedestrian problem could be solved if the City (bureaucrats, council members, the mayor) asked the right questions. First, what works? Riverwalk, parks, green spaces, even Midtown has foot traffic. What doesn't work? Vacant store fronts, giant casinos with nothing facing Virginia or Sierra streets except concrete and garage entrances, and the city run albatross superfecta of the underused events center, ballroom, bowling stadium, and former bus station on University Ave.

What brings a vibrant downtown and pedestrians? Local stores besides smoke shops, pawn shops, and liquor stores. Restaurants, bars, cafés, grocery stores, interesting shops. These attract tourists and locals.

What doesn't work? Infill (vacant lots), empty store fronts, useless shops, vagrants, no parking, and closing a major thoroughfare for some festival or another. People drive there, park in a casino garage, hang out for an hour, then leave.

Downtown, to have a vibrant street life, needs affordable housing, a supermarket, and necessities. We don't need another RPM. Downtown needs people, residents, locals, and tourists.

The events center needs a new roof. There's no money to repair it. Turn the bowling stadium into a giant grocery superstore. Think outside the box and stop wasting money on study after study that either fails or is ignored.

Peace.

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gayle valdes's avatar

I cannot wait until we have a mayor who is more detail oriented. Schieve is all over the place and its become worse with Bryant as ICM. Duerr has a hard couple of years ahead.

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