March 5, 2020

Page 6

BY TEMI DUROJAIYE

ON FILE On March 2, Nevada kicked off a two-week filing period for candidates seeking election and reelection to appear on the ballot. The primary election will take place June 9, with early voting from May 23 to June 5. The general election is Nov. 3, with an early voting period extending from Oct. 17-30. Candidates who appeared at the Washoe County Clerk’s office on the first day of filing included Richard “Skip” Daly, who’s running for the Nevada Assembly seat he currently holds for District 31; Teresa Benitez-Thompson, the Assembly’s Majority Floor Leader and representative of District 27; and Natha Anderson, who’s running to represent District 30. Anderson, who’s a teacher and lobbyist for the Nevada State Education Association, spoke about the educational priorities she’d pursue if elected. “I would say that fixing the education funding formula is number one, which is already going to be a large, large point of contention, I believe,” she said. “I would say number two would have to be our class sizes. We have to start addressing them—our class sizes and case loads. … When it comes to our counselors right now, we’ve got some of our elementary school counselors who’ve got 700 kids on their case loads. It’s very difficult to offer the social and emotional Natha Anderson filed to run for Nevada learning necesAssembly District 30 on March 2. sary when you’ve PHOTO/JERI DAVIS got so many.” Anderson said that addressing education funding would require taking a look at the state’s current tax structure. “Do we have everything the way we should?” she said. “Are there other elements that should also be considered? And when I say elements, I mean some of the loopholes. Do we need to continue to have all of those loopholes? And, if so, great—but let’s try to figure out if it’s been helping us or not, as a community.” Examples of the loopholes Anderson would like to take a closer look at include things like the corporate welfare the state has so readily handed out to large companies like Tesla, deferring their taxes that might otherwise be put toward infrastructure needs like schools. Anderson supported the WC-1 ballot question of 2016 that raised Washoe County’s sales tax to one of the highest in the nation. She said she’s been pleased with the way funds from the higher taxes have been utilized. “I think we’re doing the best we can with how quick we can get our buildings done, our reconfigurations that are necessary,” Anderson said. “We’re really trying to get the needs to our students as much as possible. I look at Poulakidas [Elementary School]. It’s awesome. … When I go to Poulakidas, the kids are just beaming. And it just makes you so happy.”

—JERI DAVIS

6

|

RN&R

|

03.05.20

Canyon Flats, 661 N. Center St., will house about 506 university students and staff. PHOTO/TEMI DUROJAIYE

Bring it home

in price from $3,400 to $5,000 per semester. The deal for both apartment complexes will cost $10.1 million and will be paid primarily from insurance settlements. The university began to look for a new deal after it was certain that Nye Hall—which houses 530 students— would be reopened in August, following minor renovations to windows, electrical fittings, as well as repairs to the damaged lobby. The renovation costs are just under $10 million dollars, which will also be covered by the insurance. “When it became clear to us in the fall, probably at the end of October, that Nye Hall would be able to be repaired and back online this summer, we realized we didn’t need the entire tower,” Ellis said. “That became the determining factor.” There are no plans to use the offcampus accommodations beyond this year, and students can expect to be in regular dorm residences when Argenta Hall opens at the start of the Fall 2021 semester. Renovations on Argenta Hall are yet to begin, but Ellis expects work to start in the summer and for it to be completed in time.

University settles housing situation for 2020-2021

LOOKING FORWARD

The University of Nevada, Reno recently finalized accommodation plans for first-year students in the 2020-2021 academic year, as the university continues to recover from the devastating accident last July that decommissioned two of its dorm halls, Nye and Argenta. On Feb. 18, the university announced that it had reached an agreement to lease the 838 beds needed from two off-campus apartment complexes currently under construction. Canyon Flats, 661 N. Center St., will house about 506 students and staff, while Uncommon Reno, 1669 N. Virginia St., will accommodate about 330 students and staff. “This is all just incredibly good fortune,” said Shannon Ellis, vice president for the university’s Division of Student Services. “We got lucky that we had these two apartment buildings, one up on Virginia and one right here on Center Street, that they were well under construction and that they would meet the needs of what our numbers were.”

Although accommodation plans for this year’s class of freshmen have been finalized, housing remains a challenge for students as well as the university. The university’s population has grown by over 3,000 students in the last decade and might grow even more over the next decade, making affordable residential options more paramount. Just a few days prior to the accident on July 5, 2019, the university had put out a request for proposals to build affordable student housing on top of its parking structure on Sierra Street for sophomores, juniors and seniors. However, those plans were shelved in order to manage the situation in Argenta and Nye Halls. “We just didn’t know in the days following,” Ellis said. “We didn’t know if Argenta would have to be torn down. We didn’t know if Nye could stay. And, so, the head of facilities called me and I said, ‘Can you just pull it, and we’ll figure out later what we’re going to do?’ Because we had bigger things on our mind.”

The two off-campus options will replace Wolf Pack Tower, which housed 1,300 students and staff, after the university declined to purchase the building or renew its $21 million lease with the Circus Circus. However, the university does not intend to rebrand or rename either of the apartment complexes like it did with Wolf Pack Tower. The only expected changes are the removal of perks such as rooftop hot tubs, free tanning, and a pet care station, which were initially advertised by the complexes but are not part of the university’s residence plan and will be on hold for the duration of UNR’s lease. The apartment complexes offer varying housing options from studios to four-bedroom apartments and will approximate the dorm experience— including study areas, exclusive access to only students and staff, full-time, live-in staff, and more. Additionally, housing rates will mirror the cost of living in a residence hall, and range


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.