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Opinion


LETTERS: Authority a vital community partner

To the editor:

Your Nov. 30 article, "LVCVA, ad agency defend deal," was misleading and lacked the necessary context to provide an accurate picture of the contract between the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority and R&R Partners.


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It left your readers with the misconception that something illegal has transpired. Moreover, I take great issue with what amounts to a personal attack on the authority's Board of Directors, who are charged with the oversight of the agency. The article ultimately questions whether we are doing our jobs properly, which includes ensuring that the room tax dollars funding the authority are spent with the utmost fiscal responsibility. As a board, that is our duty to the residents of Southern Nevada, and we take that responsibility very seriously.

The convention authority is a public agency which conducts meetings under the rules of the open meeting law. The authority is audited every year by an external accounting agency and several times annually by an internal auditor. The purpose of conducting audits is to ensure everything is in compliance, and if it isn't, to correct it. That's exactly what happened in this case: the minor issues found through the authority's self-audit were immediately rectified.

Let's put this in perspective, though, which is something the article also failed to do: The overcharges referenced in the article amounted to less than $2,200. That amounts to .01 percent of the authority's annual marketing budget. It seems inappropriate to place this level of emphasis on such a minor discrepancy.

Unfortunately, what also was lost in the story is the big picture of the work of this agency. Aside from the obvious tourism impact, the convention authority's efforts have contributed to an annual non-gaming economic impact of $2.5 billion at the Las Vegas Convention Center alone, benefiting all our community's residents and businesses. Clearly, the authority's marketing efforts also contribute to the overall annual visitation of 39 million people and a non-gaming economic impact of more than $40 billion. The success of the authority is intrinsically linked to the economic vitality of Southern Nevada as well as our state and should be a great source of pride for the entire community.

Now is not the time for attacks and unfounded criticism of such a vital community partner. Now is the time to do what this community does best in difficult times: to band together, to support each other and to support the industry and entities that generate millions of dollars in tax revenue, thousands of good jobs and improve the quality of life for all of us.

Keith Smith

LAS VEGAS

THE WRITER IS PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF BOYD GAMING, VICE CHAIRMAN OF THE LAS VEGAS CONVENTION AND VISITORS AUTHORITY BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CHAIRMAN OF THE AUTHORITY'S AUDIT COMMITTEE.

Educated voters?

To the editor:

In response to Thomas Mitchell's Nov. 30 column, "Just anybody can vote?":

Mr. Mitchell's concept of having U.S. citizens take a test prior to being eligible to vote is a great idea, except for the fact that the public education system in not designed to teach to success.

Former public school teacher and longtime public education critic John Taylor Gatto holds that centralized schools have the function to provide seven lessons:

1. Stay in class, where you belong.

2. Teach the kids to turn on and off like a light switch.

3. Surrender your will to a predestined chain of command.

4. Only I determine what curriculum you will study.

5. Teach that your self-respect should depend on an observer's measure of your worth.

6. Teach children that they are being watched.

7. Teach that you can't hide.

In my 30 years in the U.S. Navy, I met a lot of people who couldn't pass a civics exam but put their life on the line for the country. Mr. Mitchell, do you want to keep these people from voting?

Melvin C. Bailey Jr.

NORTH LAS VEGAS

Stop fighting Yucca

To the editor:

A solution to Nevada's bloated cost of government is 100 miles north of Las Vegas: Yucca Mountain. Simply stop the endless opposition and massive amounts of federal money would flow into the local economy.

With the help of Nevada's Harry Reid, the most powerful man in the U.S. Senate, Nevada could become the pork capital of America. Thousands of highly paid government and private-industry jobs would be created. The housing market would be revitalized.

Clark County and the city of Las Vegas would not have to make any of those hard decisions. The Clark County School District and University Medical Center could return to business as usual. Research grants would pour into both UNLV and UNR.

Unfortunately, our elected representatives are totally gutless.

CURTIS F. CLARK

BOULDER CITY

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dennis1944@cox.net wrote on December 08, 2008 11:09 PM: Dingy Harry says he wants to save us from the nuclear waste. Everyone I know wants to know why he is selling us out instead of saving us and our country and state on the illegals. Fishing for more illegals to vote, Harry? A**HOLE!


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Ken wrote on December 08, 2008 12:28 PM: Re "In my 30 years in the U.S. Navy, I met a lot of people who couldn't pass a civics exam but put their life on the line for the country. Mr. Mitchell, do you want to keep these people from voting?"

Yes, I want to keep those people from voting. Nothing sickens me more than the entitlement mentality of those who have served.

I served in the military and used to tell people who served with me that the most classless thing you can see is someone with a purple heart on their license plate.

You do your job, you serve, you come home. You don't need to shove it in people's faces that you are a vet and deserve special treatment.

If you can't pass a simple test you shouldn't vote regardless of your history or your work experience.


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mirrell grimes wrote on December 08, 2008 11:21 AM: would you please warn people of a very authentic looking email from the head of security of the U.N. they've put the bells and whistles on it so it does look legit.................I know it's not, but I'm sure there are people who may think different....thanks


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TimeRanger wrote on December 08, 2008 11:07 AM: To Curtis Clark - Just WHERE do you think that "federal money" comes from? Yup, that's right...from we the Taxpayers.


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Ted T wrote on December 08, 2008 10:18 AM: dear fiscal conservative;

1. dean heller and john ensign are not "Dummycrats" they are free spending republicRATS.

2. "Reprocessing has made this a potential ongoing gold mine for Nevadans"; BREAKING NEWS! Yucca is a DUMP not a "reprocessing" plant.


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Randy wrote on December 08, 2008 09:38 AM: Has anyone noticed personal attacks against the LVCVA board? I haven't seen any. All I see is LVCVA spin.

All I noticed were mentions about the LVCVA and R&R misspending money. As far as overcharging $2,200, maybe that is the case with 1 article, but there have been multiple articles on the subject and I bet there is even more overcharging.

At least their spin is starting to address relevant points.


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Joe C wrote on December 08, 2008 09:28 AM: To Melvin C. Bailey Jr.
Your answer to the question about soldiers that can’t pass a civics exam is this.
I don’t want to stop them from voting but highly encourage them not to.

It helps if you know what you are voting, fighting and dying for.
Many have died in illegal wars and wars for profit, so it helps if you are informed.

We all need to inform ourselves to what a corrupt government or business that controls governments gets us into.

After all we have a new capitalism paid for by taxpayers. So I guess economic knowledge is useful too.

Melvin you should be encouraging them to educate themselves so understanding bravery isn’t just about fighting.
Thank you for serving but I respectfully disagree with you.


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RHG wrote on December 08, 2008 09:22 AM: Brian wrote on December 08, 2008 06:00 AM:
Wow, and now the RJ editors publish another letter slamming Reid. And what for this time?

For trying to keep nuclear waste from being stored 70 miles away from Las Vegas.

One slip and there will be no more Nevada.
---------------
Oh please, you must be new to Nevada. The problem with Harry Reid is that he's a hypocrite. He supported nuclear testing out there (yep, they actually exploded "the bomb" there for years) where the dump is going for years and gladly took federal tax money without so much of a yelp about it. Now he's all of sudden concerned about Nevadans getting exposed to nuke waste, yeah right. As usual ol' hapless Harry is playing politics with an issue for the betterment of his party, not the citizens of Nevada.


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fiscal conservative wrote on December 08, 2008 09:20 AM: Kudos to Curtis F. Clark. It's time the
nut job environmentalists like Reid and
the Dummycrats shut the hell up and let
us move forward with this project.
Reprocessing has made this a potential ongoing gold mine for Nevadans. Just like Alaskans get a piece of the pie for their oil, residents could get $5,000 a year if we negotiate now.
Otherwise, it will be here anyway and we will get nothing.
Nuclear power is safe, economical, and it is ready to go. Let's tell these blowhards like elitist Reid who doesn't
like the smell of tourists in the capitol building to jump in Lake Mead!
NEGOTIATE NOW FOR YUCCA MOUNTAIN!


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Virga wrote on December 08, 2008 09:16 AM: That area is contaminated for thousands of years by all the A-bombs that were detonated there. Whats a few more turds in the cesspool going to hurt?


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