101°F
weather icon Clear

City not giving up on finding track operator

Some late interest in possibly operating the motocross park has prompted the city to put the operation and lease contract back out for bid.

The city previously advertised a request for a bid on the 50-acre Eldorado Valley motocross track in June. But at the July proposal due date, no bids had arrived.

With seemingly no parties interested in operating the track, the City Council was scheduled to discuss the issue at its Aug. 13 meeting. Public Works Director Scott Hansen was prepared to recommend that the course be flattened so it would no longer be a liability.

However, shortly before the meeting, Hansen said the city received interest from two potential bidders who heard about the request after the deadline had passed.

“We originally advertised in the (Las Vegas Review-Journal),” Hansen said. “And I don’t think people who are interested in running motocross tracks are reading the legal section of the (Review-Journal).”

Hansen and City Manager David Fraser then made the decision to pull the item from the council agenda, and again issue a request for project bids.

The request for proposal can be found on the Public Works department website, www.bouldercitypublicworks.org. Bids are due Sept. 26.

The city will host a presubmittal meeting Sept. 5 at 8:30 a.m. in the City Hall Large Conference Room.

“We really just want to get people together to briefly go through the (request for proposals) and ask them if they have any questions ... that’s kinda the goal,” Hansen said. “If anybody wants to go down there and visit the site we can do that, too.”

The request for proposal is the same as the one issued in June, which places new requirements on bidders that didn’t exist for the previous operator, BCMX, including a required $100,000 bond, Hansen said.

“The next company that comes in, I want them to put down a bond, so if they fold we don’t end up using tax dollars (for cleanup),” Hansen said in June.

The city claims BCMX owes roughly $50,000 for the cost of an environmental remediation performed last year. BCMX has contested this claim.

The city also is requiring that a future operator provide properly staffed private ambulances on-site when open.

BCMX did not have its own medical team, which required Boulder City paramedics to respond to calls and transport patients to Las Vegas hospitals.

The city and BCMX are entangled in two lawsuits involving injuries at the track.

City Attorney Dave Olsen said lawyers representing the family of Casey Johnson, who died after crashing his motorcycle at the track in 2010, have asked the city not to damage any evidence by altering the track.

The request not only weighed on the city’s potential flattening of the track, but may also affect a new operator, who would likely want to change the course to suit its needs.

“Any kind of a deal we enter into with a potential new operator has got to be limited by the fact that we still have this lawsuit issue unresolved,” Olsen said.

However, Olsen believes that by the time a lease with a new operator is negotiated the issue could be resolved.

The city’s lease with BCMX was signed in 2007, initially for 30 acres, and later expanded to include 50 acres of land.

Boulder City Motocross has been closed since Jan. 1, 2012, according to its website.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Really better buy that helmet

With a couple of significant amendments, the city council voted unanimously to pass an ordinance regulating the use of e-bikes and e-scooters in Boulder City. The ordinance passed unanimously Tuesday and will take effect on Sept. 18.

Nevada Way to go Pink … and pay for the privilege

The main topic of discussion was color. As in color of a building when the board of the Boulder City Redevelopment Agency (aka the city council) met two weeks ago.

City to nix admin services dept. in favor of deputy city manager

In a move that is really little more than “cleanup” (i.e., bringing official city code into sync with decisions made by the city council more than a year ago), the council voted to approve changes to city code related to the created-but-not-yet-filled position of deputy city manager.

Better buy a helmet …

It was just the opening salvo, but it appears that lost patience with riders of e-bikes and scooters are to the point that they are ready to go well beyond the “Well, how about more education” approach they opted for back in April.

Boulder City approves fire captains’ 2-year contract

For those who may have seen any of the recent social media posts put out by reps of the firefighters union calling out the city about pay and benefits, they might have been surprised that one collective bargaining agreement covering fire department personnel was approved by the city council this week without any discussion at all.

What’s on the pole?

There are 1,450 power poles in Boulder City and 880 of them support equipment owned by private companies who don’t pay for the privilege.

Shooting gets another look

It’s a case that captured the attention of many in Boulder City more than four years ago and has kept that attention ever since.

Advocate for preservation?

It is not often in Boulder City that there is resident pressure for the city to create a new position and hire someone to fill it. But that is the situation discussed recently by the Historic Preservation Commission.