70°F
weather icon Clear

City to pay off golf course loans early

In June, the city is expected to make its final payment on the Boulder Creek Golf Club revenue bonds, putting behind years of contention and controversy over the hot-button issue.

The City Council discussed the matter during its Tuesday meeting, much to the delight of council members and department heads.

Because of the renegotiated solar leases with Techren and KOMIPO, the city was able to free up more than $8 million in deferred revenue. And with a balance of $4.6 million on the revenue bonds, council members decided to pay the debt off in full instead of going to an accelerated plan.

After the final payment is made in June, a portion of the $3.6 million left over will cover the city’s additional loan used for maintenance and operation of the golf course, which is scheduled to be paid off in July, according to Finance Director Shirley Hughes. Any money left will be used for capital improvements.

The construction of Boulder Creek was a contentious issue for the city, according to numerous council members. The bonds, which were issued in December 2005 in the amount of $9.3 million, came with an interest rate of 3.85 percent.

Under the original payment plan, the bonds weren’t expected to be paid off until 2025. Under the accelerated payment plan, the debt would have been paid off by fiscal year 2017.

The city will save $2.9 million in interest by paying the remaining debt in June.

“It frees up money for the future,” Councilman Duncan McCoy said. “It also removes what was a bone of contention in the community.”

The council touted Mayor Roger Tobler for his assertiveness to tackle the golf course issue, including Councilman Cam Walker, who told a story about Tobler coming to his house about a decade ago to seek input about the situation.

“This is a big accomplishment, and his (Tobler’s) vision and foresight was there back when he was a councilperson,” Walker said. “I’m proud to see this move forward.”

Tobler was humble on the matter, refusing to take much credit. Instead, he commended city staff and his fellow council members for acknowledging the importance of paying off the debt years ahead of schedule.

“This is a huge deal and I think a lot of people deserve credit for it,” he said. “We are now keeping the golf course, and we’ll have a beautiful development behind it.”

Like his colleagues before him, Tobler echoed the sentiment that construction of Boulder Creek created division within the town.

“People drew the line over the golf course issue,” he said. “We had elections where people’s ideas were to close it and let it die. Could you imagine all those beautiful acres just dead out there?”

In other council news, the city was presented with a $1,500 grant from the Southern Nevada chapter of the International Code Council to provide free swimming lessons to children under the age of 4 at the Boulder City Pool.

Representatives from the Interstate 11 project also spoke about wanting to become more integrated into the Boulder City community. According to public information officer Lucie Moya, many residents have already come to visit the informational office at 1404 Colorado St.

“We want to make sure we’re part of the community and we’re not just in and out,” she said.

Contact reporter Steven Slivka at sslivka@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow @StevenSlivka on Twitter.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
BC welcomes city manager

Boulder City’s new City Manager Ned Thomas chose an auspicious day to start his new job. No, that is not a reference to April 15 as Tax Day, but it is about finances.

Pickleball courts break ground at Veterans Park

For those who enjoy pickleball, work began this week on new, designated courts for one of the country’s most widely-played sports.

City seeks state PERS law carve-out

If you thought that the pace of state legislation in Nevada — a state with a part-time legislature that meets only every other year — would be a slow stroll rather than a break-neck run, you might be surprised to find out that there are well over 1,000 bills being considered at some level in this session.

Living costs, inflation cited as challenges

“Full disclosure,” Jennifer Hedland, the community resource liaison (CRL) said as she began to present the city council with an annual report in its meeting this week.

City Council approves changes to ADA project

The actual news hook is that, in the consent agenda, the city council on March 25 approved $75,000 worth of changes to a bid for work that is largely being paid for by the Regional Transportation Commission (RTC).

Calloway outlines state of city parks and rec

The big question when it comes to Parks and Recreation in Boulder City is, “When is the pool we all hear so much about actually going to be built?”

Memorial deal gets approval from council

One of the final steps before installation of the monument honoring fallen soldier and Boulder City native Shane Patton happened without fanfare at the city council meeting this week.

Council OKs judge panel

If you didn’t read the agenda, you would have no idea that the city council took a vote on the issue of municipal judge in Boulder City.

Council nixes development idea

Call it fiscal creativity, although some developers prefer harsher terms.