68°F
weather icon Clear

Spending for proposed pool to be on Nov. ballot

During Tuesday’s Boulder City Council meeting, City Manager Taylour Tedder may have summed things up best.

“It’s more of a Toyota project than a Cadillac product,” he said.

He was referring to the proposed replacement for the aging city pool that has some residents questioning the price tag, which currently stands at almost $37 million and that could rise to as much as $44 million.

The discussion was part of the council being asked to retract the previously-approved placement on a future ballot seeking to get permission for the city to tap the Capital Improvement Fund (CIF) for up to $4 million to cover a gap in funding.

The new proposal would do two things. First, it would raise the “ask” from up to $4 million to up to $9 million. Second, it would remove a caveat saying the spending would be dependent on the funds being available in the CIF. Tedder explained that change by reporting that the fund currently has more than $12 million in uncommitted funds.

Following up on the “Toyota versus Cadillac” imagery, Councilmember Sherri Jorgensen noted that the original cost estimate from 2021 was just over $27 million.

“There is a lot that has happened since then,” Jorgensen said. “The American dollar isn’t going as far. Eggs cost more, so the pool is going to cost more. That’s the way it looks.”

Tedder had previously explained that the cost had come through a process that included a council-appointed pool committee which, over a number of months, came up with a list of features they would like to see in a replacement pool.

Those requirements were sent to the architecture and design firm SCA Design which developed plans and a projected cost of $27 million.

Jorgensen noted that over last summer, the city asked SCA for updated cost projections which came in at almost $37 million, an increase of about 36%.

“I just hesitate to wait any longer,” Jorgensen said. “Either we want a pool or we don’t want a pool. If, in two year’s time, we see inflation take the same Toyota and make it almost $10 million more… I can’t even imagine what it would cost in 2028.”

The council wants a pool.

Councilmember Cokie Booth asked Tedder to explain what the pool would cost city taxpayers.

Tedder replied that the cost was zero. No taxes were being raised and that the bulk of this money came from the sale of land as well as $7 million from the CIF that was already approved by voters. The CIF is, in turn, funded by city land sales, 90% of which go to the CIF and a portion of the money the city gets for leasing land in the Eldorado Valley to solar companies.

Tedder further noted that the fund gets an injection of about $3 million per year from those sources.

The vote to put a question on the November ballot asking voters to approve the CIF spending was unanimous, 4-0 with Councilmember Matt Fox absent.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Trio of Boulder High athletes sign with colleges

Fulfilling their dreams of becoming collegiate athletes, three Boulder City High seniors, Logan Borg, Cameron Matthews and Preston Van Beveren will be heading off to their respective universities next fall.

N.Y. man drives through power plant fence

This past Friday, LVMPD Sheriff Kevin McMahill, along with the FBI Special Agent in Charge Christopher Delzotto of the Las Vegas Field Office and Timothy Shea, Chief of the Boulder City Police Department, provided details regarding a vehicle ramming a power facility outside of Boulder City.

Lady Eagles lose to state champions

Boulder City High School girls basketball may have fallen to eventual state champion Churchill County in the state tournament, 56-17, on Feb. 20, but coach Brian Bradshaw’s Eagles took more away from the experience than just a loss.

Musician looks back on his long career

It’s almost as though when graduating in 1964 from Bound Brook High School in New Jersey, Thom Pastor had a crystal ball to see into the future.

Nominations open for Historic Preservation Award

As reinvestment and renovations occur to many of the older buildings, parks and homes within this community, historic preservation remains an important and celebrated part of Boulder City’s identity. The city’s history is forever tied to the families who came here 95 years ago for the construction of the Hoover Dam, and the places that remain today serve as a meaningful reminder of how it all started.

Ruth, Burrows make state podium

Competing at the 3A state meet, Boulder City High School wrestlers Otis Ruth and Coen Burrows made their way onto the podium at the Winnemucca Events Center on Feb. 14.

Lady Eagles advance to state tourney

Boulder City High School girls basketball will be making their first 3A state tournament appearance since 2019.

Just play by the rules during the parade

If you’re reading this and have not yet read the page 1 article about the concerns of the Damboree committee and the popular water zone, I will stop typing until you do.