logo
Legislative proposals would nudge, aid municipalities toward infill development

Legislative proposals would nudge, aid municipalities toward infill development

Yahoo29-04-2025
Infill development advocates argue vacant office buildings, vacant land, and even parking lots are underutilized. (Photo: Hugh Jackson/Nevada Current)
Tens of thousands of square feet of vacant lots and commercial properties sit empty in the Las Vegas and Reno metro areas. Proposed legislation attempts to help tackle the state's housing crisis by establishing a process to rezone them as residential.
State lawmakers are considering multiple proposals that would empower cities to more aggressively encourage infill development to address Nevada's shortage of affordable and available units.
Assembly Bill 241, sponsored by Democratic Assemblymember Sandra Jauregui, is designed to spark development of more multi-family housing, and require counties to speed up the process to rezone land currently designated commercial use into residential or mixed use.
'Many commercial properties, particularly aging strip malls and vacant office buildings, are underutilized,' Jauregui said during the bill's hearing in March. 'Repurposing them for housing makes better use of existing infrastructure. Building homes closer to jobs, schools and public transit reduces commute times, lowers greenhouse gas emissions and decreases urban sprawl.'
The bill, which passed the Assembly on a party line vote earlier this month, is directed toward the state's most populous counties, Clark and Washoe, and would give them until Oct. 1, 2026 to adopt an ordinance that allows for a more expedited rezoning process.
Under the legislation, if a buyer purchases a commercial property and wants to build multi-family housing on it instead, they could seek swift approval rather than go through a lengthy rezoning process, Jauregui said.
A recent analysis by the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern and the regional planning collaborative known as Southern Nevada Strong identified 78,285 acres as 'vacant or underutilized land,' most of it — 85% — vacant.
The bill is scheduled to be heard Wednesday in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee.
The legislation's supporters included theNevada Conservation Leaguethe Nevada State Apartment Association.
However, the Nevada Association of Counties along with Clark and Washoe County opposed the legislation.
'There are some commercial areas where multi-family or mixed-use (zoning) may not be appropriate,' said Ashley Kennedy, a lobbyist with Clark County, adding the county wants to retain 'the ability at the local level to determine' when to quickly rezone without state legislation mandating it.
Kennedy said that the county supports infill development and hasn't denied any application for a multi-family project since 2022.
She added that during that timeframe there were 39 applications for multi-family projects approved, and 21 of those applications were in commercially zoned areas.'
Cadence Matijevich, a lobbyist with Washoe County, warned the bill would produce 'unintended consequences' and could 'upset the balance of land use in our community' by requiring some commercial projects to be rezoned as residential.
'Nevada cannot afford to let outdated zoning laws and people who oppose density continue to be the reason we are stalling housing production,' Jauregui said.
Efforts to promote infill development come as state lawmakers, some members of Nevada's Congressional delegation and Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo have pushed for stepped up sales of federal land development.
Assembly Joint Resolution 10, also sponsored by Jauregui, would ask the federal government to pass the Southern Nevada Economic Development and Conservation Act, commonly referred to as the Clark County Lands Bill.
The bill passed the Assembly 36-6 April 17. Six Democrats Assemblymembers, Natha Anderson, Venicia Considine, Tanya Flanagan, Selena La Rue Hatch, Cinthia Moore, and Howard Watts, voted against the resolution.
Democratic Rep. Dina Titus recently took issue with state lawmakers voting for the resolution and denounced the federal bill, saying nothing in the legislation mandates that any of the land must be dedicated to affordable housing. The bill would only make land available 'to developers to build more homes that average Nevadans cannot afford,' Titus said.
AB 241 isn't the only bill that could lead to more infill development.
Senate Bill 28, legislation being brought by the City of Las Vegas, would create 'tax increment areas' in which a portion of future property tax revenue would be used to pay interest on bonds used to finance affordable housing development as well as public transit.
Much of the city's development over the next 25 years 'will consist of infill and redevelopment within existing neighborhoods, Seth Floyd, Director of Community Development for the City of Las Vegas, told the Senate Government Affairs Committee during a hearing on the bill in lawmakers during the bill's hearing in March.'
SB 28 passed the Senate 17-4 on April 17. Republican Sens. Carrie Ann Buck, Robin Titus, Ira Hansen and John Ellison voted against the bill.
Lawmakers are also considering allocating general fund dollars to aid housing development, including $250 million proposed by Lombardo.
Any proposal seeking to allocate any funding could face serious setbacks after the Economic Forum meets Thursday, when it will set final budget limits that legislators and the governor must meet when they approve a budget for the upcoming biennium.
Uncertainty and anxiety driven by Donald Trump's trade war and the resulting fallout have prompted widespread projections of not only a slowing economy, with many observers projecting the chance of a recession has increased substantially in recent weeks.
Assembly Bill 366, sponsored by Democratic Assemblymember Daniele Monroe-Moreno, would appropriate $25 million from the state general fund to supportive housing initiatives throughout the state. The Nevada Housing Division would determine the projects eligible to receive those dollars.
Permanent supportive housing projects are subsidized for populations with significantly low or no income, such as folks experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness, and comes with case management and wrap-around support services.
Brooke Page, the Nevada director of the Corporation for Supportive Housing, said funding supportive housing for unhoused people is more cost effective than the alternative.
The organization conducted an analysis for Northern Nevada last year that found eight days in the emergency room, three months in jail, and one year in supportive housing with rental assistance and warp around services all cost the same. Page said.
'It makes more sense to house people, ensure they have the services they need to improve their mental health, their physical health, and gain access to employment than it does to continue to allow people to cycle in and out of high-cost systems,' she said.
Not only do developers struggle to find financing for supportive housing, funding for operational support and tenant services is also limited.
State lawmakers in 2023 allocated $30 million from the state's general fund to permanent supportive housing projects.
AB 366 seeks to strengthen the program..
During its first hearing in March, Monroe-Moreno said though the state 'doesn't have any money' allocating funds for permanent supportive housing was a priority Lombardo also identified during his budget proposal, she said.
The bill has not advanced out of its first house but is exempt from legislative deadlines.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Virginia GOP candidate, CNN host tangle on air over Trump questions
Virginia GOP candidate, CNN host tangle on air over Trump questions

The Hill

timea few seconds ago

  • The Hill

Virginia GOP candidate, CNN host tangle on air over Trump questions

Virginia gubernatorial nominee and Lieutenant Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears (R) clashed with CNN reporter Manu Raju over her past criticisms of President Trump on Friday. Raju pressed Earle-Sears over the Trump administration's cuts to the federal workforce this year, which have had a significant impact on Virginia given its large population of federal workers. 'Do you support the president's purge of the federal workforce, yes or no?' Raju asked the lieutenant governor. 'Oh, okay. If this is the way you want to go, then go ahead. I'm just not going to participate because I want to talk about real issues,' Earle Sears responded, adding that Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) and his administration have tried to bring more jobs to Virginia. Earle-Sears accused Democrats of blocking the jobs. 'If they want to work together with me, we can get it done,' she said. Raju also pressed Earle-Sears about her previous criticism of Trump, specifically pointing to a 2022 interview with Fox Business, in which she referred to Trump as 'a liability.' 'Do you stand by those comments?' Raju asked. 'I voted for the president the first time around. I voted for him the second time around and I voted for him the third time around,' Earle-Sears responded. 'I am going to vote for somebody who understands how everything works.' 'I'm talking about who has brought us economic prosperity in the past,' she continued. 'I'm talking about somebody who understands how business works, who understands that the rogue nations of the world have to be told that we're not going to let them fool around with America, that we will protect America, and that's what President Trump has done.' The GOP hopeful added, 'Now because of your politics I suppose, you wanted to keep talking about the past when I've already told you the president and I have been in the Oval Office, we have had discussion, and I'm going to talk about things that should be held private.' Trump has yet to formally endorse the lieutenant governor to succeed Youngkin, who is term limited. Virginia Republicans have raised red flags about their chances in the state's gubernatorial race, pointing to Earle-Sears significantly trailing her Democratic opponent Abigail Spanberger in fundraising and polls.

Slotkin says she would have voted to block arms sales to Israel
Slotkin says she would have voted to block arms sales to Israel

The Hill

timea few seconds ago

  • The Hill

Slotkin says she would have voted to block arms sales to Israel

Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) said Thursday that she would have voted to block arms sales to Israel over hunger in Gaza after missing a series of Senate votes Wednesday night to appear on Stephen Colbert's show. The Michigan senator said she was worried about the lack of food and medicine entering Gaza, and that 'images of emaciated children are hard to turn away from.' 'Should similar votes on offensive weapons come up in the future, I will take them on a case-by-case basis, with the hope of important humanitarian course corrections,' she wrote in a lengthy statement on X. 'While the leaders of Hamas deserve what they're getting in response to October 7, and Israel — like any other country in the world — has the right to defend itself, that doesn't include letting children go hungry.' The resolutions, sponsored by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), would have blocked more than $675 million in weapons sales to Israel, and barred another transfer of tens of thousands of assault rifles. They were resoundingly defeated in the Senate, although a record number of Democrats — more than half the caucus — voted in favor. The votes came amidst growing worry in the Democratic caucus over what the United Nations termed 'mounting evidence of famine and widespread starvation' in Gaza, where Israel's war is nearing its two-year mark. President Trump has also expressed concern with the situation, acknowledging earlier this week that there was 'real starvation' in the territory. Slotkin, who is Jewish, served three tours in Iraq as a CIA analyst in the early 2000s. She said in her statement that her experience in the Middle East showed her that aid could be safely distributed in complex war zones. '[E]ven in the most violent years of the war, the U.S. still had the responsibility to facilitate humanitarian supplies into places like Fallujah,' she wrote. 'And militaries that can pull off dangerous and complex operations overseas can also ensure aid is safely distributed in occupied areas.' Slotkin also said that the conduct of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had significantly undermined the country's standing among American lawmakers, writing that he had threatened 'the longstanding bipartisan consensus that have helped keep Israel safe since its inception.' Still, Slotkin appeared to garner criticism from fellow Michigander Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D), the only Palestinian-American in Congress. 'Shame on every senator who voted to continue arming the Israeli apartheid regime or didn't even have the courage to show up and vote,' the representative wrote on X. Michigan is home to one of the largest populations of Arab Americans in the country and was the epicenter of backlash during the 2024 election against the Biden administration's support of Israel.

Bibb claps back at Trump admin over crime drop claims
Bibb claps back at Trump admin over crime drop claims

Axios

timea few seconds ago

  • Axios

Bibb claps back at Trump admin over crime drop claims

Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb is pushing back on the Trump administration's effort to take credit for falling crime rates in major U.S. cities. Why it matters: Bibb's response is a natural follow-up to his 2025 State of the City address, at which he lamented forthcoming federal cuts to violence prevention. "Washington is not coming to save us," he said at the time. State of play: An X post this week from the Department of Homeland Security noted that homicides were down 17% across 30 cities during Trump's term compared to the first six months of 2024. "The rapid arrests and deportations of criminal illegal aliens are having real impact on public safety," the post reads. Reality check: In an opinion piece published Friday on MSNBC, Bibb wrote that violent crime is indeed dropping, "in city after city led by Democratic mayors." He attributed the trend to local leadership and community-based strategies. What they're saying: "The truth is that it's all happening in spite of Donald Trump, not because of him," he wrote. Democratic mayors "have stepped up to demonstrate what real leadership looks like... We are managing what we can control and doubling down on programs and strategies that work." Zoom in: Homicides are down 26% year over year in Cleveland, according to Bibb. The big picture: Bibb joined a chorus of Democratic mayors in a press call Thursday to tout their grassroots public safety efforts, while accusing Trump and congressional Republicans of slashing federal funding.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store