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# Friday, October 17, 2008

Don't mourn the departed Trekkies yet.

Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman and Neonopolis developer Rohit Joshi say the defunct Star Trek: The Experience attraction at the Hilton is moving downtown.

If it works it would be the biggest resurrection since Mr. Spock reanimated on planet Genesis -- both for the Experience show and the troubled Neonopolis development.

Goodman let the news slip Thursday morning during a chat with reporters at City Hall.

Later Joshi, developer for the struggling Neonopolis mall on Fremont Street, confirmed a deal was close.

But he clearly wasn't prepared for the news to leak.

"You kind of shocked me," Joshi said when asked about the potential deal. "I don't know how to respond to that."

He continued: "We are in very serious negotiations. We think it would be a fantastic addition to downtown."

Joshi also produced a bound agreement with CBS Consumer Products, the licensing division of the media giant that owns the rights to the Star Trek name, dated Monday.

Leslie Ryan of CBS said the company had no statement on the potential move.

CBS owns the costumes, rides and other hardware and intellectual property that make up the Experience.

It licensed the material to Cedar Fair Entertainment Co., to operate the Experience at Las Vegas Hilton. But that agreement ended when the show closed at the Hilton, leaving CBS free to license the material to someone else.

Cedar Fair spokeswoman Stacy Frole said the company had no involvement with the move downtown.

Star Trek: The Experience had an 11-year run at the Hilton that ended Sept. 1.

If Joshi is able to revive it downtown he will be operating an attraction that lured millions of people to Las Vegas for Star Trek rides, themed food, a museum and even weddings.

"We don't have volcanos, we don't have fountains, we have got to create attractions," Joshi said.

Reviving the attraction won't be easy, though.

In addition to retrofitting space on the first floor of the mall to accommodate the rides, restaurant, museum and other show elements, Joshi would need to bring back the audience.

Even hard-core Star Trek fans say that by the end of its run at the Hilton the attraction was getting stale and needed an update.

And a new "Star Trek" movie scheduled for release in May would make the old props look even more dated by comparison.

"I think it is a mistake to take what was there and re-create it," said Anthony Pascale, editor of the Web site TrekMovie.com. "It was getting a little long-in-the-tooth."

Pascale said the version at the Hilton was aimed at a generation of Star Trek fans tuned into the series "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

"That is just part of Star Trek, not all of Star Trek," Pascale said.

He suggested a revived Experience would need to incorporate the new movie and more of the original 1960s television series which later spawned several movies including "Star Trek III: The Search For Spock," a film that included the resurrection of Mr. Spock, the U.S.S. Enterprise's science officer and perhaps the most renowned Star Trek character in popular culture.

No matter how a new Experience unfolds, Goodman was clearly excited by the prospect of Neonopolis living up to its promise to attract new blood downtown, even if it becomes Nerdopolis in the process.

He practically beamed as he dropped the news on Thursday.

Neonopolis has long been viewed as a black hole in terms of development downtown.

The complex is between the east end of the Fremont Street Experience canopy and the west end of Fremont East, a bar and entertainment district that includes the El Cortez hotel-casino.

The mall has struggled to attract tenants and its lack of life has been blamed for reducing foot traffic between the canopy and Fremont East.

"It would be ironic," Goodman said of the potential for landing Star Trek. "Perhaps the most successful place downtown could be Neonopolis, even though it has been an albatross around my neck all these years."

Contact reporter Benjamin Spillman at bspillman@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3861.

source: lvrj.com

Friday, October 17, 2008 11:21:35 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
Categories: Business | Las Vegas Metro
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# Monday, September 29, 2008

Huge ‘plume’ traced to business under bankruptcy protection

A massive plume of pollution under acres of homes, roads and a golf course in central Las Vegas is the worst of 28 sites in the valley contaminated by the same chemical.

At some point, someone winds up footing the bill for cleaning up those sites, and the Las Vegas National Golf Club case is turning out to be a local test of federal regulations outlining who pays when the polluter has filed for bankruptcy protection. In this case, the party in bankruptcy court is Al Phillips the Cleaner.

The gas-like mass of perchloroethylene, PCE, also known as tetrachloroethylene, or TCE, is emblematic of the intersection of older, less regulated Vegas — indeed, the entire nation — with a world of science that discovers dangers in commonplace practices of years past.

The “Maryland Square site” — the name given to the golf course plume of the potential carcinogen by the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection — is also the starting point from which to examine a list of PCE-contaminations pockmarking the Las Vegas Valley.

The sites identified by the Nevada Environmental Protection Division include two at Nellis Air Force Base, three at casinos and 19 at current or former dry cleaning businesses.

The chemical is widely used for metal degreasing as well as for dry cleaning fabrics. Inhalation of its fumes can cause neurological, liver and kidney problems, according to the EPA. Studies have found that prolonged exposure increases the risk of cancer. The EPA is currently reassessing its potential carcinogenicity.

Perchloroethylene remains in use in the dry cleaning industry, though other solvents with less harmful effects are also being used. Dry cleaners are now asked to take special precautions against site contamination to prevent PCE from getting into drinking water. In 1991, California declared perchloroethylene a toxic chemical, and its use will become illegal in that state in 2023.

Dante Pistone, public information officer for the state environmental protection agency, said the degree of contamination of most local sites other than Maryland Square is “minimal.” But six of those are considered serious enough to be in the various stages of a remediation process.

Those six sites are another Al Phillips location at 3754 E. Desert Inn Road; Cantrell Cleaners, 1015 E. Charleston Blvd.; Las Vegas Hilton/Convention Center, 3000 S. Paradise Road; Regency Dry Cleaners, 4575 S. Procyon St.; Ultra 1 Day Cleaners, 316 S. Decatur Blvd., and Vogue Cleaners, 550 S. Decatur Blvd.

“None of the sites even approach the magnitude of the Maryland Square site in terms of cleanup,” Pistone said.

He also said using the word “toxic” to describe the pollution is “alarmist.”

“The concentrations we’re talking about are such that they’re not acute at all,” he said, adding that the ground water contamination is 10 to 20 feet below the surface, “and shallow ground water doesn’t affect anybody.”

More worrisome, however, are the vapors from PCE that “can come up through the soil and potentially get into some of these houses” or other buildings that sit atop contaminated land, Pistone added.

The Maryland Square site is large and sweeps east from a former Al Phillips the Cleaner business at 3661 Maryland Parkway, north of Twain Avenue and west of the Boulevard Mall. The building that housed the dry cleaning business was demolished in 2006.

Pistone said the NDEP is not sure how PCE, a chemical used in the dry-cleaning process, leached or leaked from the site. He added that the number of sites of contamination in Las Vegas is hardly unique in the nation.

“It’s fairly common across the country,” he said. “There weren’t very tight operating procedures in the past,” so most, if not all, of the sites were contaminated years ago.

Two things about the Maryland Square site, however, distinguish it from the others. For one, a large contingent of concerned residents have hopes that, ironically, the underground chemical might actually help them preserve their quality of life.

The other is that the company responsible for the contamination is not likely to be forced to spend millions to clean it up, because of its bankruptcy filing.

Pistone said the Environmental Protection Division is watching the bankruptcy proceedings “to see how much we can get out of that.”

Barring a payout from the Al Phillips dry cleaning business, federal regulations require going after the land owner.

“It’s just the way the regulations are written,” Pistone said. “Somebody has to be responsible and if you own the land, you’re responsible for what goes on that land.”

That’s why the Herman Kishner Trust, which owned Maryland Square LLC and leased to Al Phillips, has set aside some money in case responsibility ultimately falls to it to pay for the cleanup, said Las Vegas attorney Al Marquis, who represents the trust.

“Al Phillips agreed they were responsible and that they would remediate the site,” Marquis said. “But with the filing of the bankruptcy ... it appears the ball is back in our court.”

He added, “We believe Al Phillips still has primary responsibility here and we intend to pursue that claim in the bankruptcy court.”

The state’s environmental agency hasn’t determined a cost for the cleanup yet, Pistone said. “Until we get actual cleanup plans in place, it’s pretty tough to estimate the cost.”

Marquis said the Kishner Trust estimates the cleanup will cost “millions of dollars.”

As part of the effort, the state environmental protection agency is taking water samples from 33 wells in the residential area under which the plume rests. The agency has also identified “about 15 homes,” Pistone said, where the amounts of PCE vapors exceeds “the health protective level.”

The state agency has contacted a contractor and talked to homeowners, and some remediation systems are about to be installed.

These systems can involve sealing a home’s foundation, then depressurizing the soil to prevent vapors from seeping indoors. Costs of these “subslab depressurization systems,” according to state agency’s Web site, can range from $2,000 to $20,000 per home.

The cost will ultimately be borne by whomever is forced to pay for the cleanup, Pistone added.

The agency estimates it could take five to 10 years to clean up the Maryland Square site.

Homeowners surrounding Las Vegas National Golf Club hope the contamination will somehow kill any plans by the golf course owners to build about 485 homes on the 130-acre site.

Actually, Pistone said, developers could build in the area as long as they follow environmental guidelines to ensure the health of anyone living there.

“There’s no regulation saying ‘until this is cleaned, you can’t do anything,’ ” he added. “We’d simply work with the developer as part of the developer’s due diligence, and if they decided to move forward, we’d do some additional monitoring wells as part of our due diligence.”

John Knott II, one of the investors who bought the golf course in August 2007, said before they bought it, the golf course was thoroughly tested for contamination.

“And we don’t have an (environmental) problem there,” said Knott, executive vice president of the CB Richard Ellis real estate brokerage. “There is a plume of PCE but it is in trace amounts and below all standards set by the federal government.”

source: lasvegassun.com

Monday, September 29, 2008 9:33:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Friday, September 26, 2008

Bill Heard closes 13 dealerships, including Vegas locations

Published Wed, Sep 24, 2008 (2:59 p.m.)

“Mr. Big Volume” is now Mr. No Volume.

Bill Heard Chevrolet and its sister Chevy dealership in Las Vegas closed their doors, along with 11 other dealerships across the country.

In a statement released Wednesday, Bill Heard Enterprises says the closures will affect about 2,700 employees nationwide.

The statement says the company didn't have the resources to continue operating. It cites factors including rising fuel prices, an inventory dominated by trucks and SUVs, economic recession, unfavorable market conditions and the current banking and financial crises.

The Columbus, Ga.-based company had five dealerships in Georgia and nine in six other states – Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Nevada, Tennessee and Texas. The Arizona dealership closed two weeks ago.

Calls to the Las Vegas Bill Heard Chevrolet location at 444 South Decatur went unanswered. "No one is available to take your call right now and we'll get back to you as soon as we can," a recording said each time.

Calls to the Vista Chevrolet location at 5501 Drexel Road in northwest Las Vegas went to a voicemail box.

The closed Bill Heard Enterprises dealerships were two of the valley’s five Chevy dealers. The remaining dealers are Findlay Chevrolet, in the southwest valley near the Las Vegas Beltway at 6800 S. Torrey Pines Drive; Fairway Chevrolet at 3100 E. Sahara Ave.; and Henderson Chevrolet (in the Valley Auto Mall) at 240 N. Gibson Road in Henderson.

A spokesman for Findlay Chevrolet said the dealership will be ramping up its service operations given the Bill Heard and Vista closures, opening additional service bays and hiring additional technicians to take care of customers who used to rely on the closed dealerships.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

source: lasvegassun.com

Friday, September 26, 2008 12:47:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Thursday, September 18, 2008

Hacker impersonated Palin, stole e-mail password

By TED BRIDIS
Associated Press Writer
 
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Details emerged Thursday behind the break-in of Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin's e-mail account, including a first-hand account suggesting it was vulnerable because a hacker was able to impersonate her online to obtain her password.

The hacker guessed that Alaska's governor had met her husband in high school, and knew Palin's date of birth and home Zip code. Using those details, the hacker tricked Yahoo Inc.'s service into assigning a new password, "popcorn," for Palin's e-mail account, according to a chronology of the crime published on the Web site where the hacking was first revealed.

The FBI and Secret Service launched a formal investigation Wednesday. Yahoo declined to comment Thursday on details of the investigation, citing Palin's privacy and the sensitivity of such investigations.

The person who claimed responsibility for the break-in did not respond Thursday to an e-mail inquiry from The Associated Press.

"i am the lurker who did it, and i would like to tell the story," the person wrote in the account, which circulated on the Internet. What started as a prank was cut short because of panic over the possibility the FBI might investigate, the hacker wrote.

Investigators were waiting to speak with Gabriel Ramuglia of Athens, Ga., who operates an Internet anonymity service used by the hacker. Ramuglia told the AP on Thursday he was reviewing his own logs and promised to turn over any helpful information to authorities because the hacker violated rules against using the anonymity service for illegal activities.

"If you're doing something illegal and causing me issues by doing this, I'm willing to cooperate," Ramuglia said. "Obviously this is the most high profile situation I've dealt with."

The break-in of Palin's private account is especially significant because Palin sometimes uses non-government e-mail to conduct state business. Previously disclosed e-mails indicate her administration embraced Yahoo accounts as an alternative to government e-mail, which could possibly be released to the public under Alaska's Open Records Act.

At the time, critics of Palin's administration were poring over official e-mails they had obtained from the governor's office looking for evidence of improper political activity.

Details of this week's break-in, if authentic, were consistent with speculation by computer security experts who said Yahoo's "forgot-my-password" service almost certainly was exploited. The mechanism allows customers to retrieve or change their password if they can verify their identity by confirming personal information such as birthdate, zip code and the answer to a "secret question," such as a childhood pet's name or school mascot.

Palin's hacker was challenged to guess where Alaska's governor met her husband, Todd. Palin herself recounted in her speech at the Republican National Convention that the pair began dating two decades ago in high school in Wasilla, a town near Anchorage.

"I found out later though (sic) more research that they met at high school, so I did variations of that, high, high school, eventually hit on 'Wasilla high'," the person wrote.

The McCain campaign issued a statement describing the hacking as an invasion of Palin's privacy.

Source: lvrj.com

Thursday, September 18, 2008 3:23:25 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Thursday, August 21, 2008

Wild-child heiress Courtenay Semel is in trouble after whacking a Caesars Palace security guard during an argument after losing her cell phone, sources said.

Semel, whose father, Terry Semel, is a former CEO and chairman of Yahoo!, was partying earlier Tuesday with Kourtney Kardashian, who had co-hosted a BestofVegas.com launch party with Nicky Hilton.

The incident occurred after 3 a.m., after Semel left Pure Nightclub at Caesars Palace with friends. She returned after the club closed and complained to a security guard that she had lost her cell phone.

Semel, who has been romantically linked to Lindsay Lohan and reality TV star Tila Tequila, was cited for battery after slapping the guard on the back of the head, according to a source.

She was detained by Caesars Palace security and given an early October court date.

Semel, 28, appeared in E!'s reality TV series "Filthy Rich: Cattle Drive" in 2006 with Kardashian and a roster of super-rich kids. Semel and Lohan dated late last year before the "Mean Girls" star developed a relationship with DJ Samantha Ronson.

Source: lvrj.com

Thursday, August 21, 2008 2:31:34 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
Categories: Las Vegas Metro
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