My lucky day

No, not at the slots. Thanks to Dr. David G. Schwartz of UNLV’s Institute for Gaming Research, a man who clearly reads the fine print, I’ve just found out that I won two Nevada Press Association awards. (You have to scroll waywaywaywaywaywayway down to Class IV, but it’s there.) Las Vegas CityLife swept the “Best Non-Staff Story” category, with first prize going to Rebecca Zisch — congratulations! — for “Coffee Clash.” Unfortunately, Zisch’s story appears to have been “disappeared” off the CityLife Web site.

Yours truly took third place forThe Neighborhood That Had to Die,” about a stalled Station Casinos condo development that, subsequently, turned into a $105 million writeoff (above). Quoth the citation: “The story of a housing collapse, corporate greed told on the neighborhood level. Writer painted a compelling picture of how neighbors, neighborhoods and a community suffer when greed and no planning supercede [sic] what’s best for a community. Nicely done.”

I also earned a second-place sheepskin with “Last Stand,” about the protracted — and ultimately disastrous — unionization campaign by Wynn Las Vegas dealers: “Great story about splitting tips and how this one issue has repercussions across Las Vegas/Nevada economic landscape.” Most importantly, I’m glad that the subjects of these stories resonated with the (non-Vegas) judges who deemed them worthy of recognition. It’s nice to know that one occasionally does something worthwhile.

This entry was posted in Current, Economy, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn. Bookmark the permalink.