STATEMENT by Culinary Union Secretary-Treasurer Ted Pappageorge regarding the certification of the Neighborhood Stability ballot measure signatures:

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Monday, July 25, 2022

MEDIA CONTACT:

Bethany Khan: bkhan@culinaryunion226.org ▪ (702) 387-7088 

STATEMENT by Culinary Union Secretary-Treasurer Ted Pappageorge regarding the certification of the Neighborhood Stability ballot measure signatures:

In a letter mailed on Tuesday, July 19, 2022, the City of North Las Vegas Clerk deemed the Neighborhood Stability petition insufficient.

“We will not be deterred. The Culinary Union submitted 3,396 signatures and we are confident in their validity. The City of North Las Vegas is misreading the law as to how many signatures are required. We have proceeded on the basis of the law and the Clerk’s advice as we prepared the petition to be circulated. The Culinary Union stands with North Las Vegas residents who have requested an immediate review of the finding of insufficiency and we are confident that justice will prevail,” said Ted Pappageorge, Secretary-Treasurer for the Culinary Union

“North Las Vegans are being pushed out of their homes by rent increases that are among the highest in the nation,” continued Pappageorge. “On top of 9.1% inflation in gas and groceries, rising rents are a blow to working families who are still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic. Neighborhood Stability is good for everyone: Long-time residents, senior citizens, first-time homebuyers, parents with children, and local neighborhood businesses. That’s why the Culinary Union and community allies are advancing a ballot measure to ensure neighborhood stability by preventing rent increases in North Las Vegas from exceeding the cost of living. The Culinary Union is confident that the Neighborhood Stability ballot measure, which would limit rent increases to at most 5% a year and tie rent increases to inflation, will be on the ballot in North Las Vegas this November.”

Residents of North Las Vegas who comprise the Petitioners' Committee on behalf of Nevadans for Neighborhood Stability will be appealing to the North Las Vegas City Council in accordance to the law.

The Neighborhood Stability ballot measure is essential in North Las Vegas because:

*Long-time residents and senior citizens are being pushed out of their homes in North Las Vegas following an average of 28.5% rent increase since 2019 in Clark County.

*Senior citizens (whose rent increases exceed monthly Social Security payments) are forced to rely on taxpayer-funded assistance or are evicted.

*Saving up for a down-payment can be an impossible hurdle for first-time homebuyers when their rents go up faster than the cost of living.

*The loss of stable families in a community results in student turnover in our public schools (which creates more challenges for teachers).

*Local North Las Vegas neighborhood businesses suffer when customers need to move or cut back spending when rents go up faster than the cost of living.

The Culinary Union launched a campaign on May 18, 2022 to win Neighborhood Stability in North Las Vegas by working with North Las Vegas residents and community allies to advance a ballot initiative that would prevent rent increases in North Las Vegas from exceeding the cost of living. On June 30, 2022, the Culinary Union gathered (in 30 days while running the largest political effort in Nevada during the 2022 Midterms) and submitted 3,396 signatures (more than 7x times what is required) in North Las Vegas to put a Neighborhood Stability initiative on the ballot for voters in North Las Vegas to vote on this November to enact. 

Supporters can go to www.NeighborhoodStability.org to learn more about the campaign, read stories of North Las Vegas homeowners and renters who support the campaign, read the proposed ordinance, and sign up to receive regular text/email updates.

FACTS:

From the end of 2019 through March, 2022, rent prices have skyrocketed in North Las Vegas: 47% for one-bedroom apartments in North Las Vegas (Zumper); average 25% rent increases in 2021 in North Las Vegas (Zumper); 38% for all apartments in North Las Vegas (Yardi Matrix); and 38% in North Las Vegas’s most populous ZIP code of 89031.

Nationwide, the burden of rising rents falls heaviest on Black and Latinx renters: A majority of Black (57%) and Latinx (52%) families rent their homes (Washington Post, April 2022). The Culinary Union represents over 7,300 members who live in North Las Vegas. 63% are Latinx and 18% are Black. In a 2022 survey of Culinary Union members, 21% of respondents said that their rent had gone up $500. 

In Southern Nevada, median hourly wages rose only 5% from 2019 to 2021 according to the BLS. Low-wage workers are also disproportionately impacted. There is not a single state, metro area or county in the United States where a typical minimum-wage worker can afford a two-bedroom rental, according to a recent study by the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

Home prices are up 23% in the Las Vegas Valley year-over-year.Especially given 8.5% inflation (March 2021-March 2022), that makes buying a home is extraordinarily difficult for working families. Since 2020, the average monthly asking rent for apartments in the Las Vegas area has risen 30% (Nevada Independent, February 2022). Rent has gone up 3 times faster than inflation and local rent hikes have far outpaced cost-of-living increases. Social Security’s cost-of-living increase was only 5.9% for 2021. The CPI-U consumer price index rose 7% in 2021. According to the Washington Post, the average rent in Clark County is $1,376, which is up an average of 28.5% since 2019. 

Along with rent increases, the community has also seen home prices escalate. In North Las Vegas, median home price rose 43% from February 2020 - February 2021. Buying a home extraordinarily difficult for working families. In North Las Vegas as elsewhere in the country, huge out-of-town corporations have started building “single-family rentals” targeted at families who “typically do not have enough savings for a down payment on a home” (Entrata). The top 10 apartment owners in Nevada own 26.4% of total available units, the largest owner in state is the Westland Real Estate Group which is based in Long Beach, California. In March 2022, 39% of Nevadans had difficulty paying for housing-related expenses according to the federal government’s survey data.

Top 10 apartment owners in Nevada and their headquarters: Westland Real Estate Group (Long Beach, CA), LivCor (Chicago, IL), Ovation Development (Las Vegas, NV), Olen Properties (Newport Beach, CA), Bridge Investment Group (Salt Lake City, UT), Cicerone Real Estate Group (Altamonte Springs, FL), Ties Equities (Los Angeles, CA), TruAmerica Multifamily (Los Angeles, CA), (Nevada H.A.N.D. (Las Vegas, Nevada), and The Calida Group (Las Vegas, Nevada). 

Top 10 apartment management companies in Nevada and their headquarters: Cushman & Wakfefield (Frisco, TX), FPI Management (Folsom, CA), Greystar Management (Phoenix, AZ), Westland Real Estate Group (Long Beach, CA), Stout Management (Las Vegas, NV), ConAm Management (San Diego, CA), Ovation Property Management (Las Vegas, NV), WestCorp Management Group (Las Vegas, NV), Picerne Real Estate Group (Altamonte Springs, FL), and AMC (Salt Lake City, UT). 

ABOUT CULINARY UNION:

Culinary Workers Union Local 226 and Bartenders Union Local 165, Nevada affiliates of UNITE HERE, represent 60,000 workers in Las Vegas and Reno, including at most of the casino resorts on the Las Vegas Strip and in Downtown Las Vegas. UNITE HERE represents 300,000 workers in gaming, hotel, and food service industries in North America. 

The Culinary Union, through the Culinary Health Fund, is one of the largest healthcare consumers in the state. The Culinary Health Fund is sponsored by the Culinary Union and Las Vegas-area employers. It provides health insurance coverage for over 145,000 Nevadans, the Culinary Union’s members and their dependents.  

The Culinary Union is Nevada’s largest Latinx/Black/AAPI/immigrant organization with members who come from 178 countries and speak over 40 different languages. We are proud to have helped over 18,000 immigrants become American citizens and new voters since 2001 through our affiliate, The Citizenship Project.  

The Culinary Union has a diverse membership which is 55% women and 45% immigrants. The demographics of Culinary Union members are approximately: 54% Latinx, 18% white, 15% Asian, 12% Black, and less than 1% Indigenous Peoples. 

Culinary Union members work as: Guest room attendants, cocktail and food servers, porters, bellmen, cooks, bartenders, laundry and kitchen workers. The Culinary Union has been fighting and winning for working families in Nevada for 87 years.

CulinaryUnion226.org / @Culinary226 

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