50°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy
Ad 320x50 | 728x90 | 1200x70

Clark County officials OK measures to aid Monorail Co.’s fees

Clark County commissioners on Tuesday approved two measures that will aid Las Vegas Monorail Co.’s county business license fees, which increased after the company restructured its debt.

The county will return to Monorial Co. $246,213.78 in business license fees paid to the county from January 2013 through last June 30, under a settlement agreement commissioners unanimously approved Tuesday. The county keeps the other half of those fees, plus its guaranteed minimum payment of $75,000. The company had paid $567,427.56 during that time period, including the $75,000 minimum.

The county also changed the business license fee structures for monorails and other fixed-guideway transportation systems so that they no longer use a formula that factors in the amount paid for debt service. Monorail’s business license fees to the county shot up after its debt service was restructured.

The company filed for bankruptcy in 2010.

Under the new business license fee plan, Las Vegas Monorail Co. would pay the larger of two options: a minimum payment of $12,500 a quarter, adjusted annually for inflation, or 0.25 percent of gross revenue each quarter.

Monorail CEO Curtis Miles said after the meeting that the changes are a “fair result for everybody,” adding that the county was helpful throughout the process.

Las Vegas Monorail Co., a nonprofit company, projects that it will log more than 4.5 million rides this year.

Contact Ben Botkin at bbotkin@reviewjournal.com or 702-405-9781. Find on Twitter: @BenBotkin1.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
 
Las Vegas Grand Prix track removal underway on Strip

With the second-annual Las Vegas Grand Prix completed, crews are already tearing down the infrastructure tied to the 3.8-mile street circuit, with the majority of the work planned to conclude by Christmas.

Thanksgiving traffic to stuff Southern Nevada roads

Motorists should brace for heavy traffic around Las Vegas during Thanksgiving weekend as droves of people travel in and out of Southern Nevada to celebrate turkey day with family and friends.

Did you spot the turkey in the crosswalk? More than 100 didn’t, police say

A Clark County School District police officer dressed up as a turkey to walk pedestrians across a busy intersection, raising awareness for pedestrian traffic safety. More than 100 citations were issued for drivers who didn’t yield to pedestrians, or the turkey, police said.