Summer. Downtown Reno. It was 93 degrees, and the man wandering in the small art gallery was dressed wrong for that kind of heat. Not one, but two long black duster-style coats cloaked most of his six-foot frame, and he wore leather pants and boots. He carried several tote bags and a metal-handled cane. It was the cane that scared Tara Lee Bertucci, the owner of Amaranth Gallery on Sierra Street.
โThe guy was huge,โ Bertucci says. โAnd I tried to talk to him, but he didnโt reply. Just walked around the store, then took jewelry off the display right at the counter.โ
He didnโt try to hide his actions. Bertucci walked into the back of the store and pretended to talk to her husband.
โI pretended like he was just getting in from the parking garage,โ she says.
The shoplifter left the store. Police arrested him not long after this in nearby Fulton Alley. The man had some of the jewelry still in his possession. After he was booked into the Washoe County Jail, he began calling Bertucci, accusing her of violating his civil rights by calling the police.
โHe called work, and he started calling my home,โ Bertucci says. She tried to get a judge to issue a protection order, but since the man was in jail, the judge ruled she didnโt need protection.
Last week, Dell Marvin Roberts, 43, of San Francisco, was sentenced to four to 10 years in prison, the maximum penalty for burglary, and six months in the Washoe County Jail for petty larceny.
The incident is just one reason that Bertucci, who rents business space in the city-owned Parking Gallery, isnโt sure anymore that she wants to be among the pioneering store owners in Renoโs nascent arts and commerce district.
Crime, redevelopment delays and a rent that seems too high to Bertucci are among the reasons the gallery owner is considering filing a lawsuit against the city of Reno. Sheโd seek a retroactive rent reduction and damages to her business due to what she describes as gang and drug activity, as well as the cityโs failure to get restaurants on the property across from the Century Riverside 12.
Bertucci opened her gallery in June 2001. She expected a few thriving eateries to have been built on the city-owned lot at Sierra and First streets by now. She says sheโd been told, in 2001, that an agreement between the city and developers White-Leasure was a โdone deal.โ Months later, she read in the paper that the developers had never paid a deposit to the city and had never signed a development agreement. Recent deals have also fallen through, including one with the developer of a pool hall on the site. The dirt lot remains vacant.
โWe really believed the cityโthat development would happen down here,โ Bertucci says. โI was stupid to believe that.โ
Bertucci doesnโt really consider herself stupid. The last business she and her husband started, she describes as a successโa computer store they opened with $5,000 in 1994 and that turned into a $5 million enterprise.
Bertucci isnโt thrilled about her story being in the paper, because if Reno folks think thereโs crime downtown, it will further harm her business.
โIf word gets out, people might not come down here,โ she says.
She appreciates the efforts of the Reno Police Departmentโs bicycle cops, who do a great job despite their very small ranks. But she usually sees only two bicycle cops per shift patrolling most of downtown, and to her thatโs hardly enough.
Then thereโs the condition of the city-owned Parking Gallery, the building that houses Bertucciโs gallery. When she comes to work, she smells urine in the parking garage and has to step over beer cans and other trash, she says. Sheโs come across such items as underwear and socks on her front steps and in a nearby city planter.
Besides the struggle to keep the parking garage clean, it seems the security cameras have been broken for at least a year. Bertucci recalls that a female parking garage supervisor was beaten and robbed at 10 a.m. one day more than a year ago. Bertucci was told then that the garageโs security system didnโt work. Cameras were dirty and monitors broken.
A recent visit to the security booth at the garageโs entrance seemed to indicate that the system had not been repaired. Two video monitors flashed muddy repetitive images showing parts of the garage. A third monitor was dark. When asked how the cameras were working, the security guard politely said, โNo comment.โ
โI wonder if the casino parking garages even have security cameras,โ responds Dorene Soto, economic development manager for the Reno Redevelopment Agency. Soto couldnโt say how long the cameras had been broken. The agency is in the process, she says, of getting bids on a new camera system.
โAnd weโll be installing some extra ones,โ Soto says. โThe garage is being used a lot more. On Saturday, I came downtown and had to park on the sixth floor.โ
Soto contends that things are far from dismal downtown. She points to the near-immediate success of the Beaujolais Bistro, a French restaurant that opened this fall.
โThey thought it would take a while for people to find out about it,โ Soto says. โBut they opened to reservations-only if you wanted to have dinner.โ
As far as rent on the stores in the Parking Gallery building, Soto says Amaranth Gallery has one of the best deals in the building. The store pays 85 cents a square foot, compared with a new furniture store and Esoteric Coffeehouse, which both pay $1. River Gallery pays 50 cents a square foot for its 5,000-square-foot space, but thatโs because the gallery uses only about half of that space. The rest is used as a kind of communal storage that River Gallery shares with other building tenants.
โThe rent is pretty common for the area,โ Soto says.
Soto remains hopeful regarding the development on the mid-block property across from the Century Riverside. The agency is talking with several businesses about taking the place of the pool hall, a business that recently dropped out of the much-touted plan for restaurants, entertainment and housing on the property.
โAt the end of March, weโll have an exact timeline,โ Soto says.
Soto says she hasnโt heard complaints from other shop owners about crime in the downtown area.
โThereโs a lot of excitement downtown,โ she says. โThe theater is doing really well. And the tenants I have talked to are very happy.โ
Bertucci wasnโt always the โblack sheepโ of Renoโs arts and commerce district. When she moved in, bolstered by the cityโs promises, she was active in the Riverwalk Merchants Association. For a while, she served as vice president.
In September 2001, a still-optimistic Bertucci sent e-mails to Soto about ideas she had for the downtown area:
โThe Smithsonian has been looking for a West Coast satellite museum site,โ she suggested. โCan you imagine the number of people who would visit just to see the Smithsonian-Reno? โฆ It would be a real benefit for people working and living downtown to have a 24-Hour Fitness Center here. Possibly the old Penneyโs across the street? โฆ I know we are all having a little โdown-in-the-dumpsโ time right now, but there is a bright future out there; we just need to hang in there.โ
Soto replied, asking for contact information for the Smithsonian.
โKeep the ideas coming,โ she wrote.
By the end of a long, dismal winter season, though, Bertucci was starting to keep track of the scenes outside her door:
ยท March 6, homeless woman camped out on our steps, drinking alcohol from two small bottles.
ยท March 8 & 9, drug dealers on North Sierra.
ยท March 10, homeless men partying in the elevator when I was leaving the gallery.
Bertucciโs accounts list the value of shoplifted merchandise, which Bertucci estimates to be an average of about $300 per day during a special event such as the downtown Wine Walks.
During an Art in Bloom show in April, customers complained about โthe drunks outside and one male who approached a young teen girl for sex.โ After the event, as she walked holding her husbandโs hand to the Siena Hotel Spa Casino for dinner, a car of men pulled over and offered Bertucci money to have sex with them.
During Hot August Nights, gang and drug activity was rampant in the area, Bertucci says. She closed the gallery early on Aug. 2-3 and didnโt even open on Aug. 4, 6-7.
By Aug. 26, sheโd had enough. She typed up an e-mail and sent it to everyone: the mayor, the city council members, other Riverwalk merchants.
The e-mail was the beginning of the end of Bertucciโs good relationships with her neighbors and landlords.
โI wish you all the best in facing these problems alone,โ one individual responded the next day, โand remember, if you arenโt part of the solution โฆโ
Bertucci resigned from the Riverwalk Merchants Association. She says sheโs been frustrated over the lack of attention to these issues. Now it seems the city is waiting for her lease to expireโfor the squeaky wheel to finally leave the neighborhood, rather than get any needed attention.
โNo one from the city will talk to us,โ Bertucci says. โNo one will physically come here.โ
Soto says thereโs been noreason for her to visit Bertucci. Sheโs chatted with other storeowners when sheโs been downtown shopping.
โI havenโt heard from Tara,โ she says. She did receive an e-mail that the gallery owner sent out in August. But that was months ago.
โHer lawyer called, but we didnโt hear back from him until [early February],โ Soto says. โShe was concerned about rent because things had been slow.โ
Bertucci was given the opportunity to sit down with the cityโs property manager and work out a plan, according to Soto.
“[Bertucci] wasnโt willing to do that,โ Soto says. โIf sheโs having difficulty, we need to look at the books. We have to be businesspeople, too. Show me thereโs a problem. Other tenants are saying things are pretty good.โ
Bertucciโs lawyer, Ken McKenna, says the matter may be forced into court if the city doesnโt attempt to respond to Bertucciโs concerns.
โTara loved being down there, being a part of downtown redevelopment and getting in on the ground floor of a retail environment,โ McKenna says. โBut at this time, we think itโs unfair for her to be paying the rental value of an established retail space. โฆ I see the city giving away property and giving huge concessions to large corporations. Mom-and-pop organizations ought to be given at least the same consideration. Itโs funny. The little guy doesnโt get a break, but the big guy does?โ
McKenna, whose own office is just blocks away from the Parking Gallery building, is optimistic about an eventual thriving arts and commerce district. Heโs excited about the changes Mayor Bob Cashell pledges to bring to downtown redevelopment.
โIโm really a believer,” McKenna says. “But security issues, the cityโs failure to perform correctly as landlords and failure to developโthese need to be cured so that downtown is a friendly, safe environment. That will lead to the growth of the downtown core. โฆ I spend a lot of time down here. I have faith that itโs going to happen. My concern for my client is that she survive for the next few years.”
