A woman walking past the Century Riverside Theater Tuesday wondered what the crowd of people was doing across the street.

โ€œTheyโ€™re announcing big plans for the vacant lot,โ€ I told her. โ€œBig, exciting plans.โ€

โ€œOh,โ€ she said, looking not very excited. โ€œItโ€™s about time they do something over there.โ€

I nodded and crossed into the redevelopment fray.

Mayor Jeff Griffin was recounting a walk to the Parking Gallery after a movie.

โ€œI overheard someone saying, โ€˜Thereโ€™s too many art galleries down here. We need a place to eat,’โ€ Griffin said. โ€œAnd I think thatโ€™s a good sign.โ€

With that, Griffin introduced two new proposals for the development of the vacant half-block across from the movie theater. One plan, by local developers Billy3, LLC, includes space for ground floor restaurants like Pane Vino and Silver Peak Brewery. (Donโ€™t worry, Silver Peak would still keep its bar/restaurant on Wonder Street.) Above the restaurants would be an apartment complex, and next door, a 10,000-square-foot bar/restaurant/pool hall to be owned by Michael Peel, who also owns the Keystone Cue & Cushion.

The press conference was short, so I grabbed some coffee at Java Jungle and drove to Gallery 516, where Jack Hoyleโ€™s been busy hanging the paintings of Ron Oden, head graphic artist at the Reno Gazette-Journal. A public reception is Saturday, March 9. Hoyle expects a good crowd.

Itโ€™s only a block from Gallery 516 to Reno City Hall, where I dove into another press conference fray, this one held by trench vote activists. Trench critic Mike Tracy has given up golfing to spend Saturdays getting signatures on a petition that would put the trench issue on the Sept. 3 ballot. Tracy rehashed a city poll of 800 registered voters showing that a majority, 66.63 percent, were opposed to trench construction.

Volunteers have collected about half the needed signatures to get the question on the ballot, he said. In other news, Tracy held up a stack of fliers recently mailed out as part of the cityโ€™s trench info campaign. He knows of two individuals who received more than a dozen identical fliers. Another individual ended up with an astonishing 15 fliers. (The Reno News & Review received eight fliers, addressed to current and former editors with curious spelling variants.)

โ€œWho pays for these?โ€ Tracy asked, waving the stack. โ€œOur money pays for these. Weโ€™re paying for this propaganda. So weโ€™re asking people to write, fax, call or e-mail the council members and tell them to stop wasting tax dollars.โ€

Then it was time for lunch. Carli and I made our way to the Little Nugget Diner on North Virginia. We were approached by panhandling teens and complimented by a homeless guy. We bought laminated poems ($4) from Larry Jamerson, who was selling his wares in front of the Eldorado Hotel Casino. Jamerson complained that sales werenโ€™t exactly going well because potential customers and poetry lovers kept losing their money in the casinos.

โ€œItโ€™s brutal,โ€ he told us, referring to making a living in downtown Reno.

And who were we to disagree?

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