Itโ€™s not about digging a big ditch through downtown Reno anymore. Itโ€™s about trustโ€”the trust citizens put in their city government. And right now, many have lost that trust.

โ€œPeople who even see benefits to the trench are not pleased with how the project is being handled,โ€ said Dave Rigdon, Reno city councilman. โ€œThey are very, very distrustful of the way information has been put forward. What you have is not just a trench project, but a mentality in City Hall thatโ€™s very defensive, that says, โ€˜Weโ€™re going to build a moat around city hall and do the project no matter what.โ€™ โ€œ

The Reno City Council will vote Nov. 6 to decide whether to proceed with the trench project. If the council gives the go-ahead, the bidding process will move forward with the number of bidding contractors narrowed down to four.


I met Rigdon downtown a couple of weeks ago, just after the Reno City Council had voted in favor of hiring a lobbyist to go after more federal funding for the ReTrac project. Rigdon supported the move, though he questioned its timing.

โ€œThe question is, why did we wait so long to pursue this?โ€ he asked.

Rigdon, in previous debates, voted against hiring a public relations firm to build a positive image of downtown redevelopment. The councilman has this radical theory about opening government up to the public. Government, in his view, ought not to be run like a business, but as a forum where the public can participate in the decision-making process.

Thatโ€™s a contrast to a view of government as a place to get stuff done, doing whatever it takes to achieve its goals.

โ€œI think that both viewpoints are valid,โ€ he said. โ€œMost businesses are run in a top-down manner, very authoritative. Those at the top make the decisions, and thereโ€™s nothing anyone can do about it.โ€

This method can be efficient. But itโ€™s not how Rigdon would run the governmental zoo.

โ€œWe protect the process,โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s why we have open-meeting laws, so people know whatโ€™s going on. People have a say and feel like participants in the process.โ€

Results of a telephone survey of registered Reno voters showed that 58 percent of them disagreed with the city of Renoโ€™s plan to relocate the railroad into a trench in downtown Reno. Six out of 10 voters said the project was not important to them or their families.

Though the city has held hundreds of public meetings on the ReTrac concept, Rigdon said those meetings werenโ€™t as much about gathering public responses as they were about pitching the project.

โ€œ[The city] decided what to do and held 200 meetings saying, โ€˜This is what weโ€™re going to do,โ€™ โ€œ he said. โ€œNo wonder people feel disaffected.โ€

Rigdon said that the issue might have been better handled if officials had sought to garner the publicโ€™s ideas from the start.

“Tell people that we have a problem. Thereโ€™s been a railroad merger. That might mean more trains. Then open it up for discussion. That gives people a chance to at least participate in a meaningful way.”

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