South Tahoe to probe potential convention center investor
By Kathryn Reed
South Lake Tahoe is waiting for a $30,000 check so it can begin its due diligence – aka background and financial checks – of Woodridge Capital Partners LLC, the firm wanting to take over the would-be convention center.
At the City Council meeting this month, attorney Lew Feldman, who has represented original developer Lake Tahoe Development Company and now Woodridge, wanted the item to be discussed at a special meeting.
The city doesn’t want to use taxpayer money to pay consultants to investigate Woodridge.
The action unanimously taken by the council last week allows for the due diligence of Woodridge Capital Partners to be done, for the company to be an assignee to the owner participation agreement, and for the formation of a conceptual plan of the construction of what is known as the Chateau at Heavenly Village.
The council approved the item with the fee intact, but has since scheduled a special meeting for 10am April 27. (The budget and possible increase to business license fees will also be discussed at that meeting.)
Councilmen Hal Cole and Bill Crawford were appointed as an ad hoc committee to meet with Michael Rosenfeld, CEO of Woodridge. No meeting has been scheduled between the parties. However, Rosenfeld is expected to address the full council at the April 27 meeting.
“This guy, I don’t think he has the money, but he has access to money,” Gene Palazzo, South Lake Tahoe redevelopment director, said of Rosenfeld.
City Attorney Patrick Enright echoed those sentiments.
“He has access to funds. He would obviously be doing this with others who have funds,” Enright said. “If he can’t get the financing, it’s not going to work.”
Randy Lane and John Serpa, the men behind Lake Tahoe Development Company, have been in bankruptcy court since October because of their inability to pay creditors the $54 million they are owed. They have until June 2 to come up with a plan.
Rosenfeld, so far, is the plan. He has been a player in projects this size and larger.
“Eventually, if we pick this guy, we will either amend the existing (owner participation agreement) or have a new one,” Palazzo said.
The $410 million, 11-acre project that was approved several years ago was to include two hotels – with at least one a four star; extensive retail space (this was before commercial vacancies became the norm here); a convention center that would double as a facility local organizations could us; have a possible under or overpass linking to Heavenly Village; and open space.
What a future project may look like is unknown. The footprint is likely to remain the same because of existing permits and environmental documents. What the inside looks like is expected to change. A smaller project has also been talked about.
The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency permits were to expire this summer, but they will be extended for the length of time the project is in bankruptcy court, so probably another 10 months, according to Lane.
“This is not something that is going to be an easy solution even if new people come in. There are still many issues that have to be addressed on an ongoing basis,” Lane told Lake Tahoe News. “First, you have to make some sort of reasonable agreement with the creditors. Second, you have to wait things out and decide when it is a good time to bring the project forward. You can’t build it today for what you can sell it for. That means you don’t build it. That’s the issue.”
He said just when he thinks things are solidified something unexpected pops up.
Per the judge’s order from last month, Lane et al have been filing twice monthly reports to the court that creditors and interested parties have been receiving.
Another report is due this week, but it is the first one in May that will be the most significant because that’s when an outline of a potential deal must be filed.
“That will give us our first inclination as to whether he can make this work or not,” Enright said.
One thing that makes this situation unique is that the foundation has been poured. But it’s not one parcel. A final map was never recorded so the concrete and rebar near the Nevada border is laid on 29 parcels. That’s why foreclosure is not much of an option for creditors because then there is little or no value for someone who would want to resurrect the project.
“I think what needs to go there is what is planned there. It makes sense,” Lane said. “Whether we get to a plan or don’t will be driven an awful lot by creditors. I’m not saying we aren’t going to get consensus.”
Once Lane and his people present a plan to the bankruptcy judge by the June 2 deadline, the judge has until Aug. 2 to make a ruling.
“Our position always has been we want the creditors paid and the project to go forward,” Lane said. “We don’t have anymore money to throw at it. At some point we’ll find a solution. We would not continue to be the developer. Whoever comes in would be.”
Hear we go again
Hopefully the city council has sobered up somewhat after their giddy days of naive fantasy led to such poor decisions.
Skateboard park, parking garage….. better hope someone builds something otherwise there will be a lot of concrete and rebar to pull out and a lot of dirt needed. Lets put the council’s bad decision behind us and move forward with support of something that will help the local economy. Time to be positive and root for Lane to find funding to get out of having this “hole”. Direct your anger at making sure we elect three good council members this Fall .
Sounds like yet another middleman wants to jump on the band wagon and make some money off this project when they have no money to invest. All Woodridge seems to bring to the table is he knows “people” who have the money. How many middlemen can this project sustain? Where are the real investors?
Whole thing seems crooked, follow the process and get Woodridge and Lane off the project, and get a “real” investor, with their own real money in.
Let’s hope that the City gets a better deal this time. The way I understand it, the previous developer would have given the Convention Center to the City but retain the revenue from all the profitable weeks of the year. The city, as owner, would collect no property tax and would have to pay to maintain the facility. In return, it would get only the revenue from the unprofitable weeks of the year. I can’t believe that the city would fall for such a sucker deal – the only worst deal the city ever got was when it bought the airport for $1 (think of how many millions of dollars it has cost us since).
I would be glad to see the Big Units(Embassies ,Harrah’s, Harveys,Blue,Heavenly Village) be able to fill up their current Open “SPACE.”
That be a Starter!
Why more building when the others sit Empty?
Why on earth does it cost THIRTY THOUSAND dollars to do a credit check?! That’s an absurd amount of money that for a job that shouldn’t take more than a few days at most.