Fortunately, it is also the turf of Reno Police Department's Motel Interdiction Team, a law enforcement, crime prevention, and services-outreach team targeting budget motels in the downtown area. With it, police in The Biggest Little City in the World are reclaiming properties and driving out criminals and other social predators who live there.
"One bad motel affects the entire city block, and in less than a two-square-mile radius, we have 50," says Sgt. Greg Ballew, who supervises the department's Downtown Enforcement Team. "We knew that we could impact crime in all our downtown area, just by controlling the motels."
Long before Las Vegas became the international gaming and risqué-entertainment playground it is today, Reno was a gambling mecca. Sin City's growth led to Reno's decline, and its downtown suffered an additional blow in the 1990s when big-name resort-hotel-casinos lured even more tourists away from its modest "motor hotels."
Occupancy plummeted. Room rates fell to as low as $19 per night (or $120 weekly) and the aging motels quickly became squalid lodging for the working poor. They also attracted local and out-of-town undesirables in search of fast, anonymous room rental: Unlike apartment complexes, low-budget motels don't require first and last months' deposits, credit checks, background checks, or even-at least, until recently-proper identification.
A lot of motel dwellers are "between having an apartment, and being on the street," Ballew says. "Low-budget hotels have become the home of sexual predators, criminals, drug dealers, drug addicts, ex-felons, and alcoholics."