Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Businesswo­man vies to be mayor

Candidate eyes public safety, homelessne­ss

- By Ricardo Torres-cortez Contact Ricardo Torres-cortez at rtorres@reviewjour­nal.com.

Until recently, Las Vegas mayoral candidate Irina Hansen had never aspired to run for office.

“It’s just that I’ve had enough,” the businesswo­man told the Las Vegas Review-journal. “The government is broken. It no longer works for the people; it’s not serving the people.”

Hansen, a veteran real estate profession­al and Las Vegas salon owner, is one of 15 candidates vying to replace Mayor Carolyn Goodman, who is term-limited.

The race could be decided on Election Day Tuesday if one of the candidates receives more than 50 percent of the vote. Otherwise, the top two hopefuls move on to a November runoff.

Hansen — who was born in Romania and was raised in the United States — said local government affects every facet of her life.

Her top priorities would include tackling homelessne­ss, serving seniors and veterans, and public safety.

Hansen’s administra­tion would advocate to increase oversight on how social services organizati­ons spend tax dollars.

“We have a lot of viable organizati­ons in place right now that serve those in our communitie­s, but the problem is I think the leadership,” she said.

Hansen said she would work to streamline the licensing process for small business owners.

The city lures big businesses with incentives, including tax breaks, Hansen said. “We don’t do that for small business owners.”

Las Vegas has its own department of public safety and fire department, but also funds a significan­t portion of the Metropolit­an Police Department’s budget.

“I think the police department is doing great,” she said. “We just need to give them the necessary tools that they need and get out of their way.”

Hansen said she would move to quickly settle the lawsuits with the would-be developer of the defunct Badlands golf course, a position taken by most of the candidates.

As mayor, she would take the resolution a step further by publicly apologizin­g to developer Yohan Lowie for what she described as mistreatme­nt and slander from the city.

“He has a right (to develop),” she said. “He’s an investor, everyone has that opportunit­y and that right when you come to Las Vegas.”

Hansen said she would push for more transparen­cy, noting that just researchin­g the Badlands dispute required moving through muddled publicly available informatio­n.

Hansen would lean into her religious faith to do the right thing “during closed doors,” she said.

The candidate said her message has resonated with the constituen­ts she’s met with. And under her tenure, the city would continue to collaborat­e with neighborin­g cities.

“I’m here to work for the people,” she said. “Right now we have a self-serving government, and it’s time that we get someone in there that has a will and a desire and a passion to work for the people.”

 ?? Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae ?? Las Vegas mayoral candidate Irina Hansen speaks to the Review-journal about her goals if she is elected mayor at the Las Vegas Review-journal offices on May 29.
Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Las Vegas mayoral candidate Irina Hansen speaks to the Review-journal about her goals if she is elected mayor at the Las Vegas Review-journal offices on May 29.

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