Nerve isnât will power. Itâs, actually, wonât power.
Nerve, for people and for communities, is knowing where youâre going and you wonât be driven off course. Every day, put your game face on and decline to be diverted from your purpose.
When people recently let game faces slip because the word Hyatt was uttered and appeared in print, it was a reminder Carson Cityâs message too often is like that of many communities trying to screw up collective will power without understanding that wonât power undergirds success. The most important key to unlocking this communityâs greatness is refusing to shrink from the tenacious heritage upon which this city has been built.
Do you think Orion and Samuel (Mark Twain) Clemens saw todayâs Carson City in their dreams when they arrived here? Did it stop them they were in the middle of nowhere with next to nothing? Or Abe Curry? And Henry Yerington?
Did Mayor Jim Robertson and his colleagues in the 1960s let naysayers stop the movement that led to folding Ormsby County into the consolidated municipality of Carson City, setting the stage for modern growth that took the community to more than 50,000 residents today? He wouldnât be deterred and, if our mettle proves equal, we wonât settle for a community that stalls.
So it was heartening to telephone Steve Neighbors a few days back and learn, in effect, he viewed premature disclosure of Hyattâs possible interest in downtown Carson City as a mere hiccup. Fear the hotel would walk didnât seem to come up on his radar. Neighbors, steward of Hop and Mae Adams Foundation property galore downtown, after a 2012 setback over his last idea just moves on with recalibrated plans.
His vision is for a tech-oriented auditorium/convention facility with hotel attached. Hyatt would be great, but a right-sized facility will attract a right-sized hotel no matter what nameplate it bears. As Neighbors said, Carson City may be small but itâs a unique gem. Folks here need to stop selling themselves and the community short. Whomever comes gets us and this â a good deal. Whomever wants something else should go somewhere else.
Meanwhile, our wonât power needs to dig in on five big things: We wonât let Las Vegas steal our state capital status, a dunderheaded and costly idea; we wonât let Northern Nevada become water-starved; we wonât jeopardize our communityâs fiscal integrity by overindulging in bonded indebtedness; we wonât think small time or second rate, opting for right size and key player; and, finally, we wonât ever just settle.
âThe greater danger for most of us,â said Michelangelo, âlies not in setting our aim too high and falling short, but in setting our aim too low and achieving our mark.â
John Barrette covers Carson City government and business. He can be reached at jbarrette@nevadaappeal.com.