Categories: News

Polaris grants $100,000 to Fernley Community Foundation toward Community Center campus

Robert Perea, The Fernley Reporter

The Fernley of Cody Wagner’s youth looked much the same as the city does now, but was a much different place.

With a population a little more than a quarter of what it is today, the Fernley Wagner grew up in was a small town, with small town amenities and a tight-knit community. But while the explosive growth of the early 2000s brought more people, and more recent development has brought more business and industry, none of that growth has brought community and recreational facilities. The city still lacks any performance arts venue and has no facility outside of schools or parks capable of hosting large gatherings.

Seeing the population grow without corresponding community facilities, Wagner dedicated himself to eventually building a community center campus, and he’s serving as the chairman of the Fernley Community Foundation, which is working to do just that.

Advertisements

“We missed an opportunity there, but we’re trying not to miss the next opportunity,” Wagner said.

That’s why Wagner was so excited for the announcement of a $100,000 grant from the Polaris Distribution Center to the Fernley Community Foundation toward the community center project the Foundation is working on. The presentation was made during a Media Day event last Friday where Wagner and other members of the group working on the community center project to provide and update about that project and the Lyon County Senior Center on the proposed community center site.

Specifically, the donation will go toward the building of the Polaris Plaza, an outdoor space that will serve as a sort of front porch for the eventual community center campus.

Polaris manager Ben Mollman said he hopes the donation kicks off the fundraising process for the community center project. Wagner, meanwhile, used it as a call to action for everyone in the community to get involved and help with the project, even if that help isn’t financial.

“Much like an awkward pubescent teenager, Fernley has grown almost four times the size it was when I was a teenager, but without the coordination or community support to continue to make this a great place to live,” Wagner said. “People in Fernley have been talking about a project like this for a long time, and we think now is the time.”

The grant from Polaris represents the second biggest donation in Fernley’s history, behind the William Pennington Foundation’s $3 million for the Senior Center.

Financing a community center project like the one the foundation and the city are working toward will require many more donations and a huge fundraising effort. City Manager Daphne Hooper said the city has a conceptual design for a $30 million community center facility, although it would be built and paid for in phases, not all at once. She said the next step is engineering design to cut the project into phases.

The foundation has raised more than $150,000 through a brick fundraising program. They are selling bricks that will be placed somewhere on the campus – $250 individual 4×8 inch bricks and corporate 8×8 inch bricks for $500. Wagner said 56 bricks have been sold so far.

“I’m hoping all the residents will buy a brick,” mayor Roy Edgington said. “Wouldn’t that be wonderful, you could build a building with everybody’s name on it.”

Edgington got involved in the community center project when he was first elected to the City Council 10 years ago. At that time, the council, which is also the Fernley Convention & Tourism Authority, voted to begin putting a portion of its money, which comes mostly from room taxes, toward a community center project, and eventually paid $950,000 for the property that the Fernley Depot is on. The Senior Center built on the site was the first step in what the foundation and the city hopes becomes a place that serves every member of the community, from infants to senior citizens.

“When I look at this piece I see a parking lot, I see a building, I see young people, old people, everybody in between. I see laughter, learning, fun,” Edgington said. “I think we have a dream that will come true.”

Mayor Roy Edgington (left) and Polaris manager Ben Mollman.
Fernley Community Foundation Chairman Cody Wagner
Mayor Roy Edgington
Retired Lyon County Human Services Director Edrie LaVoie
Cody Wagner and Ben Mollman
Robert Perea

View Comments

  • Great article, hopefully it will get read and responded to.. an interesting part in the first part of the article says , no place to hold large meetings, but we turn around and plan to tear down the Newlands senior center, that just needs some repair. No structural problems, its just old, thats the reason.

Recent Posts

Fernley Women’s Golf Club, April 23

GAME: No Putts 1st: Jana Garner, 34 2nd: Bonnie MacQuarrie, 37 3rd: Sandi Sewchok, 38…

13 hours ago

Tickets are still available for the Boys & Girls Club of Truckee Meadows Serving Fernley's…

5 days ago

William Robert Hissam

William Robert Hissam, age 79, passed peacefully at home on Friday, April 19 in Fernley,…

6 days ago

One recovery effort, two strains of fish. The complex comeback of Lahontan cutthroat trout

Once-endangered fish is recovering along the Truckee River — but is it sustainable without human…

7 days ago

Fernley Women’s Golf Club, April 2 and April 9

April 2 Game:  Monthly Stroke Play 1st Gross: Kathy Kennedy, 84 1st Net: Verl-Lee-Ely, 64…

2 weeks ago

County Commissioners approve 2024-2025 tentative budget

Courtesy of Lyon County The Lyon County Board of County Commissioners met Tuesday, April 9,…

2 weeks ago