Harvey Whittemore (born 17 August 1956) is an American lawyer and businessman in the Reno, Nevada area.[1] As an influential lobbyist[2] for the gambling, alcohol and tobacco industries, and for his own ventures,[3][4] Whittemore has been called "one of Nevada's most powerful men".[1] Whittemore was the president of Coyote Springs Investment, LLC, the land-development company behind Coyote Springs, a controversial[5][6] $30 billion planned golf course community of 160,000 homes on 43,000 acres (170 km2) in the rural Nevada desert.[7][8] Whittemore's close relationship with Senator Harry Reid came under scrutiny because of perceived legislative and political pressure favors allowing Coyote Springs to overcome regulatory problems.[9][10]
Whittemore, whose daughter, Andrea Whittemore-Goad, is a chronic fatigue syndrome patient, has also founded a research center known as the Whittemore Peterson Institute to investigate the condition.[11]
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Harvey Whittemore was born in Carson City, Nevada, in 1956, and was raised in Nevada and Arizona. Harvey and his wife, Annette Whittemore, met in college and have been married 38 years. Whittemore attended the University of Nevada, Reno and earned a law degree from Arizona State University.[1]
Whittemore's first experience with politics was the 1978 Nevada gubernatorial race, during which he established contacts in the Nevada political scene. He was hired by the law firm Lionel Sawyer & Collins as a lobbyist, where he advanced to senior partnership.[1]
Whittemore has lobbied on behalf of industries including the Nevada casinos, liquor, and tobacco.[3] He has been called one of the most powerful men in Nevada, the most powerful casino lobbyist, and "the Lance Burton" of lobbying.[5] State Senator William Hernstadt attributes Whittemore's success to his ability to command attention and respect, remarking, "when Harvey Whittemore speaks, the Nevada Senate listens".[1] Whittemore has also lobbied for his own ventures, both business and non-profit.[2][12][13]
Whittemore's land-development ventures included golf communities and Coyote Springs, a planned living community about 60 miles (97 km) north of Las Vegas on 43,000 acres (170 km2) of desert land. First envisioned by Whittemore in the early 1990s,[3] Coyote Springs is located in a large valley on the border of Clark County and Lincoln County[14] and is slated to include 160,000 homes, twelve golf courses and several hotel-casinos. Its total cost has been estimated at around $30 billion. The first golf course, designed by golfer Jack Nicklaus, opened in 2008.Home construction is expected to begin in fall 2012.[15][16] Coyote Springs has been called a "marvel" and an "outrage".[17] Whittemore considers the development an opportunity "to create a beautiful place which is unique in the world".[3]
Whittemore obtained land in the Coyote Springs Valley from a private owner but was unable to acquire all of the land or build on what he owned because of regulatory obstacles. The desert land included a sanctuary for the desert tortoise, an endangered species, and some of the adjacent land was designated a wilderness study area. A federal easement for utilities was also present, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would not allow building due to the presence of stream beds in the area. Water rights agreements were also needed to procure large amounts of water.[3][10]
Whittemore and his company have successfully overcome most of the obstacles to development of Coyote Springs. A commentator at the Las Vegas Review-Journal called Whittemore's triumphs a "marvel." Politicians at the state and national levels have introduced legislation to benefit the project by removing some of the regulatory problems; in other cases, politicians have reportedly exerted pressure on regulatory agencies to agree Whittemore's projects. Journalists and advocacy groups have questioned whether Whittemore's personal and financial relationships with political figures, particularly Senate majority leader Harry Reid, have affected these developments.[3]
Whittemore is reportedly one the closest friends of Senator Harry Reid, who became Senate majority leader after the fall 2008 elections,[10] and both men have characterized their relationship as close and decades long.[3] Whittemore, his wife, and company have contributed tens of thousands of dollars to Reid's election campaigns and to Reid's leadership fund, which has been used to aid Reid's allies and is said to have helped Reid attain his leadership position.[3] Whittemore has also funded political campaigns of two of Reid's sons. All four Reid sons have at one time been employed by Whittemore's law firm.[18] According to the Los Angeles Times, Whittemore helped advance the careers of two sons, including Leif Reid, Whittemore's personal attorney. Responding to allegations of favouritism, Reid's office stated that the Senator's behaviour had been "legal, proper and appropriate".[6]
In 1998, Harry Reid and John Ensign, Nevada's past Republican Senator, co-sponsored legislation removing restrictions to the sale of federal wilderness lands in Nevada. Environmental groups, who initially supported the bill because of accompanying protection of mountainous areas, now say they regret their actions.[10] In 2002, Reid introduced "The Clark County Conservation of Public Land and Natural Resources Act of 2002", reclassifying land on or abutting Coyote Springs, moving a federal easement off Coyote Springs land and allowing Whittemore to make a land swap at no cost.[10][19] Whittemore was eventually obliged to pay for the land after watchdog groups objected to the transfer provision.[18] Reid achieved additional adjustments to the land's status in 2004 legislation.[3] Reid has blocked funding to study the impact of underground water pumping on neighbouring Utah.[10]
In 2006, two public lands issue groups sued the federal government over what they charged was an illegal land swap between the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM) (an agency in the Department of the Interior) and Whittemore's Coyote Springs. The Western Lands Project and the Nevada Outdoor Recreation Association stated that the government had unlawfully exchanged almost 10,000 acres (40 km2) of protected desert tortoise sanctuary for property owned by Whittemore himself. The Los Angeles Times reported that the swap consolidated and added to the value of Whittemore's holdings. The advocacy groups questioned the role of Whittemore's political allies in this decision and sought a restraining order.[6][20] Whittemore responded to the filing by stating that neither Senator Reid nor his son Leif had affected the decision,[3] and, along with the BLM, requested dismissal of the suit. District Judge Brian Sandoval declined to do so in 2007.[21]
The US Environmental Protection Agency initially refused to grant permits based on the projected environmental impact of destroying stream beds in the Coyote Springs Valley. In what EPA officials called an "unusual" move, Senator Harry Reid contacted the EPA administrator after a process including a phone call from his son Leif, Whittemore's personal attorney.[3] Soon thereafter, the EPA came to an agreement with Whittemore and also awarded Whittemore's company an environmental sensitivity award. The prize was accepted by Leif Reid.[3] Senator Reid's office denied any wrongdoing but emphasized that Leif Reid should not have called his father on behalf of his employer.[3]
Environmentalists, residents of Utah and California and local ranchers fear negative consequences of Coyote Springs water usage, summarized by Las Vegas investigative reporter George Knapp as "pumping water in the teeth of a drought for golf courses".[10] Water rights issues initially interfered with Coyote Springs progress, but agreements were reached.[7][10] In coverage by Bloomberg, water rights attorney Greg James stated, “You need a large amount of money and some very powerful people to make water projects happen". Bloomberg notes that Harry Reid's son Rory is an employee of Whittemore's law firm and was the vice-chairman of the Southern Nevada Water Authority from 2003 to 2008.[7] However, an opinion piece in the Las Vegas Review-Journal states that Rory Reid, who is also the Clark County Commission chairman, "bows out of all discussions and actions" related to Coyote Springs.[14]
The Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental advocacy group, announced plans in 2009 to sue the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The Center expressed concern about the environmental impact of agreements of the agencies and Whittemore's company, contending that the Coyote Springs development and loss of water resources and habitat would harm the desert tortoise and potentially hasten the extinction of the Moapa dace, both endangered species. The Fish and Wildlife Service and Nevada's water authority responded that they, too, are interested in protecting the Moapa dace, a small fish living in the Muddy River north of Las Vegas.[16]
In 2007, Judicial Watch, a politically conservative watchdog group, sued the BLM for documents related to Coyote Springs. Judicial Watch alleged that Harry Reid and other Nevada politicians may have applied pressure improperly on behalf of Whittemore and Reid's son. Reid's office stated that there was no misconduct.[9][22][23]
Whittemore and his wife Annette, together with chronic fatigue syndrome specialist Daniel Peterson, established a CFS research organisation known as the Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease (WPI).[4] A study conducted by the WPI reported in October 2009 that the Xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus was found in most CFS patients they tested, sending many patients to doctors for tests and drugs, but an independent attempt to replicate this result reported failure in January 2010.[24] The Whittemores envision a wider mission for WPI as a research and educational institute involved in patient care.[4]
The Whittemores contributed and raised funds for the institute in response to what they felt was a lack of action on chronic fatigue syndrome from the federal government.[4] They also believed, along with Peterson, that CFS must be caused by a virus. The Whittemore's daughter, Andrea Whittemore-Goad, had been diagnosed with CFS at the age of 11. At 31, in 2009, she was reported to be very ill and has seizures.[11][25] The Whittemores state that the only treatment with any effects was an experimental antiviral drug administered by Dr. Peterson.[4]
Whittemore and his wife Annette met at the University of Nevada Reno, and Whittemore credits Annette with influencing his choice of career.[1] The Whittemores have five children.[26]