Dirty jobs casino food recycler

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Farms, a muddy outpost of agriculture surrounded by suburban sprawl, would also pave over a unique and smelly slice of Las Vegas history. The sale gives them perhaps one of the larger remaining “infill” sites in the valley, or developable land surrounded by existing projects and not on the valley’s outer edge. 1 and was financed heavily by the sellers: Inzalaco’s group still owes $20.5 million to Combs for the purchase, property records show. The deal, a fraction of what buyers reportedly offered before the Great Recession, closed Nov. Farms site and adjacent, vacant land – to developer Guy Inzalaco for $23 million, Clark County records show. Now, months after he put his land on the market, investors have bought the property - but the Combs family isn’t done feeding Las Vegas’ table scraps to hogs.Ĭombs recently sold about 154 acres at North Fifth Street and Ann Road - comprising the R.C. He saw it as God’s work to recycle the food, but with pungent fumes in the air, plenty of people couldn’t wait for him to push the pigs out of the neighborhood. (Elizabeth Page Brumley/Las Vegas Review-Journal Follow farmer Bob Combs fed casino leftovers to squealing pigs for years on his spread 10 miles north of the Strip. Remaining pigs at RC Farms in North Las Vegas, Wednesday, Nov.

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