A seemingly straightforward real estate deal between the city of Camas and owners of a Camas City Hall-adjacent building turned messy this week, after a retiring state legislator accused the city of using its condemnation powers to “unfairly compete on the open real estate market.”
In a guest column sent to The Post-Record on Dec. 10, Washington’s 18th District Rep. Liz Pike (R-Camas) called the city’s threat of condemnation to obtain the former Bank of America building in downtown Camas for $1.6 million “one of the most underhanded government tactics” she had ever seen, and said “it casts a dark shadow on the elected leaders in our community.” (Pike’s full column is on page A4 in this issue.)
Pike’s ire stems from a bidding war for the downtown Camas building, which city leaders plan to renovate and use as an expanded city hall.
Camas City Administrator Pete Capell said Monday the city reached out to the building’s four owners — Jerry and Marilyn Nies and Gina and Todd Stevenson, who purchased the property at auction in March 2017 for $535,000 — after the building’s tenant, Bank of America, announced it was closing its Camas branch.
“We indicated we wanted to lease the space quite a while ago,” Capell said. “We needed additional space and that building was very convenient.”