Two of Nevada’s five most complained-about ZIP codes for potential COVID-19 safety violations encompass nearly all of the Strip.
Casinos & Gaming
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Nevada’s casinos won’t need to overhaul their operating plans under new guidance issued Tuesday by gaming regulators.
Strip casino operator MGM Resorts International is immediately working to adjust its operations.
A second shutdown would have adverse effects on a number of industries within the state, and could push the state into deeper economic trouble.
Hundreds of resort jobs in the Las Vegas Valley are potentially on the chopping block come December.
The Tropicana and Paris Las Vegas’ Eiffel Tower Restaurant have informed the state that they anticipate layoffs in the near future.
The resort will close at noon Monday and begin operating on a new Thursday-through-Monday basis “indefinitely.”
Planet Hollywood is back in business. It will be a limited reopening: Gaming floors will be open seven days a week, but the hotel will only accept weekend reservations.
Nevada companies are extending furloughs for or laying off hundreds of workers in coming weeks.
Oyo Las Vegas notified the state it plans to lay off employees effective Nov. 12.
New state data and company figures from Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands don’t provide insight into what role Nevada’s resort industry is playing in the spread of the coronavirus, experts say.
Six months ago, the Las Vegas Strip was just a plane ride away. These days, it’s a road trip for gambling.
Hotel owners are facing an “unprecedented wave” of foreclosures, according to a Tuesday letter from the industry to Congress.
Three Las Vegas Valley nongaming hotels have notified Nevada’s employment bureau that layoffs may be coming.
Wynn Resorts is the first major Strip gaming company to publicly disclose how many of its employees have tested positive for the novel coronavirus.