Wynn Resorts Ltd.’s Las Vegas gaming floors have been given the green light to operate at full capacity, effective Monday.
Casinos & Gaming
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Restaurants, stores and casino floors in Las Vegas are bumping up to 50 percent of their fire-code capacities, right around the time stimulus checks arrive.
Some of the casinos are holding out for looser operating restrictions, or more foot traffic. Others have shuttered their doors permanently.
Nevadans are optimistic about Las Vegas’ post-coronavirus future, but they believe a full economic recovery is going to take some time.
Metrics like foot traffic, gaming revenue and occupancy rates in the Reno area are closing in on pre-pandemic levels ahead of Clark County.
Mandalay Bay, Park MGM and Mirage are set to operate 24-7 starting March 3, thanks to increased interest in travel to Las Vegas, according to a Wednesday news release.
Caesars Entertainment Inc. has reopened its final Las Vegas property, just in time for the holiday season.
Planet Hollywood Resort welcomed guests once again Thursday.
A coalition of labor unions is again gathering in front of the Clark County Commission on Tuesday morning to push for local workers’ right to return to work.
The Tropicana is ready to reopen its doors for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic reached Nevada.
The property, known for its dolphin habitat and erupting volcano, had been closed since mid-March.
The offers come as Las Vegas’ trade show and convention traffic has come to a standstill because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Hotel owners are facing an “unprecedented wave” of foreclosures, according to a Tuesday letter from the industry to Congress.
Labor union members across several industries in Nevada are fighting for the right to return to work.