Many in Las Vegas report drop in sales; all worry about another shutdown.
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Six months ago, the Las Vegas Strip was just a plane ride away. These days, it’s a road trip for gambling.
Las Vegas’ unemployment rate continues to drop, though job growth remains slow.
According to RunRepeat.com, just 30 percent of U.S. gym members surveyed have returned since gyms reopened amid the 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.
With new towers opening and the city’s first from-the-ground-up resort since 2016, downtown Las Vegas has been on a roll for months, and that includes higher gaming win.
One week from the start of the Clark County School District’s distance learning, Nevada’s six largest gaming companies haven’t made clear what support they’ll give to working parents.
Wynn Resorts is the first major Strip gaming company to publicly disclose how many of its employees have tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
Southern Nevada homebuilders signed nearly 1,230 sales contracts in June, the most since February.
Hope is dissolving into fear for thousands of unemployed Nevadans as Saturday marks the end of a federal provision that paid an additional $600 a week in unemployment insurance benefits.
At first, it was toilet paper, face masks and meat. Now, the nation is facing a new crisis from the coronavirus pandemic: a coin shortage.
While some guests said they felt completely safe at resort pools, others worry the crowds could further the spread of COVID-19, or say they were turned off by the new protocols.
Gov. Steve Sisolak said Friday that he would “take swift and decisive actions” against those that don’t comply.
The act of entering a local casino — put your right wrist up, pull your mask down, look at that camera, stand on that dot — is playing out like a game of the COVID hokeypokey.