A Nevada Gaming Control Board report last week showed how much slot machines kept and how much was paid back to players. Will that help you decide where to play?
Business Columns
The California-based Americans for Nonsmokers Rights is connecting casino revenue with smoking bans and has enlisted the Oakland A’s to take up the fight in Nevada.
After three Las Vegas casino-resorts debuted during the pandemic, no others are officially scheduled to open anytime soon.
Coming out of the Great Recession, various plans to build massive hotels, complete an unfinished skyscraper, and construct an arena on the north Strip have produced hardly any visible results.
Rhode Island-based Bally’s Corp. is one of the nation’s fastest growing casino companies and it’s making its mark with sports wagering and a television network.
The Nevada Gaming Control Board will have a new self-exclusion list for players of interactive games soon, a new means to address problem gambling in the state.
The only international flights arriving at McCarran International Airport come from Mexico and not 10 other countries that were part of the pre-COVID-19 mix.
In meetings between Red Rock Resorts executives and two investment groups, new details on the company’s planned Durango property emerges and analysts like what they see.
Executives said on a conference call with analysts that Station plans to develop a casino on its 71-acre parcel near Ikea.
A new agreement between Caesars Entertainment and the Arizona Diamondbacks has spurred some conversations on whether sportsbooks belong in our stadiums and arenas.
When the city of Chicago unveiled its request for proposals for a casino-resort, it said the winning bidder would also get to install slot machines at O’Hare and Midway.
The north Strip megaresort will feature 3,500 rooms, more than 40 food and beverage spots, 250,000 square feet of meeting space, and 117,000 square feet of casino space.
The failure of Kentucky Derby track operator Churchill Downs to sign an agreement with a licensed disseminator could prevent race wagering in Nevada.
Executives of the Southern Nevada’s publicly traded gaming and tourism companies would just as soon forget about their fourth-quarter earnings reports.
Four companies, including two from Las Vegas, participated in the city’s “request for information.” Does that mean they’ll apply to build in the Windy City?