50°F
weather icon Clear

WEEKLY EDITORIAL RECAP

TUESDAY

FLAMINGO FIRE SAFETY

One rejection of public safety standards could be considered an aberration. Two incidents within the same company might be a coincidence. But three violations of a similar nature? That's trouble.

Harrah's Entertainment was working to remedy hotel room renovations that were completed at the Rio without proper permits and safety inspections when word came that similar deficiencies existed at Harrah's Las Vegas. Then, just last week, company executives learned that Flamingo Las Vegas workers were told to remove a piece of safety equipment from one floor to obtain a part so another floor would pass a fire inspection. ...

Clark County's strict fire safety standards exist for very good reason. An electrical ground fault caused the 1980 MGM Grand fire that killed 87 people, and after the blaze, inspectors found 83 building code violations. Housing thousands of guests and workers inside massive buildings that have a limited number of exits demands extraordinary protection against spreading flame and smoke.

It's in the best interests of Harrah's Las Vegas to make "safety first" more than a slogan for cafeteria signs and company e-mails -- executives have to make it a corporate culture to compensate for this fall's errors. Clearly, Harrah's can't afford a fourth such failure.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Undermining unions

A boon to the working man, dues aside.

NEVADA VIEWS: Special session a win for employers, economy

The Legislature’s recent special session may not have made headlines for this issue, but its outcome was critical for every employer in our state. The passage of Senate Bill 8 was the single most important action taken to protect Nevada’s business community and preserve our economic stability.

COMMENTARY: Why Invest America philanthropy trumps traditional welfare

This Giving Tuesday, two American billionaires became heroes instead of villains. Though corporations give away $44 billion annually, it is often hard to see a tangible effect. Michael and Susan Dell’s $6.25 billion gift to Invest America bypasses traditional philanthropies and foundations to make a direct effect on the next generation.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Can the Dark Ages return?

The medicine for decline requires unity, honesty, courage and action — virtues now in short supply

MORE STORIES