Vegas tourism, airport, casinos show rebound from virus
LAS VEGAS (AP) – Las Vegas is bouncing back to pre-coronavirus pandemic levels, with new economic reports showing increases in airport passengers and tourism and a big jump in a vital index showing that casinos statewide took in $1 billion in winnings last month for the first time since February 2020. “I don’t believe anyone imagined this level of gaming win,” Michael Lawton, senior Nevada Gaming Control Board analyst, said of a Tuesday report showing 452 full-scale casinos in the state reported house winnings at the highest total since February 2013. The $1.07 billion reported last month topped the $1.02 billion the board charted in March 2019.
Lawton called March 2021 “the perfect storm for gaming activity in Nevada.”
“Demand was a driver,” he said, “in addition to capacity being increased to 50% on March 15 and the NCAA basketball tournament being played after last year’s cancellation.”
The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority launched a new advertising campaign on Monday and reported Tuesday that it tallied more than 2.2 million visitors in March.
The tourism figure was down 40% compared with the same month two years ago. Still, up from the 1.5 million tourists the authority tallied in the first half of March 2020, before casinos and other businesses were closed to prevent people from gathering and spreading COVID-19.
McCarran International Airport said Monday it handled nearly 2.6 million passengers last month, up 961,000 from about 1.6 million arriving and departing passengers in February. In March 2019, by comparison, the airport counted 4.4 million passengers on the way to a record-setting 51.5 million travelers in 2019.
Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat, loosened occupancy limits statewide from 35% to 50% on March 15 and plans to leave coronavirus mitigation measures to local jurisdictions on May 1. Sisolak has set a June 1 target for lifting all statewide restrictions except face coverings, which will still be mandated.
Many rural counties will lift all restrictions except mask rules on May 1. In Las Vegas, occupancy limits will be relaxed but not raised entirely this weekend at businesses, including stores, spas, saunas, and strip clubs.
The Gaming Control Board said Friday that casinos in Clark County could go to 80% occupancy starting May 1.
Lawton, the board analyst, said spending on gambling is believed to have gotten a boost after direct payments of up to $1,400 went to most Americans under the $1.9 trillion federal coronavirus relief measure.
House winnings reported by Las Vegas Strip properties topped $501 million in March, up almost 44% from about $348 million in February. Lawton noted spikes in five other reporting markets set records for casino winnings: downtown Las Vegas, the Boulder Highway area, the rest of Clark County surrounding Las Vegas, Elko County, and the Carson City area. Statewide slot winnings totaled $772 million – the second-highest total in history – and slot machine volume was the highest since July 2008, Lawton said.
Nevada sportsbooks handled almost $641 million in March and won $39.3 million, second in the nation to New Jersey, where sports pools dealt $859 million and won $60.7 million. This story corrects the second-to-last paragraph to say slot winnings totaled $772 million, not sports gambling.
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