Casino Firms
Worry About Employees
While Mississippi's Gulf
Coast sifts through the wreckage wrought by Hurricane
Katrina, the director of the state's casino regulatory
agency is already making a direct appeal to Las
Vegas-based casino companies and other gaming operators
to rebuild their properties.
"This state is going to do whatever it can
to keep them," said Larry Gregory, executive
director of the Mississippi Gaming Commission. "We
can't afford to lose them."
Gregory took a helicopter tour of the devastation
Tuesday and saw first hand what many around the
country have seen on television: wrecked casino
barges thrown ashore, broken highways and flattened
homes.
"The impact is just going to be devastating,"
he said. "I broke ground on most of those casinos.
I put my foot on the shovel and the blueprints are
in my office. I've seen these magnificent properties
come to this poor state of ours."
Mississippi -- the country's third largest gaming
market behind Las Vegas and Atlantic City -- has
long been friendly to Las Vegas casino giants. The
state's dozen Gulf Coast casinos employ about 14,000
people and pay about $500,000 per day in tax revenue
to the state, Gregory said.
That doesn't include non-gambling spending by casino
customers in the region, he said.
A 13th hotel and casino, the Hard Rock Biloxi,
was scheduled to open for the first time at midnight
Wednesday but was decimated in the storm. Today,
the company said it was "adequately insured
and intends to rebuild."
The property isn't affiliated with the Peter Morton-owned
Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.
"The Mississippi Gulf Coast was in dire straits"
before casinos, Gregory said. "The casino industry
has been a blessing not only to the Gulf Coast but
to the entire state. We want them to rebuild --
but that's going to be a business decision."
In Louisiana, which wasn't as badly damaged, the
three riverboats affected by the storm employed
about 2,700 people and won about $292 million from
gamblers last year. The state gets about $62 million
per year in casino taxes, or about $172,000 per
day, from those properties. Those figures don't
include Harrah's New Orleans, the state's only land-based
casino.
"It's going to be months before the full extent
(of damage) is known and access is going to be questionable
for some time," said Wade Duty, executive director
of the Casino Association of Louisiana.
Of the Las Vegas gaming companies operating in
Mississippi, Harrah's Entertainment Inc. has been
the most forthcoming about what it intends to do
next.
In an interview with CNBC, Chief Executive Gary
Loveman said that the company remains committed
to the region and intends to rebuild its two, badly
damaged Grand Casino riverboats in Biloxi and Gulfport.
A best-case scenario for the Biloxi property, which
was hurled several hundred feet ashore from the
coast, would be to build a temporary casino on land
rather than another boat, Loveman said in the interview.
The company's third property in the region, its
land-based casino in downtown New Orleans, only
has modest damage and would be able to reopen relatively
soon depending on whether the city would be able
to sustain it, he said.
In a press conference earlier this week in Las
Vegas, Loveman said the storm damage to riverboats
would encourage Mississippi legislators to allow
land-based casinos -- something the state has fought
in the past.
The state allowed riverboat casinos under the premise
that the boats would not grow into Las Vegas-style
gambling palaces. But companies have built ever
larger barges in recent years that have essentially
become permanent buildings attached to large hotels.
Gregory, who has argued for land-based casinos
in the past, said the prospect is likely to become
"the most critical issue facing our legislature
next year."
Lawmakers have debated the issue in Mississippi
since riverboat casinos were legalized in 1990 and
the first properties opened in 1992.
"We've always feared this day coming and prayed
that it wouldn't," Gregory said. "We knew
that if a Category 4 or 5 storm hit the Gulf Coast,
there would be a chance that we'd see casinos (strewn
across) Highway 90. And it's happened."
Last month the state legislature allowed future
casinos to be built atop pilings to make them more
secure. The pilings still have to be over water.
Gregory said his agency has so far reviewed three
casino applications under the new rule.
Other Las Vegas companies haven't yet confirmed
that they will rebuild their resorts as before,
though Boyd Gaming Corp. has said its Louisiana
property doesn't appear to be badly damaged.
Officials said they still haven't been able to
get a close look at the damage to their casinos
because flooding and road damage make them difficult
to access except by helicopter. Officials have yet
to declare some regions safe for entry, they say.
Companies say they are focused on the immediate
relief effort and are trying to reconnect with employees.
"We have no desire to think about anything
in the long term," MGM Mirage spokesman Alan
Feldman said. "We are much more concerned about
trying to find out where our employees are."
The company employs about 3,000 people at its Beau
Rivage property in Biloxi, which was still left
standing after the storm but reported significant
damage.
Wednesday, MGM Mirage said it was working to make
sure employees receive their regularly scheduled
paychecks Friday, either by direct deposit or paper
checks.
The company has set up a call center in Las Vegas
and a toll-free number -- 866-368-7399 -- so that
employees can check in with the company and provide
contact information. The reservation number for
Beau Rivage has been rerouted to this hotline, where
customers with existing reservations can get information
about cancellations and refunds.
Harrah's also is working to get in touch with its
workers and is attempting to find jobs for them
at its other casinos.
Loveman said his company intends to pay workers
affected by the storm for the next 90 days and has
donated $1 million to an employee relief effort.
All three properties closed Sunday before the hurricane
hit.
Harrah's is housing more than 400 people, mostly
non-employees, in the convention center at its Grand
Casino in Tunica, Miss and also has a relief center
at its Lake Charles, La. casino for displaced workers
and their families.
The company has offered to let guests at its six
Las Vegas properties who are from the regions affected
by the storm stay on for two nights at no charge.
Officials with Ameristar Casinos of Las Vegas said
they reopened the company's Vicksburg, Miss. casino
Wednesday afternoon and that the property suffered
"minimal" damage.
The company believes that none of the casino's
roughly 950 workers were unjured through some may
have had some property damage. Workers will be paid
for work time missed while the property was closed,
Ameristar said in a statement.
An executive with Pinnacle Entertainment said Tuesday
that none of the company's employees are believed
to be hurt.
The Las Vegas company owns Casino Magic in Biloxi
and Boomtown New Orleans, which employ about 2,000
people.
"We're quite worried about them," Chief
Financial Officer Steve Capp said. "Land lines
are down and cell phone service is spotty. We're
doing the best we can."
Pinnacle Chief Executive Dan Lee was on his way
down to the Gulf Coast with other officials earlier
this week to assess the damage.
"He's a hands-on kind of guy," Capp said.
"But I'm not sure what they can do at this
point."
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