Boyd
Aims to Keep Stardust Employees
Boyd Gaming Corp. has developed
a plan to retain all 1,899 of its Stardust workers
even after it demolishes the resort to make
way for its $4 billion Echelon Place project.
The
company also wants to minimize disruptions and
keep its loyal customers by relocating them
to alternative Boyd Gaming properties.
"We
want to retain both as many employees and customers
as we possibly can," Boyd Gaming spokesman
Rob Stillwell said. "We're fortunate we
have 11 other properties that afford us great
flexibility from an employee and a customer
standpoint."
Culinary
Local 226's top official, Secretary-Treasurer
D. Taylor, said Boyd Gaming executives met with
the union in mid-January to discuss plans for
the Stardust's 1,005 union workers.
He
said the union raised concerns with the company
involving the closure, severance payments and
placement of workers, but he expects a response
from the company early this month.
"Then,
we'll know better where we stand," he said.
Stillwell,
who said Boyd Gaming has always had a positive
relationship with the Culinary, declined to
discuss details of the plan because negotiations
with the union are continuing.
He
also said Boyd Gaming has scheduled meetings
with 894 nonunion workers Feb. 15 to present
its plans for retaining and reassigning them.
Workers,
who all asked not to be named, generally said
Boyd Gaming has been supportive and that they
were pleased with the broad outlines of the
plans.
"They
had to tear it down sometime to keep up. Can't
fight City Hall. But it's good to hear they're
worrying about us workers," one waitress
said Wednesday.
Another
hotel worker said he has been with the company
10 years and the placement plans are consistent
with the support and training opportunities
Boyd has offered.
"Boyd's
been good to me and the guys I work with. It's
not a surprise they're being smart about this
too," he said.
Not
everyone was entirely happy, though.
A
bellman said he wished it were possible to redevelop
the site as a phased project because it's a
convenient commute and he likes the customers.
University
of Nevada, Las Vegas Professor Bill Thompson,
who specializes in gaming studies, said retaining
all of a hotel-casino's workers through the
entire construction phase is unusual, if not
unique, in Las Vegas history.
Other
companies have offered 90 days pay after closures
and implosions and promised workers jobs after
reopening, as when Wynn Resorts demolished the
Desert Inn or when Las Vegas Sands Corp. imploded
the old Sands and built The Venetian.
But
most companies have not been in a position to
retain the affected workers over multiyear construction
projects, he said.
"It's
an unusual pattern of showing loyalty. No one
else has ever kept employees in the system from
day one to reopening," Thompson said.
Redevelopment
plans call for keeping the Stardust open through
the end of the year, and then imploding the
iconic tower and other structures on the 63-acre
site early next year.
Thompson
said Boyd Gaming, which has 14,000 employees
in the Las Vegas Valley, is better positioned
to place workers at other properties since its
acquisition of Coast Casinos in 2004.
"It's
an advantage of scale. Coast gives them five
or six more outlets and with attrition of 10
or 20 percent a year or more, they need the
workers in any event," he said.
"It's
good for the loyalty of customers, but especially
good for worker loyalty. And that makes it smart
for the company," he said. "Boyd is
going to need the workers and their talent,
and this way it won't be giving the experience
and training away to competitors."
Plans
call for a single-phase development with all
elements of Echelon Place opening within a few
weeks of one another.
Some
workers said they would prefer the option of
going on unemployment when the Stardust closes,
and company executives said nothing will be
done to impede such assistance.
Stillwell
said Boyd Gaming will handle hiring at Echelon
Place just as it did at South Coast on Las Vegas
Boulevard south of the airport and at The Borgata
in Atlantic City, offering current Boyd Gaming
workers the chance to apply for positions before
they are opened to the general public.
However,
he said after Echelon Place is completed, all
employees will have the option of applying for
positions there, although many may prefer to
stay in their interim positions rather than
returning to the old site and working at an
entirely new property.
When
it opens in 2010 on the Strip's west side just
north of Wynn Las Vegas, Echelon Place will
include 5,300 hotel rooms, 1 million square
feet of meeting and convention space, 350,000
square feet of retail stores and a 140,000-square-foot
casino.
Boyd
Gaming will own and operate the 3,300-room Echelon
Resort, which will include a 2,600-room Resort
Tower and a 700-room Suite Tower, with each
containing its own spa.
It
will include a 4,000-seat theater with stadium
seating designed to accommodate concerts and
production shows and a 1,500-seat theater for
smaller shows and touring acts.
Boyd
Gaming has also entered a management agreement
with Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts, the Asian
Pacific's leading luxury hotel group, to include
a Shangri-La Hotel within Echelon Place.
The
Shangri-La Hotel, Las Vegas, which will be owned
by Boyd Gaming and operated by Shangri-La, will
include 400 guest rooms and suites, a 20,000-square-foot
spa, meeting space and two restaurants.
Boyd
Gaming has entered into a 50-50 joint venture
agreement with the Morgans Hotel Group, a developer
of lifestyle-boutique hotels, for the construction
of two hotels within Echelon Place.
As
part of the master-planned project, Boyd Gaming
will develop, own and operate the Las Vegas
ExpoCenter at Echelon Place. The Las Vegas ExpoCenter
will feature 650,000 square feet of exhibition
space and 175,000 square feet of meeting and
conference space.
With
the Echelon Resort, the total meeting and exhibition
space at Echelon Place is expected to exceed
1 million square feet with more than 200 meeting
rooms. |