Who Gets
in May Be Out
Anyone who has been to a nightclub
in Las Vegas has seen a form of gender discrimination
at work.
It's a Darwinian
process that favors young, attractive females.
Being a celebrity -- or knowing one -- helps,
as does being a high roller or a friend of the
nightclub staff.
Under
proposed regulations considered by state gaming
regulators, nightclubs, lounges and other venues
that charge admission would be able to offer
gambling while continuing arbitrary admission
policies aimed at keeping riffraff out and beautiful
people in.
It's
a change experts say will further undermine
Nevada's long-standing policy of requiring that
gambling be conducted in public and available
to everyone.
The
state Gaming Control Board discussed a draft
of the regulation at a workshop Tuesday and
is expected to hold a follow-up workshop in
Carson City in the next few weeks. The Control
Board and Nevada Gaming Commission are expected
to adopt the regulation in about three months.
The
regulation is an outcome of Senate Bill 444,
which the Legislature passed earlier this year.
The Nevada Resort Association backed the bill
on behalf of the casino industry, and the Palms
-- which is building a Playboy-themed club atop
its new hotel tower -- was a primary force behind
the change.
While
the regulation states that customers can't be
discriminated against based on "race, color,
religion, national origin or disability,"
gender was deliberately left off the list.
Gaming
Control Board Chairman Dennis Neilander said
Tuesday the board doesn't have the authority
to challenge the will of the Legislature, which
didn't include protection from gender discrimination
in the final version of the bill.
That
means casinos will be able to continue to practice
any number of arbitrary, velvet-rope policies
designed to enhance the mystique of a club,
such as allowing women in for free while men
wait outside.
"That
may cause some issues if (a man) wants to enter
to gamble," board member Bobby Siller said.
"We will probably not see the end of this.
This could be a major issue for the state."
Neilander
said that under the proposed regulations, admission
policy disputes would trigger an investigation
by regulators. Checking out such complaints
could severely tax Gaming Control Board resources,
he added.
The
proposed regulation may be changed to put the
burden on the customer to contact the Gaming
Control Board with a complaint, he said.
The
regulation weakens a long-standing law that
gambling be open and available to the public,
experts say.
Over
the past two decades, casinos have fought to
change the law by offering private gambling
areas, former Gaming Control Board Chairman
Steve DuCharme said. Bars and nightclubs wanted
some minimal cover charges to pay bands, for
example.
But
regulators resisted the changes, saying such
moves would go against public policy, he said.
"There
was a pretty strong objection to allowing these
types of private rooms because of some abuses
that could occur," DuCharme said. "Some
admission policies could become subjective rather
than objective."
That
changed this year when casinos were able to
convince legislators that gaming in clubs that
charge admission would be good for business.
Bill
Eadington, director of UNR's Institute for the
Study of Gambling and Commercial Gaming, said
Nevada's public gaming rules -- created to prevent
skimming and ensure the public's trust in casino
games -- may have outlived their original purpose.
Gaming
regulators shouldn't be allowed to dictate politically
correct, open-door policies in a nightclub setting,
he said.
"It
does not insult me as a potential customer if
beautiful young women and handsome young men
are admitted over me," he said. "Nightclubs
should not have to admit ugly, old and fat people
... If you undermine the aesthetics that make
nightclubs perceived as exotic, then you kind
of kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.
Then whether the nightclub has gaming anymore
is irrelevant."
Recently
implemented regulations allowing private gambling
rooms for high rollers were so burdened by rules
that the so-called international gaming salons
have failed to generate much business for Nevada
casinos, Eadington said.
To
comply with the public gambling law, casinos
must let people into their high-limit rooms
even if they are wearing jeans and T-shirts.
The rules have backfired for casinos, preventing
high-limit gamblers from having a truly private
experience, Eadington said.
The
Gaming Control Board discussed the admission
fee along with about a dozen other proposed
regulations the board expects to approve in
the coming months.
Those
include a regulation that would prevent casinos
from offering payday loans or contracting with
vendors to offer such loans, and regulations
allowing mobile gambling devices in casinos.
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