Kuwait Times

Empty Las Vegas Strip counts losses; locals venture out

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LAS VEGAS: The marble statues at Caesars Palace are fenced off, the Venetian hotel’s gondolas sit empty, and the New York-New York casino rollercoas­ter has ground to a halt. Even the Bellagio’s famous dancing fountains are “completely shut” due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, says a surly security guard, before shooing an AFP correspond­ent away. In the absence of bustling crowds of drunken revelers, packed poker tables and overzealou­s club promoters, the slogan “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas” has never felt more redundant.

Last year, May was Las Vegas’s secondbusi­est month, drawing nearly 3.7 million visitors. Now, the sidewalks lie empty under the scorching sun, except for idle security guards, and a handful of vagrants and bewildered-looking tourists. When the sun drops, some familiar flickers of activity return. The empty casinos’ famous neon lights still shine out, illuminati­ng the occasional low-riding sports car roaring down the Las Vegas Strip.

And local residents, from cycling families to skateboard­ing teens, are flocking to the vacant sidewalks in search of respite from

weeks of stay-at-home orders. “Being that I live in Las Vegas, I never come to the Strip. Ever. There’s no need to,” said automotive business owner Mike Evans, 47. “Being around drunk people and belligeren­t people is not relaxation,” he added, pausing from his bike ride to take a selfie. Now even the outdoor escalators that usually transport pedestrian­s across traffic lanes stand still.

Angela Arnold, taking advantage of the lull to cycle to the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign with two fellow residents, added: “We’re not going to hear horns blowing and people passing out vulgar advertisin­g.” Similarly, Luis Rosales, a 30year-old server at the Venetian, has taken to rollerblad­ing and jogging along the Strip. “I thought never in my life like I would see Las Vegas shut down,” he said. “There’s no commotion, there’s no hustle and bustle... it’s like a ghost town.”

‘Money and greed’ Beneath the odd sense of calm, the financial pain of the shutdown is clear. Billboards are plastered with adverts for nightclub launches that never happened — alongside uplifting messages to “Stay Strong.” One budget hotel that has remained open on the Strip reports a few stir-crazy tourists visiting from neighborin­g California - and even as far away as Wisconsin. But more customers are long-term guests who have lost their Las Vegas homes during the lockdown — despite laws intended to prohibit evictions. “We miss the noise... the great vibes, and people, and feeding off the happiness of other people,” said Samantha, a former well-tipped cocktail waitress now serving chicken wings for minimum wage, who did not want to give her last name. She spoke with AFP while out for a walk with her mother Louisa, left unemployed as a poker dealer due to coronaviru­s.

There are nascent signs of the city starting to reawaken. From Saturday, restaurant­s will be allowed to reopen at half capacity. But the tourist-magnet casinos and nightclubs - along with the state’s strip joints and legal brothels - will remain shut, for now. “Since money is the root of all evil and Vegas is considered the capital of money and greed, this is the last place I thought I’d see shut down,” said Evans. “But they still did.”

 ?? —AFP ?? LAS VEGAS: An empty Las Vegas Strip is seen amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. In the absence of bustling crowds of drunken revelers, packed poker tables and overzealou­s club promoters, the slogan ‘what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas’ has never felt more redundant.
—AFP LAS VEGAS: An empty Las Vegas Strip is seen amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. In the absence of bustling crowds of drunken revelers, packed poker tables and overzealou­s club promoters, the slogan ‘what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas’ has never felt more redundant.

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