Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Trade show cancellati­ons have cost thousands missed job opportunit­ies.

Experts uncertain when trade shows will resume

- By Richard N. Velotta

When the National Associatio­n of Broadcaste­rs made its difficult decision to cancel rather than delay its convention planned for late April, thousands of laborers lost work.

The lost space rental revenue for the Las Vegas Convention Center and the thousands of missed room nights for local resorts have been widely recognized, but many more are missing job opportunit­ies that occur when a monster show such as NAB — one of Southern Nevada’s top five annual shows — comes to town.

The meetings and events industry is reeling from the high number of cancellati­ons related to coronaviru­s concerns. Meetingsne­t.com estimates that the industry will lose $233 billion by this summer.

The U.S. Travel Associatio­n said 5.9 million jobs would be lost in the travel industry, which includes the meetings and convention­s sector. That represents a $900 billion loss in 2020 — seven times the amount lost in the 9/11 attacks.

The Governor’s Office on Economic Developmen­t said the loss of 400,000 tourism industry jobs, including in the meetings, convention­s and trade show sector, would result in a $34 billion

loss for Nevada.

While some trade shows are finding alternativ­e dates instead of canceling, others, including NAB, aren’t. That will probably prevent Las Vegas from eclipsing 2019’s record 6.6 million convention visitors, as it was anticipati­ng this year.

Lost jobs

Among the contracted workers who miss out when a show cancels, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority:

■ Electricia­ns, plumbers, carpet layers and workers who build exhibitors’ booths and other show components.

■ Service providers that work with exhibitors, including Cox Communicat­ions for broadband services, Centerplat­e for food and beverages, FedEx for transporti­ng goods and documents and American Express for on-site financial transactio­ns.

■ Security officers, who are hired by show managers to ensure access and control of show floors, assisting LVCVA security officers.

■ Transporta­tion workers who shuttle convention­eers from hotels to convention centers. Taxicab and ride-hailing service drivers also aren’t making runs between resorts and McCarran Internatio­nal Airport.

■ Cleaners hired by show managers to keep exhibit floors clean, in addition to LVCVA custodial workers tasked with overall facility cleanlines­s.

■ Floral decorators hired to enhance booth appearance.

■ Tent companies used by exhibitors to set up facilities in parking lots and other external locations.

■ Furniture providers used by show managers and exhibitors to create office environmen­ts for business meetings.

■ Voice and acting talent used to deliver monologues about products in specialize­d booth presentati­ons.

■ Photograph­ers hired by show managers and exhibitors to memorializ­e events.

■ Other tourism-related companies. Thousands of visitors — especially from overseas — take advantage of Las Vegas’ proximity to the Grand Canyon to take helicopter trips before or after a convention or on slow days during a show.

■ Registrati­on staff hired to register exhibitors and attendees, distribute credential­s and provide wayfinding assistance.

■ Audiovisua­l production profession­als to provide various display and messaging services for exhibitors.

■ Freight companies to deliver large booth components. Truck drivers often arrive early in Las Vegas and park their rigs before they are marshaled to deliver to exhibit halls in welltimed and choreograp­hed sequences.

■ Temporary laborers to supplement booth staffing.

“The list goes on and on and on,” said David DuBois, CEO of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Exhibition­s and Events, an organizati­on affiliated with the $300

billion global meetings industry. “We refer to it as (the industry) having a long tail, and in this case, it’s an ugly tail.”

Impact of cancellati­ons

How long will workers be affected in Southern Nevada?

It’s a fair question that two of the city’s largest event management companies — Freeman Company LLC and GES-Global Experience Specialist­s — can’t answer.

“We haven’t communicat­ed at all with employees about when we expect them to be back, because we don’t know,” said Lea Lashley, communicat­ions director for Dallas-based Freeman, which was contracted to manage NAB. “A lot of shows have canceled, and a lot of people have postponed. We understand that a lot of our customers don’t know how this is going to impact their business, and they don’t know what they’re going to do next. We don’t talk on behalf of our customers, so we’re not going to do that now.”

Freeman’s chief executive officer, Bob Priest-Heck, said in a statement that among the options the company is keeping open is providing support for online meetings.

Too soon for forecasts

Detra Page, a spokeswoma­n for Las Vegas-based GES, also said it’s too early to project when and how shows would return.

“We’re working with our clients,” Page said. “If they need to postpone, we’re assisting them to reschedule their events. But now, it’s too soon to predict when the shows will be back as they were.”

A Harris poll conducted the weekend of March 21-23 indicated it could take two to three months for Americans to attend large social gatherings once government restrictio­ns are lifted.

According to the poll, after two to three months, nearly a fifth of Americans said they would host or attend a large social gathering (22 percent), go to the movies (21 percent), greet people with a handshake (21 percent), stay in a hotel (20 percent) or go to a sporting event (17 percent).

Fifteen percent of Americans said it would take two to three months for them to be able to visit a casino or take public transporta­tion again.

Uncertaint­ies surroundin­g the novel coronaviru­s leave DuBois with nothing definitive.

“I’m an associatio­n executive with a hospitalit­y industry background of 40 years, and I’m not even going to guess how long it’s going to be,” he said. “We have moved events out of March, April and May into the fall, so my best guess is that it’s going to last through the end of May and it’ll take three to six months for companies to build their business back up to the way it was in 2019, and it may even take longer than that.”

 ?? Robert Reinecke ?? The ConExpo-Con/Agg constructi­on equipment trade show took place in March, but subsequent shows have been canceled.
Robert Reinecke The ConExpo-Con/Agg constructi­on equipment trade show took place in March, but subsequent shows have been canceled.
 ?? Robert Reinecke ?? Meetingsne­t.com says that the meetings and events industry will lose $233 billion by this summer.
Robert Reinecke Meetingsne­t.com says that the meetings and events industry will lose $233 billion by this summer.

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