Las Vegas Review-Journal

What’s in a plan?

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Nevada law requires casino emergency response plans to include:

■ A map of all areas of a casino and its grounds.

■ The name and phone number of the emergency response coordinato­r.

■ An evacuation plan.

■ A drawing or descriptio­n of interior and exterior access routes. ■ The location of any emergency response command posts.

■ The location of emergency response equipment and resources. ■ A descriptio­n of any public health or safety hazards at the casino.

plans for casinos, state agencies, local government­s and school districts.

The audit questioned whether the agency even reviewed the plans and suggested that the lack of oversight was hurting the state’s ability to respond to emergencie­s and natural disasters. After the audit, the division, overseen by the Department of Public Safety, sent letters to casinos seeking updated emergency plans and later told the Legislatur­e it had corrected the problem.

Auditors did not follow up. Years later, state emergency managers have made few if any of the improvemen­ts called for in the audit.

Most casinos on the Strip have not updated their emergency plans with the state since 2012. The law does not require casinos to amend their plans every year, but any

EMERGENCY An emergency plan covers a wide variety of incidents, including active shooters.

changes must be submitted to state and local authoritie­s within three days.

More than two dozen casinos — including Strip properties Caesars Palace, MGM Grand, Luxor and The Mirage — have not revised plans since 2008, records from the Division of Emergency Management show. Others include neighborho­od casinos Green Valley Ranch, Texas Station, Boulder Station and Santa Fe Station.

Roughly half of 155 casinos in the state required to file or update plans in 2008 did not submit them, documents show.

A leading sponsor of the legislatio­n, former Assemblyma­n John Oceguera, D-las Vegas, said the law is still relevant today to catastroph­ic events.

“An emergency plan covers a wide variety of incidents, including active shooters,” he said.

Nevada and Las Vegas emergency managers would not say whether Mandalay Bay, which last updated its emergency response plan in 2012, properly carried it out on the night of Oct. 1. MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, which owns Mandalay Bay, said the plan’s guidelines for defining roles and responsibi­lities during an emergency were followed.

Emergency management officials said casino response plans are not etched in stone. Personnel have to adapt to the varying circumstan­ces of each incident.

MGM Resorts officials would not discuss why state records show that several of the company’s Strip resorts have not updated their plans since 2008.

In a statement, the company said, “Emergency Response Plans for MGM properties have been on file with the Nevada Department of Public Safety for several years. They will be re-submitted to county officials this month, per their request.”

The company said it submitted its plans to both state and local authoritie­s in 2008.

Security officers at the 13 MGM Resorts properties on the Strip go through extensive training on active shooters and other emergency situations and rely on the expertise of current and former law enforcemen­t officers, including those at the Metropolit­an Police Department, the company said in its statement.

Caesars Entertainm­ent declined to comment on why state records show that its flagship resort, Caesars Palace, has not updated its emergency response plan since 2008.

Station Casinos spokeswoma­n

Lori Nelson did not have informatio­n on whether emergency plans for several casinos had been submitted to the state since 2008. She said the company recently submitted updated plans for its properties at the state’s request and will send the plans to local police and fire department­s.

Wynn Las Vegas and Las Vegas Sands Corp., two other major casino operators on the Strip, said they will update their emergency response plans. State records show that the companies’ plans were last filed in 2012.

No state oversight

In this year’s annual report, the Division of Emergency Management said it was responsibl­e for reviewing casino plans yearly, along with plans for schools and utilities. But the report said the agency had only 76 of 139 casino plans on file.

The division reviews the plans to determine whether they comply with the law and to “ensure both our infrastruc­ture and economic base are prepared for any contingenc­y,” the report said.

But no review actually has taken place.

Bill Elliott, the division official responsibl­e for overseeing the casino plans, said he has not had time to read the plans over the years. For the past four years, until last month, he was assigned to other duties and did not even verify that any plans had been submitted, he said.

Elliott said he has little knowledge about what makes a quality emergency response plan. He said there are no standards in place for him to judge a plan.

“My expertise on a casino plan is very minimal,” Elliott said. “If we had a requiremen­t to judge the plans, we would need additional staff to do it.”

Clark County Fire Chief Greg Cassell, whose department by law is also supposed to receive the plans, said none had been provided to the department.

“This is something that we had no clue ever existed,” said Cassell, who We look at planning and preparedne­ss in general — how we can make sure we have plans in place at the state to correspond with local government­s and tribal government­s that work directly with the local businesses. is a member of the Nevada Homeland Security Commission.

Las Vegas police spokesman Larry Hadfield refused to say whether his department has received any casino plans, which by law must be filed with the agency.

Hadfield also would not allow the Review-journal to interview a member of the department’s Emergency Management Section, which would be responsibl­e for reviewing any plans.

The department also declined to make Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo available for an interview.

The plans are confidenti­al and are not subject to public inspection.

Barry Smith, executive director of the Nevada Press Associatio­n, said the lack of police response to the Review-journal leaves “no opportunit­y for accountabi­lity to even check whether these reports are being filed in the way that they are required to by law.”

“This should concern everybody, especially after the shooting at the Mandalay Bay,” he said. “We trust the government to have our backs on this kind of stuff, but when they won’t tell us what they’re doing, we suspect that they’re not doing anything all.”

Oceguera, one of the sponsors of the legislatio­n, said the Legislatur­e should strengthen the law.

The intent of the legislatio­n was to improve preparatio­ns for a terrorist attack on the Strip and help resolve communicat­ion issues that New York authoritie­s encountere­d during the Sept. 11 attacks, Oceguera said.

“There needs to be some teeth in the law so folks are compelled to act,” said Oceguera, a former North Las Vegas assistant fire chief who now works for a government consulting firm. “But more importantl­y, a plan on a shelf is virtually useless if it’s not getting to the people who

Casino plans put to use

The Reno Police Department sees the value of casino emergency response plans.

Lt. Robert Larson, of the operations division, said the agency keeps the plans on file for Reno’s half-dozen major resorts.

“They are incredibly useful to us on the back end,” Larson said. “Just having a floor plan is huge in letting officers know where they can go and where they can’t.”

Caleb Cage, chief of the Division of Emergency Management, acknowledg­ed that the state agency has not focused on the casino plans since he took the reins in July 2015. Instead, the agency has concentrat­ed on making sure broader, comprehens­ive emergency management plans are in place across the state to deal with any natural disaster or mass casualty event.

“We look at planning and preparedne­ss in general, how we can make sure we have plans in place at the state to correspond with local government­s and tribal government­s that work directly with the local businesses,” he said.

Cage said it is more critical for local emergency responders to see the casino plans than his agency because they are the first ones on the scene.

Local authoritie­s have great relationsh­ips with casinos and work closely with them to prepare for emergencie­s, he said.

But after inquiries from the Review-journal last month, Cage sent letters to roughly 90 casinos in the state asking them to submit updated response plans to his agency by Dec. 31. He attached a copy of the law to the letter.

Cage said he expects to make recommenda­tions to the Homeland Security Commission on how to improve the law.

One option is to ask the Legislatur­e to strengthen the statute to include enforcemen­t provisions for the division of emergency management, he said. Another is to remove the state from the process and give local authoritie­s the ability to enforce the law. And still another option is to put enforcemen­t in the hands of the state Gaming Control Board, which regulates the casino industry.

In the meantime, Elliott again has been assigned to oversee casino filings with the state division of emergency management.

Cassell, the Clark County fire chief, said he is not a fan of the statute.

He thinks it is outdated and requires casinos to submit some informatio­n that is not necessary for first responders.

“It’s not a well-thought-out law,” he said. “The world is more technologi­cally advanced right now.”

Since 2010, firefighte­rs have had access to all the informatio­n they need about the casinos on their computers in the field and don’t really need to see the emergency response plans, Cassell said. That informatio­n includes maps of the casinos that identify exits, water hook-ups, power sources, elevators and fire command rooms.

“I’m comfortabl­e with the informatio­n we have, and I’m confident in the capability of our field commanders,” he said.

But Cassell said he still was sending letters to the more than three dozen casinos in the county asking them to submit their plans under the law by next month.

Las Vegas Fire and Rescue spokesman Tim Szymanski said his department does not keep emergency plans for the 21 major casinos within the city limits but instead reviews them when it does annual inspection­s.

Like the county, the city has a computeriz­ed system that provides the necessary informatio­n firefighte­rs need when encounteri­ng emergencie­s at casinos, Szymanski said.

In contrast, the Reno Fire Department keeps the emergency response plans on file. The department is also revising its fire code to recommend that the properties update and get approval for their emergency response plans every year, said Capt. Willie Seirer, of the department’s fire prevention division.

Much of the informatio­n in the state emergency plans overlaps with fire code requiremen­ts, he said. However, the state emergency plans also show how casinos would work with law enforcemen­t in a crisis.

“They are complement­ary, but neither supersedes the other,” Seirer said.

He said it is important for the department to play an active role in reviewing the plans to make sure the right procedures are put in place. Just recently, he said, a local casino turned in an emergency plan that advised employees to call a supervisor before the Fire Department when reporting a fire.

“I red-lined that part, sent it back and told them to change it so that the Fire Department was called first before a supervisor,” Seirer said.

In New Jersey, the Atlantic City Fire Department also retains emergency response plans for casinos and is updating those plans, said Fire Chief Scott Evans.

“We have a pretty good relationsh­ip,” Evans said. “They are very cooperativ­e with our needs and our partnershi­ps now with casinos to enhance the security of the city as a whole.”

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands Corp. operates The Venetian and Palazzo.

Contact Jeff German at jgerman@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4564. Follow @Jgermanrj on Twitter. Contact Anita Hassan at ahassan@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4643. Follow @anitasnews on Twitter.

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