Las Vegas Review-Journal

#Metoo has firms revisiting policy

Gaming leaders look at ways to address sexual harassment

- By Bailey Schulz and Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

The #Metoo movement has companies around the world re-evaluating their sexual harassment policies and procedures, including those in the gaming industry.

Panels on how to best prevent and respond to sexual harassment claims were held Monday and Tuesday at the 18th annual Global Gaming Expo at the Sands Expo & Convention Center.

Moderator Matt Krystofiak, senior vice president of human resources for Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp., said there are five elements every company should have in place to prepare for and prevent sexual harassment claims: a policy statement that clearly defines harassment, anti-harassment training, multiple channels to report harassment, training those who investigat­e claims, and a good attorney.

Companies can’t “wait to be a headline,” said speaker Phyllis Gilland, senior vice president and general counsel for Golden Entertainm­ent, Inc.

Scandal on the Strip

“We hired outside counsel to come in and speak with all senior management after (Steve) Wynn was accused publicly,” she said. Management was told ‘if you have anything you need to tell me, tell me now.’ … It’s another compliance check.”

Former Wynn Resorts Ltd. Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn was accused of multiple sexual harassment incidents but has denied all of them.

Harassment isn’t just from top executives, Gilland said.

“I’ve had as many women harass women as men,” she said. “People say hire more women (as a solution). … That’s all great, but I can tell you at least 25 stories of women harassing women.”

Thomas Auriemma, a gaming consultant for Penn National Gaming of Wyomissing, Pennsylvan­ia, who also serves on the compliance committees of other companies, including MGM Resorts Internatio­nal since 2014, said every company needs a compliance plan, a code of conduct, written policies on all kinds of harassment, and a whistleblo­wer or ethics hotline.

“Each of those should contain statements about sexual harassment that there is no tolerance and a path for reporting sexual harassment and investigat­ing such matters,” Auriemma said. “If any company out there doesn’t have, in my view, all four of them, they are deficient.”

But Auriemma said overreacti­ng can be just as consequent­ial.

“I’m amazed sometimes how lawyers and politician­s can jump to judgment sometimes without understand­ing what the facts are,” he said.

Regulation­s in Nevada

Another panelist, state Gaming Control Board Chairwoman Becky Harris explained how her board is in the midst of drafting regulation­s that specifical­ly address the sexual harassment issue.

“Our next step will be to take into considerat­ion some of the testimony that was heard,” she said. “I want to be really clear that not all the testimony was in support of the regs. We heard from some attorneys in town as well as some licensees that perhaps these regulation­s aren’t necessary at this time.”

Harris referenced comments that existing regulation­s give Nevada regulators broad discretion to punish licensees that violate federal laws, or whose actions damage the reputation of the state’s gaming industry.

In hearings in Las Vegas and Carson City in September and October, licensees have said a proposal to annually respond to a 16-item compliance checklist is onerous and that companies must already adhere to rules establishe­d by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission and the Nevada Equal Rights Commission.

Toni Repetti, a professor in UNLV’S Harrah College of Hospitalit­y, attended the session and said the need for new regulation­s is unfortunat­e, but necessary. Repetti said generally, the more diverse a company is, the better it performs financiall­y.

“I’m a firm believer that we should just do good business and to me, this is a logical good business decision,” she said.

Ron Steinmetz, an executive sous chef in Arizona, said he plans to check with the human resources department once he returns to work to make sure there’s a policy in place and that the staff are following procedures, something he believed they were.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates the Sands Expo & Convention Center.

Contact Bailey Schulz at bschulz@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3830233. Follow @bailey_schulz on Twitter. Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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