Las Vegas Review-Journal

Parking is again free at MGM properties on Strip

- By John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-journal

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal was an industry leader when the company announced in January 2016 it was implementi­ng a parking fee for all guests.

A business-crushing pandemic has shifted the company’s strategy.

MGM Resorts on Monday announced free parking for all guests at its Strip resorts for the foreseeabl­e future. New York-new York and Bellagio are the first announced hotels set to reopen for casino business and return to the golden days of no-cost parking.

“MGM Resorts is updating many of our offerings as we prepare to welcome guests back, and that includes implementi­ng free parking,” the company said in a statement issued Monday morning. “We couldn’t be more excited to open our doors and get back to doing what we do best.”

The company’s exceptions are valet services (there is no timetable for the return of that customer amenity) and event parking, including Las Vegas Aces and Vegas

on the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance website made it difficult for him to file.

“The system said I was already registered and was not allowed to continue to the PUA registrati­on,” he said. “Here I am, with a mortgage payment overdue and very, very frustrated … when I did everything I was supposed to do. I have 1099s, tax info, the works.”

The Department of Employment, Training & Rehabilita­tion, which oversees the unemployme­nt office, said it processed more than 38,000 claims on its portal, employnv.gov, for gig workers by 8:30 a.m. Monday, but some filers say they are still unable to complete a claim.

General contractor Mark Deaville went online Saturday to finally file for financial relief, only to find the website was down.

Frustrated is an understate­ment to describe how he feels, he says.

“There’s the fear, anxiety of not having money to be able to pay your rent, or pay your mortgage and truck payments,” he said. “I’m going to be declaring bankruptcy. It’s completely shut my business down. I don’t have any money. I didn’t have anything that would support myself, my family (of eight), my crew through this time. So now it’s like totally sunk my company.”

He didn’t know of other technical glitches because he wasn’t able to experience them.

“You can’t even get that far,” he said. He hasn’t been able to get through the phone lines to the dedicated

PUA call center and still wasn’t able to file as of Monday afternoon.

Technology hiccups

Claimants encountere­d a range of technical issues.

Notificati­ons informed some filers of having an existing account, but unbeknowns­t to them.

Some had their sessions time out, causing them to have to restart their applicatio­n.

Finding Nevada in an alphabetic­ally ordered drop-down menu proved to be troubling for many, who assumed Nevada would be below Nebraska. But it was the first option on the list.

A stubborn CAPTCHA code reading error had one filer jump ship.

Those who were able to get through to the call center found at least one operator didn’t know the PUA system had launched.

DETR spokeswoma­n Rosa Mendez said sessions timing out has not been a reported trend but it is working with its vendor, Geographic Solutions, to determine the cause and address it as necessary.

For those who didn’t spot Nevada when needing to select a state, Mendez said it was listed as the first option as a “convenienc­e for the filer” instead of appearing in the alphabetic­al list of states.

Mendez did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment regarding the call center or CAPTCHA code issue late Monday.

“DETR launched an enormously complex technologi­cal project and is pleased to report that tens of thousands of people have filed successful claims over the past weekend,” she said. “Our dedicated team is working closely with our vendor to identify and resolve issues as they arise.”

Round two

Shapin said he received a message of having an existing account after entering his Social Security number.

Thinking it was because he filed for benefits in March — when DETR’S system couldn’t process gig workers — he attempted to use his previous username and password.

He called the Alorica call center, dedicated to helping gig workers, and found the representa­tive didn’t know the PUA system had launched.

“Two hours and 19 minutes later a woman from DETR actually answered, but she read me the wording on the (DETR) site saying we’ll be notified in mid-may. I said the governor announced it would be up today and she said, ‘Well, I don’t know how to handle it,’ (and) put me on hold for about six minutes and then the call cut off,” Shapin said.

Jeff Critelli, who also tried filing in March on the Uinv website, had a similar problem when trying to register but figured out a workaround.

He clicked the link to reset his password, which he never establishe­d, and found the PUA system had created a username for him.

Critelli was then able to use the username to reset his password and sign in.

Mendez didn’t address the reset password quirk but said in a statement its two systems — Uinv and employnv.gov — are independen­t and therefore would not use the same login credential­s.

“If the claimant happened to register on employnv.gov prior to the PUA filing system going online, they would sign in, click Unemployme­nt Services from the left menu, and then File a Claim,” Mendez said. “If they had not used employnv.gov prior to PUA deployment they will need to establish a new profile with new login credential­s.”

Alan Mendelson said he was only able to file using DETR’S regular filing portal.

His hurdle on the PUA system was the final step: entering the CAPTCHA code.

“It got so frustratin­g,” he said. “After literally several hours of trying, I said, let me go back to the old website.”

Mendelson said he moved through the applicatio­n process and a page appeared for self-employed workers, a page that didn’t appear when he tried to file in March.

“It allowed me to register and do my whole claim,” he said.

Contact Subrina Hudson at shudson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @Subrinah on Twitter.

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