Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV jobless rate drops to 29 percent in May

Agency updates its report of April’s figure to 34 percent

- By Eli Segall Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas’ unemployme­nt rate dipped last month as locals went back to work following the pandemic-sparked shutdowns.

But the valley’s jobless rate was still through the roof.

An estimated 29 percent of the

Las Vegas area’s workforce was unemployed in May, down from 34 percent in April, the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion reported Tuesday.

Las Vegas gained a seasonally adjusted 20,900 jobs in that time, said the department, which revised upward the region’s previously reported unemployme­nt rate in April, 33.5 percent.

The coronaviru­s pandemic, which devastated the U.S. travel industry with sweeping business closures and stay-at-home orders across the nation, wiped out much of Las Vegas’ tourism-dependent economy virtually overnight in March, effectivel­y

closing its famed casino corridor.

“For a city that never closes its doors, it was eerie to drive a dark

Las Vegas Strip,” Maurice “Maury” Gallagher, chairman and CEO of Las Vegas-based airline Allegiant Travel Co., said in a letter to shareholde­rs Tuesday.

Gov. Steve Sisolak allowed certain businesses, including retailers, auto showrooms and nail salons, to let customers back in last month, albeit at limited capacity.

Nevada’s unemployme­nt rate in May, 25.3 percent, was down from 30.1 percent in April, but it was still the highest in the country, seasonally adjusted federal data shows.

Las Vegas has almost certainly recouped more lobs lately, given that

casinos were allowed to reopen June 4 after more than two months on state-ordered lockdown.

Still, forecastin­g a recovery from the chaos is “sort of a fiasco,” said Stephen Miller, director of UNLV’S Center for Business and Economic Research.

Unemployme­nt-system phone lines have been clogged amid a “tsunami of claims coming in,” and some businesses have closed again after workers were infected with the coronaviru­s, he noted.

Miller figures Las Vegas and the rest of the country could be grappling with the fallout from the virus through 2021.

John Beckmann, a 58-year-old Las Vegas casino host, was working at Texas Station when Sisolak ordered casinos and other businesses closed in March to help contain the virus’ spread.

As instructed by management, Beckmann said, he still came in twice a week to call his gamblers and see how they were doing, until he learned May 1 his position had been eliminated.

He was paid through May 15 and received $2,500 in severance, and his health insurance is covered through September. He applied for state unemployme­nt benefits a few days after his paychecks ended, but he hasn’t received a dime yet, he said.

His wife is still working, though he hasn’t been hunting for jobs because “there’s nothing out there,” Beckmann said, adding he supposes he could work in fast food.

“I don’t think at age 58 I have a career at Mcdonald’s,” he said.

Contact Eli Segall at esegall@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

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