The Denver Post

Gilpin County casinos hoping for same turnout seen in Cripple Creek

- By Judith Kohler

Crews were busy spraying antimicrob­ial protection and disinfecta­nt throughout the Monarch Casino and employees were posting signs with a list of COVID-19 symptoms and social-distancing requiremen­ts before opening the doors three months after shutting them to the public.

About 250 employees of the Black Hawk casino went through updated training and were tested for the coronaviru­s to be ready when the doors open at 8 a.m. Wednesday. All the staff was COVID-19 free, a spokeswoma­n said.

Now it’s a matter of seeing how comfortabl­e folks are to spend time with strangers after weeks of being urged to stay at home and keep their distance from others to curb the spread of the illness that has sickened and killed people around the world.

“Through the 12-week closure we’ve had the opportunit­y to talk to some of our best guests on a number of occasions. They all tell us they’re very excited to come up and see us again,” said Erica Ferris, Monarch’s marketing director.

The Gilpin County casino has taken steps to offer customers an “incredibly clean and safe place,” Ferris said. “When people are ready, we’re ready for them.”

Several people were ready to venture into Cripple Creek casinos, which opened Monday. All the casinos, including in Central City, had to get exemptions from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t to reopen. They must follow certain

guidelines and restrictio­ns.

“We had in excess of a thousand people the first five hours we were open,” Matt Andrighett­i, general manager of Wildwood Casino in Cripple Creek, said Monday.

Wildwood monitored the number of customers to make sure there weren’t too many at one time, Andrighett­i said. The exemptions from state coronaviru­srelated restrictio­ns require that casinos limit occupancy to 50% of the capacity allowed by the fire code, or 175 people in a confined, indoor space, whichever is lower.

Wildwood has different sections where people can be.

“We let in a couple hundred people to start. We wanted to make sure the staff was equipped,” Andrighett­i said. “We didn’t have many people waiting in line too long.”

Monarch has three floors and a dining area.

“So at the end of the day, the most people we’ll end up having in the building at any one time is about 600, spread over a very wide area,” Ferris said.

Monarch will use a color code on its website, Facebook and Instagram accounts to let the public know how busy the casino is. The code will go from green for low occupancy from yellow to orange to red, which means it’s busy.

Things will look a little different to regular casinogoer­s. Gamblers won’t be shoulder to shoulder at the slot machines. At Monarch, every other machine will be turned off so players can keep their distance. Wildwood has removed every other chair and could include plexiglass dividers.

Table games are off-limits for now. The state health department said it will reconsider the decision in about three weeks.

The casinos are going big on cleanlines­s, both Ferris and Andrighett­i said. The slot machines at Wildwood have lights that players can activate when they’re ready to leave so employees know the machine needs to be cleaned. Cleaning crews will make routine rounds.

And everyone entering will have their temperatur­es checked, will be asked whether they have any coronaviru­s-associated symptoms and will need to wear a face mask. Wildwood will strongly encourage customers to wear masks inside. It will be a requiremen­t in Gilpin County casinos.

The Ameristar Casino in Black Hawk said on its website that it will have floor decals and signs to enforce social distancing and will provide stations with sanitizer throughout the building. Buffets, a favorite of casino-goers, are off the dining tale for now. Monarch will use the space for a traditiona­l sit-down dining area.

When table games are allowed, Monarch will bring back more of its team, Ferris said. The casino is in the process of hiring more people because new restaurant­s and a portion of a new hotel will open soon, she said.

However, Ameristar is laying off 117 employees. The company said in a letter last week to the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment that the layoffs are the result of the closures due to COVID-19 in the states where it operates, new restrictiv­e conditions “and the negative impact this would have on business volumes.”

Ameristar didn’t respond to a request for comment on its preparatio­ns for reopening.

 ?? Kathryn Scott, The Denver Post ?? Ryan VanStelten services one of the video roulette machines Tuesday inside the Monarch Casino in Black Hawk. The casinos in Gilpin County have been closed since mid-March but will open Wednesday morning.
Kathryn Scott, The Denver Post Ryan VanStelten services one of the video roulette machines Tuesday inside the Monarch Casino in Black Hawk. The casinos in Gilpin County have been closed since mid-March but will open Wednesday morning.

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