Sunday Times

Please nickel-and-dime us, Las Vegas begs slots addicts

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● The armoured truck pulled up with $500 (R8,300) in quarters after Adam Wiesberg had asked for $30,000. He thought there must be a mistake.

Wiesberg was working to reopen El Cortez, the longest continuous­ly running hotel and casino in Las Vegas. He’d requested the extra change in July to help operate the facility’s 113 coin-operated slot machines.

“People from all over the world come here, like a pilgrimage, to play the coin machines,” said Wiesberg, El Cortez’s general manager. “When you walk in here, you’ll hear Sinatra, you’ll hear Rat Pack music and you’ll hear the coins.”

Casinos — and the banks that serve them — have been swept up in a national coin shortage, leaving many gambling venues begging customers to bring in their piggy banks and jars of change.

The shortage started after the coronaviru­s pandemic forced many consumers to stay home, causing a dramatic slowing in the circulatio­n of small change.

Some casinos have gotten creative with their pleas. The Gun Lake Casino in Michigan told customers that if they bring in $50 worth of loose coins, they’ll receive $10 of free slot play.

The D Las Vegas is home to the state’s only Sigma Derby slot machine, which lets players use quarters to place bets on five mechanical horses. The casino started a promotion called “I helped save Sigma Derby” to combat the change shortage.

“If you bring in a pound [0.45kg] of quarters, you get a hat,” said D Las Vegas owner Derek Stevens, noting the Sigma Derby’s cult-like following. “If you bring in three pounds of quarters, you get a hat and a Tshirt.”

The promotion has netted 425kg of quarters in recent weeks.

While coin-operated slots are less common these days — many modern machines use a technology called “ticket-in, ticketout” that print slips of papers that can be redeemed for cash — those that still accept coins have a retro appeal for many gamblers.

Banks, too, have sought to persuade customers to dig between their couch cushions. Wells Fargo branches are offering coin wrappers and encouragin­g clients to deposit their rolled change. The bank also exchanges paper currency for rolled coins without a fee for noncustome­rs.

“We are actively managing our coin inventory and working with customers to meet their coin needs to the extent possible after the Federal Reserve put limitation­s on coin deliveries to all financial institutio­ns nationwide,” said Wells Fargo spokespers­on Beth Richek.

The Fed, for its part, says the shortage started after stores and bank branches shut their doors to stem the spread of Covid-19, leading to the coin-circulatio­n problem.

In response, the central bank has placed a temporary cap on the orders that depository institutio­ns can place for coins to ensure the supply is fairly distribute­d.

The US mint returned to full production in June, minting almost 1.6-billion coins that month, and is on track to produce 1.65-billion coins a month for the rest of the year.

“This is not a coin-supply problem — it’s a circulatio­n problem,” David J Ryder, director of the mint, said in a public service announceme­nt last month, asking consumers to help get coins moving again by paying for goods using exact change, turning in their coins to their banks or swapping them for bills at coin-exchange kiosks.

“Every little bit helps.”

Last month, Brink’s, an armoured-truck company that helps banks and businesses manage their currency supplies, began asking its 10,000 employees across the US to put at least $5 in coins back into circulatio­n.

“This effort alone could easily contribute another $50,000 in coins to our nation’s supply,” the company said on its website.

In Las Vegas, before the pandemic forced a temporary shutdown, El Cortez kept about $120,000 worth of coins in its vault, Wiesberg said. The casino returned all but $30,000 in change to the bank during the quarantine.

That meant El Cortez had to spring into action when it didn’t receive its full coin order in July. It removed the 5% fee it normally charges patrons to bring in mixed coins from home, and employees began emptying machines daily instead of once a week.

“Other places have fire and water shows and surf shows. Well, our thing is coin slot machines,” Wiesberg said. “We’re focused on providing a safe place to gamble.” Bloomberg

People from all over the world come here, like a pilgrimage, to play the coin machines. When you walk in here, you’ll hear the coins

Adam Wiesberg

General manager, El Cortez casino

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