Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Experts feared the New Year’s Eve crowding on the Strip would be supersprea­der event.

Dec. 31 Strip crowds spur supersprea­der alarm

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Working in a Strip resort on New Year’s Eve, Azucena Benito said she felt protected from COVID-19.

Guests’ temperatur­es were screened at entrances, while the gaming floor enforced a 25 percent capacity rule. Benito said she and her fellow servers were instructed not to wait on customers who weren’t wearing a required facial mask.

A short walk away, a highrisk celebratio­n was unfolding on Las Vegas Boulevard. In the midst of a pandemic, thousands of people packed the street and sidewalks around the Fountains of Bellagio dancing water show as the clock crept toward midnight.

Flouting Nevada’s statewide ban on public gatherings of more than 50 people — and in countless instances, the state’s mask mandate — the raucous crowd sang along to music accompanyi­ng the fountain show. People counted down the year’s final seconds in unison, erupting into cheers so loud they could be heard in videos filmed from hotel rooms high above them.

That morning, Nevada officials had reported a record 59 deaths from the coronaviru­s.

“It basically looked like it was a regular New Year’s almost,” Benito said. “It definitely irks me.”

Health experts say photos and videos documentin­g the spontaneou­s gathering present the signs of a COVID-19

supersprea­der event that could lead to exponentia­l growth in new cases. It occurred as Nevada and the nation navigate their most severe wave of coronaviru­s to date, and it will undoubtedl­y seed further disease spread both here and in neighborin­g states, where hospitals are already overwhelme­d with patients.

On Wednesday, Nevada COVID-19 response director Caleb Cage said the gathering, along with other holiday celebratio­ns, will likely erase a recent stabilizat­ion the state had seen in new cases and hospitaliz­ations. Government officials had urged people to celebrate at home with only members of their household.

“All of those efforts resulted in a collective failure” to strike a proper balance between keeping Nevada’s economy open and protecting public health, Cage said, referring specifical­ly to the gathering at the Bellagio fountains.

Infectious disease specialist Dr. Luis Medina-Garcia called the crowds “a dangerous, dangerous propositio­n all across the board,” especially as a more contagious variant strain of the virus was recently found in Southern California.

“We’re a gambling town, but this is not something to gamble with,” said Medina-Garcia, who practices medicine at University Medical Center in Las Vegas. “Spreading new variants of the virus is certainly not what we want to do, because there’s just no way for us to predict what the effect of that will be.”

People who attended should assume that they were exposed to COVID-19 and get tested, Cage said.

Gov. Steve Sisolak echoed Cage’s advice in a written statement given to the Review-Journal through spokeswoma­n Meghin Delaney.

“As the Governor has said repeatedly, safety is a partnershi­p,” the statement said. “We’re relying on that partnershi­p from the State, local officials, business and the public to make good choices and be responsibl­e to help slow the spread.”

Celebratin­g travelers

Warnings to stay home on New Year’s Eve contrasted with officials’ other actions.

Leading up to the long holiday weekend, the Las Vegas Visitors and Convention Authority officials declared the area “open for business” for those who felt comfortabl­e traveling to celebrate. The governor did not impose limits on how many hotel rooms the state’s resorts could book, and the Metropolit­an Police Department publicly announced that it would not enforce social distancing or mask-wearing mandates.

Las Vegas Boulevard remained open to pedestrian­s on the Strip without capacity restrictio­ns. Conversely, the Fremont Street Experience in downtown Las Vegas strictly limited access to its entertainm­ent district following outcry from state and Clark County officials.

Only a few blocks away from the Bellagio fountains, revelers were much more thinly dispersed, but the water show and its accompanyi­ng music drew thousands. The crowd sang along to the “Star-Spangled Banner” a few minutes before midnight, many exchanging hugs and kisses to ring in the new year. One man showered the ground with hundreds of dollar bills, drawing people even closer together to collect the money.

Metro officials said Monday that they did not have crowd numbers from the gathering on the sidewalk and street outside Bellagio, but they did release estimates Dec. 29 saying as many as 200,000 visitors could be coming to Las Vegas for New Year’s Eve.

The LVCVA attempted to discourage people from congregati­ng on the Strip by canceling its annual Strip midnight fireworks show and not hosting any outside events, agency spokeswoma­n Lori Nelson-Kraft wrote in an email.

“We noticed that crowds were visibly less than previous years and appreciate all our resort partners and Metro did to keep things fun and as safe as possible,” she wrote.

Clark County Commission­er Marilyn Kirkpatric­k, who leads the government­al body with jurisdicti­on over the Strip and voiced concern about crowds forming in downtown Las Vegas, said Monday that she had not seen any photos or videos from the gathering at the fountains because she was traveling outside the state over the holiday weekend.

“Hopefully one night of fun doesn’t set us back three weeks,” she said. “We’ll see what the fallout is, but let’s cross our fingers that it was not bad.”

Inside the hotels lining the Strip, operators made sure that their properties “were in full compliance with the regulation­s in place,” Nevada Resort Associatio­n spokeswoma­n Dawn Christense­n said.

Benito, who requested that her employer not be named, said she believes that her hotel followed the rules and safety precaution­s laid out to protect guests and workers from COVID-19 spread. However, she questioned why government officials hadn’t tried harder to enforce them on Las Vegas Boulevard.

“I don’t know if maybe they didn’t believe either that we would have such a big crowd, and it just turned to this,” she said.“But I think some kind of at least backup plan should have been in mind.”

Health fallout

The public health fallout from New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in Las Vegas will be felt both inside and outside our state, experts said.

“A lot of our visitors are from Southern California,” Medina-Garcia said. “So even if they go back to their native towns, it doesn’t help their hospital system, either.”

Almost 80,000 vehicles traveled into Southern Nevada from California on Interstate 15 on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, according to the Regional Transporta­tion Commission of Southern Nevada.

Last month, Southern California officials reported that the region’s hospitals had reached zero capacity in their intensive-care units. Ambulances carrying patients reported waiting for hours outside hospitals before openings become available.

Las Vegas Valley hospitals have also reported in recent weeks that they are facing critical staffing shortages and a diminishin­g supply of intensive care unit beds.

The impact of Las Vegas tourism on the spread of COVID-19 is currently unknown because contact tracing systems have been overwhelme­d by the sheer volume of cases.

“There certainly have been events where we have traced and shown large get-togethers like this being supersprea­der events,” said Dr. Amber D’Souza, an epidemiolo­gy professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “But more frequently, our tracing system is unfortunat­ely underpower­ed and has not been able to truly measure the full impact of all of these events.”

State health officials know of only 26 positive tests for COVID-19 by visitors after they returned home from a trip to Nevada, according to data released in late December.

But the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services is unable to determine the “completene­ss” of the data, because it is reported to officials here by other states, agency spokeswoma­n Shannon Litz acknowledg­ed.

“There is no way to quantify how much data is not reported to Nevada for out-of-state residents,” Litz wrote in an email.

 ?? Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-Journal @Elipagepho­to ?? People celebrate New Year’s Eve on the Strip. Officials and workers worry that holiday crowds may have contribute­d to the further spread of COVID-19.
Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-Journal @Elipagepho­to People celebrate New Year’s Eve on the Strip. Officials and workers worry that holiday crowds may have contribute­d to the further spread of COVID-19.

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