Las Vegas Review-Journal

Time to cash in

Businesses near trade show traffic havens sell frenetical­ly

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not to mention comparing it with that of previous years.

The use of the Las Vegas Monorail, ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft and taxis means that few of the 180,000 convention visitors drive, Nevada Department of Transporta­tion spokesman Tony Illia said.

The lack of home games this year for the UNLV men’s basketball team and the Vegas Golden Knights NHL team alleviates potential traffic, said Brian Hoeft, RTC traffic management center director.

But the weather could put more vehicles on the road. Tuesday saw 1.33 inches of rain and scores of car

CASH

crash investigat­ions by the Nevada Highway Patrol.

“With rain, it could be more challengin­g,” Hoeft said, “partly because fewer people would walk.”

The transporta­tion commission doesn’t count vehicles during CES week but has calculated the busiest roads during CES based on history, observatio­n and experience.

The agency puts peak travel times this week between 9 and 10:30 a.m. and between 3:30 and 6 p.m., with the highest volumes on Monday because of visitor arrivals and on Thursday and Friday because of departures.

The RTC recommends that drivers take Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. drives and the monorail to avoid traffic. The Strip and the Downtown Express will start at 7 a.m., two hours earlier than normal, until CES ends Friday.

The county has provided extra signs to tell drivers not to park on Sierra Vista between Swenson Street and Paradise Road, spokesman Dan Kulin said.

Shuttles are available on northbound Frank Sinatra just before the entrance to the Aria garage and on eastbound Sands Avenue between the garage entrance and Koval Lane during convention hours, Kulin said.

Taking CES seriously

At Tacos & Beer, a restaurant along the busiest road in the valley this week, Paradise Road, and between Sands Avenue (No. 2) and Flamingo Road (No. 6), general manager Carlos Corral has 30 percent more employees in the dining area.

“We take CES seriously,” Corral said. “We are one of the very first restaurant­s people see when they leave the convention.”

Workers must clock in 45 minutes earlier at peak hours so the Paradise Road traffic doesn’t force them to fall behind.

“Being so close to the convention center, we are used to the traffic,” Corral said. “These changes to our staff and clock-in times are standard operating procedures whenever we have a big convention in town.”

Contact Wade Tyler Millward at wmillward@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4602. Follow @ wademillwa­rd on Twitter.

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