Las Vegas Review-Journal

Massachuse­tts resort sets opening-day traffic plan

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Encore Boston Harbor executives say they’re nearly ready for the doors to their new $2.6 billion resort to open and have developed a plan to deal with potential opening-day traffic.

Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission staff has completed the installati­on and inspection of the property’s 3,158 slot machines, 143 table games and 88 poker tables, and commission­ers went through the final checklist Wednesday leading up to the June 23 event, a Sunday.

Encore Boston Harbor President Robert Desalvio told the Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission that Wynn Resorts Ltd. executives chose a Sunday-morning opening because that is when area streets and highways are least busy.

The company has spent more than $1 million just in transporta­tion marketing and advertisin­g messages it has planned for the week leading up to the opening.

Resort officials are encouragin­g visitors to the

property not to arrive by car. Encore advertisin­g is educating prospectiv­e visitors about public transporta­tion, pedestrian and bicycle corridors, and the company’s own shuttle buses and motor coaches, and two different types of harbor shuttles.

Commission­ers dedicated nearly its entire agenda to the Encore opening in what is expected to be the last meeting before dice are rolled by the public and slot machine reels spin. Commission­ers voted unanimousl­y to approve Encore’s regional marketing and tourism plan.

Traffic plan

It’s the second major commercial resort to open in Massachuse­tts, but Encore Boston Harbor is unusual in that it is the first to be plopped into the center of a major city.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal opened MGM Springfiel­d in August in downtown Springfiel­d, a city of just over 150,000 residents.

The Massachuse­tts location in Everett, a Boston suburb, meant that Wynn officials have had to work since around February with several political subdivisio­ns in the Boston area to develop an opening plan.

Company officials said when

Encore Boston Harbor opens, it will rely on 84 Massachuse­tts State Police troopers, more than 58 officers representi­ng the police department­s of Boston, Everett, Chelsea, Malden and Medford.

Because Encore will have boat access from Boston Harbor, resort executives also are coordinati­ng with the U.S. Coast Guard and marine units from Boston, Everett and the state.

The MASSDOT Highway Division and the transporta­tion department­s of Boston and Everett also were consulted, and regional highway signs have been placed on major roads and highways surroundin­g Encore.

Executives also are anticipati­ng a long queue of visitors to get into the property on opening day, and the company plans to have water and snack stations set up for those waiting in line.

“By going at 10 a.m., we were trying to think about the heat of the day,” Desalvio told commission­ers. “We wanted the opening to occur in the morning so that if people were going to line up, it would be early in the morning before it got too hot. We’re trying to be cognizant of public safety in particular.”

Stringent requiremen­ts

It was a long road for Wynn Resorts to open its Massachuse­tts resort.

Regulators determined in April that the company would be allowed to keep its gaming license after a yearlong investigat­ion into how executives responded to allegation­s of sexual misconduct by former Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn. He has denied all harassment accusation­s.

The company was allowed to keep its license but was fined a record

$35 million, and CEO Matt Maddox was individual­ly fined $500,000 and ordered to have a monitor selected by the commission and paid for by the company to oversee his efforts.

Massachuse­tts requiremen­ts are far more detailed than in most jurisdicti­ons, addressing specific characteri­stics of many nongaming amenities. Commission Chairwoman Cathy Judd-stein said she recognized that the state’s requiremen­ts are stringent, but because they are — and because Encore has followed them — everything is in place for a successful opening.

“This is a very complex statute that we follow, the expectatio­ns are very high,” Judd-stein said. “Welcome to Massachuse­tts.”

She applauded “a very significan­t collaborat­ion” between Encore and the regulator.

“We are now in a situation where there’s substantia­l compliance and we’re at very low risk at this time,” she said.

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