MGM sets a no-smoke policy at casino-hotel on Vegas Strip
LAS VEGAS — One of the last Las Vegas Strip resorts to reopen after coronavirus closures will be the first to be smoke-free, MGM Resorts International announced this week.
Park MGM will prohibit tobaccosmoke insidewhen it opens Sept. 30, said Anton Nikodemus, president and chief operating officer of the 3,000-room property that many remember as the Monte Carlo casino-hotel.
“We’re making the facility completely nonsmoking because of continued guest requests,” he said.
The property also includes the NoMad hotel, which will open, and the 5,200-seat Park Theater, which remains closed due to a COVID-19 ban on crowds.
Moving to smoke-free is hardly a gamble, Nikodemussaid:“believe there is a high level of pent-up demand to have a nonsmoking casino, especially here in Las Vegas.”
The move by the city’s largest casino employer is a turning point in a city known for neon lights and tourists lighting up even if they can’t at home. Smoking and secondhand smoke has in the past sparked lawsuits and intense political debate.
“The tradition has been that you go to Las Vegas to do things that are bad for you,” said Michael Green, a University of Nevada, Las Vegas history professor whose father was a blackjack dealer for 30 years at old Las Vegas casinos, including the Stardust and Showboat.
“COVID-19 is forcing us to rethink a lot of things. Maybe this is one,” Green said. “I think there might be a better reaction now, while people are asked to wear masks.”
Neighboring states have strict smoking bans. In 2006, Nevada voters were offered two smoking initiatives and passed the Clean Indoor Air Act to ban smoking in many public places — but not casinos, bars, taverns, strip clubs, smoke shops and private residences. A competing measure backed by gambling and tavern industries was rejected.
Advocates called for a smoking ban when casinos were allowed to reopen
June 4, but the Nevada Gaming Control Board declined to address the issue.
Masks or face coverings are required for people in Nevada casinos, like most other public places, under a mandate from Gov. Steve Sisolak.
Nikodemus said being closed since mid-March due to the COVID-19 pandemic revived an idea that had been considered when the Monte Carlo hotel and casino floorwas renovated, rebranded and reopened as ParkMGMin 2018.
“During this time we’ve been able to really prepare the property for a smokefree resort experience,” he said.
Even carpeting and wall coverings have been replaced “to make sure it’s a brand-new experience for the customers walking in that door,” he said.
Nikodemus noted that smoking areas will be provided outside Park MGM, and tobacco smoking is still allowed at nearby MGM Resorts properties including New York-New York and Aria.
The Park MGM reopening is slated to be the last among 29 MGM Resorts properties in the country.