The Nevada Independent

Nuestro estado. Nuestras noticias. Nuestra voz.

The Nevada Independent

Indy Gaming: Debate over smoking in casinos takes center stage at G2E

Slot influencer: “Do your math and figure it out. People are going to stay longer and have more fun when smoking isn’t involved.”
Howard Stutz
Howard Stutz
EconomyGaming
SHARE

By the time you read this, the Tropicana will be a pile of concrete and twisted steel. I will have some notes and highlights from the implosion in next week’s issue.

Today, I delve into the casino smoking issue from the Global Gaming Expo.

Please click here to sign up for Indy Gaming.


The addition of a nonsmoking slot machine area at the downtown Plaza Hotel & Casino nearly 18 months ago seemed like an afterthought. 

One of four components added to the resort’s closed porte cochère driveway, which was permanently closed to vehicle traffic along Main Street, was the smoke-free gaming space. The space has fewer than 100 slot machines, is endorsed by popular slot machine influencer Brian Christopher and has proven successful.

“We found there is a customer market for having this option,” Plaza CEO Jonathan Jossel said in a phone interview Monday. 

Although he has no plans to turn the Plaza into a full nonsmoking casino, he said the 2,500-square-foot space will be renovated to give it “more connectivity” to the main casino.

“The area feels like a box. There is not a lot of foot traffic,” Jossel said, adding that plans are underway to bring a food and beverage outlet nearby and provide better access to the location in the next 12 months. 

The Plaza would also add more games endorsed by Christopher, a smoke-free casino advocate whose social media channels, where he rates and ranks slot machines, reach 8 million unique viewers monthly.

“From my perspective, if you have this option, you have to do it justice,” Jossel said. “That way, we’ll have a better understanding of what our customer truly wants.”

The comments from Jossel may not completely appease the vocal audience of nonsmoking casino advocates. But in Las Vegas, which has for nearly two decades exempted casino floors from an otherwise broad indoor smoking ban and has just one smoke-free casino — the Strip’s Park MGM — the Plaza’s efforts help move the needle in a favorable direction.

For the second straight year, the debate about smoke-free casinos is on the agenda at the Global Gaming Expo (G2E) at the Venetian Expo. The industry’s largest annual trade show and conference has long been targeted by nonsmoking activists and protesters. Casinos had long been the last holdout to smoking bans, which permeate the country’s grocery stores, restaurants, offices and other public spaces.  

Last year’s conference marked the first time a panel discussion on smoke-free gaming was part of G2E’s schedule.

In addition to operators of two tribal smoke-free casinos in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, anti-smoking proponents have new research for Wednesday’s panel, which shows that 86 percent of casino patrons prefer smoke-free gambling floors. 

The online survey, conducted on behalf of Christopher and the American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation, explored the attitudes toward smoking by more than 2,100 casino customers. To those customers, gambling in a smoke-free casino was a larger factor in deciding where to play — 61 percent — than cleanliness, travel distance and slot payouts.

Cynthia Hallett, CEO of the nonsmokers' rights group, cited a recent Gallup poll that showed just 11 percent of the U.S. population still smokes, an all-time low. She said the findings in the survey bring additional credence to the issue, given that more than 20 states mandate smoke-free indoor gaming venues. 

“Certainly, casino customers are looking for smoke-free environments, so I’m a little surprised some states or operators aren’t moving in that direction,” Hallett said. “Many of the smoke-free casinos are doing well. They are expanding their business. Clearly, things are going well.” 

Nevada was one of 13 states where gaming regulators received a letter from Hallett last month asking that regulations be adopted to require casinos to go smoke-free. 

“We did get friendly, polite responses back, basically acknowledging receipt of the letter and saying that they would review it,” Hallett said, including a response from Nevada Gaming Commission Chairwoman Jennifer Togliatti.

The nonsmoking Brian Christopher Slot Floor at the Plaza Hotel & Casino in downtown. (Courtesy photo)

In Nevada, casino floors were exempted by the voter-approved Nevada Clean Air Act in 2006. However, neighborhood taverns, which offered bartop slot machines but also operated small restaurants, saw their business put into turmoil. The locations could only allow indoor smoking if they eliminated the kitchens (restaurants had to be smoke-free).

Nevada lawmakers changed the tavern restrictions in 2011. Smoking could coexist with food service and gaming, but entry was restricted to those 21 and older. If a location walled off the smoking area from the restaurant space, patrons younger than 21 could be admitted.

Christopher, who has a slot machine deal with Las Vegas-based gaming manufacturer Gaming Arts and recently signed a deal with BetMGM for the company’s online casinos, said he was gratified by the expansion plans for nonsmoking space at the Plaza. 

He added that the gaming industry has long adapted to change and going smoke-free shouldn’t be viewed as a damper on business. 

“Adding smoking to a casino might bring in a few customers but you’re going to chase out the gamblers that don’t smoke,” Christopher said. “I think the stats from the survey speak for themselves. Do your math and figure it out. People are going to stay longer and have more fun when smoking isn’t involved.”


Fans arrive for the Super Bowl LVIII Opening Night event at Allegiant Stadium on Feb. 5, 2024. (Jeff Scheid/The Nevada Independent)

No longer adversaries: Las Vegas the ‘presenting partner’ for the NFL’s London games 

Cooperation between the NFL and Las Vegas was on full display Sunday in London. Two decades ago, this was impossible to imagine given that professional sports leagues took a hands-off approach to sports betting, which was only legal in Nevada.

Sportico reported last week on Las Vegas serving as the presenting partner for the NFL’s three games in the U.K. this season, which kicked off Sunday when the Minnesota Vikings defeated the New York Jets 23-17 in a game played at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. 

The Las Vegas Convention Visitors Authority (LVCVA) was represented through in-game advertising, on-field branding and events at the stadium. When the agreement was announced, neither the NFL nor the LVCVA disclosed the financial terms. 

The LVCVA views its partnership with the NFL’s London games as a way to boost visitation from the U.K., which fell off during the pandemic. Las Vegas has direct round-trip airline service via British Airways and Virgin Atlantic from London airports.

“I often say that I have the easiest product in the world to sell — and there aren’t too many people that can dispute that, but [NFL owners] may be one of them,” LVCVA CEO Steve Hill told Sportico. “Instead of figuring out who has the better brand or easiest to sell, I said, ‘Let’s merge them together and build on each other.’ I still feel that way.”

Hill told Sportico the games provide opportunities to host private events that reinforce relationships with LVCVA’s top sponsors and customers, including trade show organizers based in London.

In 2003, the NFL banned Las Vegas from airing commercials during the national television broadcast using the “what happens here, stays here” messaging. 

Attitudes changed starting in March 2017 when the NFL voted to move the Raiders to Las Vegas. A year later, a Supreme Court ruling allowed states to legalize sports betting, which led to deals between the NFL and its teams with regulated sports betting operators.

In February, Las Vegas and Allegiant Stadium hosted Super Bowl LVIII, which saw the Kansas City Chiefs beat the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 in overtime.


What I'm reading

🏐 NCAA announces 240 championship host sites for 2027, 2028 — Matt Traub, Sports Travel Magazine

Las Vegas will be a location for an NCAA women’s basketball mega-regional in 2027 (the exact site is yet to be determined) and the National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Championship at the Orleans Arena in 2027 and 2028.

Gaming and Leisure Properties promotes Brandon Moore to president — Sam Bentham, CDC Gaming Reports

The longtime executive has led the real estate investment trust's efforts to bring a $1.5 billion baseball stadium to the Tropicana site.

🧢 Pete Rose found a home in Las Vegas before the nation began to embrace sports betting — Mark Anderson, The Associated Press

Rose was a regular at autograph sessions throughout Las Vegas. “He was very patient with his time,” said Westgate Las Vegas sportsbook operator Jay Kornegay.


News, notes and quotes

🤝 CDC Gaming and Inside Asian Gaming to merge

Inside Asian Gaming (IAG) and CDC Gaming announced a merger Monday to create a global gaming industry media and events business to be named Complete Media Group (CMG). The newly launched entity will become the parent company with the shareholders of IAG and CDC Gaming becoming shareholders of CMG. The two companies will continue to operate under their respective brand names. Inside Asian Gaming will cover the Asia-Pacific region. CDC Gaming will cover the United States, Canada and Latin America.

Disclosure: I have a minority ownership in CDC Gaming.

👩🏻‍⚖️ Judge OKs mobile wallet provider Koin’s antitrust lawsuit against Everi

A federal magistrate ruled an antitrust lawsuit by Las Vegas-based Koin Mobile against Everi Holdings could continue. U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Craig Denney said that a preliminary review of Koin’s allegations show plausible claims that Everi is using its contracts to tie customers exclusively to Everi’s digital wallet, which hinders competition in the markets for cashless gaming. Everi argued that Koin’s investigation should halt because the competitor brought what it called “baseless claims predicated on deficient antitrust theories,” but the judge disagreed.

SHARE
7455 Arroyo Crossing Pkwy Suite 220 Las Vegas, NV 89113
© 2024 THE NEVADA INDEPENDENT
Privacy PolicyRSSContactNewslettersSupport our Work
The Nevada Independent is a project of: Nevada News Bureau, Inc. | Federal Tax ID 27-3192716