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EMPLOYMENT: Open season for jobs

Trio of hotel-casino debuts expected to add 7,700 positions to market










You don't need to tell Robert Gibson how tough it is to find steady work in the current job market.

Gibson searched for two months before landing a job as a cook at the Eastside Cannery, which is scheduled to open Aug. 28.


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  • Recently he drove 25 miles from his residence in the Green Valley section of Henderson hoping to ride his wave of good fortune by landing a second job with a similar position at Aliante Station in North Las Vegas.

    "I am surprised by how tough (the job market) is," he said while waiting for an interview at the hotel-casino's employment center near Aliante Parkway and the Las Vegas Beltway.

    Gibson has worked for the past six months as an on-call extra for Binion's downtown. However, with the economy flagging and gaming revenues declining, shifts have become few and far between. Gibson has been forced to find something else to help pay his bills.

    Although the job market is tough for workers, job cuts at casinos and other businesses has been a boon for companies trying to staff new hotel-casinos opening later this year. In addition to Aliante Station and Eastside Cannery, Encore, a Wynn Resorts Ltd., property will open in December.

    Data show people are hungry for jobs.

    When Station Casinos began accepting applications in November 2005 for Red Rock Resort, Clark County unemployment was 3.7 percent with a labor pool of 875,000.

    By contrast, according to the latest numbers released by the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation, the county's unemployment rate in June was 6.5 percent with 64,600 workers unemployed and a labor pool of 996,000 workers.

    Layoffs and job attrition at area hotel-casinos have cut jobs in the industry by 3 percent year-to-year for June.

    The area's high unemployment rate has provided an abundant and rich job pool for three new hotel-casinos opening later this year.

    "The candidates are extremely qualified," said Valerie Murzl, Station Casinos' vice president of human resources. "When the unemployment is low and you open an employment center sometimes you're scraping the bottom of the pool. This time, we open the doors and we have these amazing people applying for jobs."

    Wynn Resorts Ltd. received 20,000 applications for its $2.2 billion Encore in the first three days its employment center was open, said Stephanie Rosol, the company's vice president of human resources.

    "It's been pretty exciting to have such a big response," Rosol said. "We're thrilled to be able to go into the community at this point in time."

    Wynn Resorts had expected to get 65,000 applications for Encore, which is slated to open Dec. 21, although the company now thinks that figure is too low.

    The $675 million Aliante Station, which is scheduled to open Nov. 11, began taking applications for its nearly 1,200 jobs July 6.

    Murzl said the pace of applications is higher than in the past.

    "It's because so many people are unemployed," she said. "They're reading the paper every day. When you have a job, how often do you look at the want ads? People were waiting for the announcement to be made and they jumped all over it."

    Murzl said the demand for cook positions became so great the company stopped taking applications.

    Dennis Shipley, corporate director of human resources for Cannery Casino Resorts, said the company received approximately 20,000 applications for 1,200 jobs for its new $250 million Eastside Cannery.

    Shipley said applications came from a mixture of people already working at other properties, people who had jobs in other industries and unemployed workers.

    For many job applicants, job offers can't come soon enough. But they'll need to be patient; casinos begin taking applications months before workers are needed.

    "The job now will begin in two to three weeks," Shipley said. "When we were looking in May for candidates, that's a long time to have to wait."

    Station Casinos spokeswoman Lori Nelson said any workers hired for Aliante Station won't begin receiving paychecks until October, a month before the new property opens.

    Wynn Resorts won't start interviewing job candidates until early August, Rosol said; job offers will follow in late September.

    The companies will also be looking for new workers at older properties because some of their workers will be moving to their new properties.

    "That was really our priority, to make sure that everybody had the chance to grow," Rosol said. "About a third of our positions at Encore are going to be filled by existing staff."

    Approximately half the jobs at Eastside Cannery will be transfers and former Nevada Palace workers. Station Casinos said transfers will fill approximately 400 jobs at Aliante Station.

    The nearly 7,700 new jobs these three properties are bringing to the market are just the beginning of a jump in employment in the industry.

    The new jobs are projected to contribute to a 7.5 percent increase in leisure and hospitality employment statewide by the end of 2009, an employment outlook report released in February by the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation shows.

    A similar growth rate is projected for 2010.

    •The $1 billion M Resort will begin taking applications in September to fill the nearly 2,000 jobs at the hotel-casino scheduled to open next spring.

    •The $2.9 billion Fontainebleau is scheduled to begin hiring early next year for the nearly 6,000 workers need for when the property opens in late 2009.

    •Boyd Gaming Corp. expects to hire 10,000 workers for its $4.8 billion Echelon project, and MGM Mirage expects to begin accepting applications for 12,000 workers for its $9.2 CityCenter development early next year.

    In the meantime, Gibson said he is not taking the lack of job offers personally. It's just the way the job market is, for now.

    "Obviously I have a few qualifications since a few places have called me and the Eastside Cannery hired me," Gibson said. "It's just tough out there. It really is."

    Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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    g scott wrote on August 04, 2008 03:31 AM: Compared to Los Angeles, this place is a utopia for work. I am working for Guardsmark and i am making more money than the East coast and L.A. combine. Thank you Las Vegas


    Dino wrote on July 28, 2008 04:46 PM: ALL of these new casinos overhire and then trim the workforce 90 days in. You may get hired, but the chances of maintaining said employment are slim. Hey rb, what are you talking about? Casinos do not run credit reports on every position, just a few key ones. Besides, there aren't too many people left in this city with good credit after the last year's financial debacle.


    steveohio wrote on July 28, 2008 04:19 PM: i hear all this complaining about the job situation in LV..im from ohio i would just love to move there..my wife and i could work for 12-15 dollars an hour and survive..there are NO jobs here in the akron-canton area..help us!!


    Marc wrote on July 28, 2008 04:03 PM: I don't understand why there is such bitterness in Vegas everytime I read these posts. It's the one place in the U.S. where you don't have to have an education and can still make enough money to be able to afford a home.

    Complain about house value? Don't buy a house in the middle of the desert!!

    Complain about low paying jobs? Who else is going to serve you fast food, answer any customer service calls or ring you up at a convenience store?

    You don't want the city to be dependent on casinos? Pay state income taxes and say hello Lake Las Vegas!


    rb wrote on July 28, 2008 01:21 PM: I wonder how many are really well paying jobs available and how many are back of the house jobs? At least the illegals will get work...


    rb wrote on July 28, 2008 01:15 PM: If you have collections, foreclosure, or a bankruptcy you can bet you will NOT a call back for a second interview. Thank Steve Wynn for that...


    LV lvr wrote on July 28, 2008 12:40 PM: Complain complain complain, more jobs means stronger economy. Sure, not all of the jobs are high paying, but many pay same or above national average. How many other cities are fortunate enough to have this many new jobs come on line that take people off of unemployment, and create purchasing power to our struggling economy.
    I will take positive news anywhere that I can find in.


    lv h8r wrote on July 28, 2008 12:21 PM: There is only one thing I care about right now living in this city; the value of my house. Is this going to help my property recover it's value? I doubt it. Filling the city with low paying jobs does nothing for the long term benefits of living here. All it does it raise the level to which this city is dependant upon the casinos. Hey, haven't heard any word on the 6000 people per month moving here lately, wonder what they are up to these days? Perhaps the best thing this city can do is place ads for these jobs in national publications...create the illusion and maybe we can create the demand.


    hilobomacaine wrote on July 28, 2008 12:10 PM: wow!8ooo more highly paid casino jobs! now i can put my $200.000 house on the market for $400.000 it should be snapped up quickly


    Dan Strauss wrote on July 28, 2008 12:08 PM: Anyone that says negative things about someone's job is an idiot in my book. Our country is built on people doing every type of job. They're working, paying taxes, providing a service, etc... Grow up and stop being such a jerk.
    Karma comes around, and hopefully you'll get canned (probably for your attitude and personality) and maybe, just maybe David could find you a job!!

    Simply unbelieveable that someone could actually think like this.


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