SÁB 18 DE MAYO DE 2024 - 15:16hs.
City Mayor, Carolyn Goodman

“Open Las Vegas. Being closed is killing us”

Las Vegas is withering with tourists staying home and conventions and businesses closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, and needs to reopen before it dies, said the city’s Mayor Carolyn Goodman. “This shutdown has become one of total insanity,” she commented the day after Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak declared he was nowhere near reopening parts of the state’s idled economy.

“I am asking: Open the Las Vegas. Open Clark County. Open the state,” said Goodman, reading a statement at the start of weekly City Council meeting convened amid social distancing advisories aimed at keeping groups of people from spreading the contagious virus.

The number of people who have “tragically” died statewide from the COVID-19 respiratory illness represents less than one-half of 1% of the state’s more than 3 million people, the mayor said. Yet, she said the entire state has been brought to its knees.

“For heaven’s sake,” Goodman said, “being closed is killing us already, and killing Las Vegas, our industry, our convention and tourism business that we have all worked so hard to build. The longer we wait to do this, the more impossible it will become to recover.”

State health officials reported Wednesday that more than 3,200 people have been diagnosed with the virus, and 131 have died.

Sisolak, a Democrat, did not immediately respond to the comments by the three-term mayor and political independent who also serves on the board of the powerful Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

Goodman was an early critic of Sisolak’s order in mid-March to close casinos for the longest period since gambling was legalized in Nevada in 1931. She has also complained that media coverage of the outbreak was hurting business.

The mayor on Wednesday put the number of out-of-work Nevadans at 900,000.

But the governor said he’ll follow the advice of doctors and hospitals about infection and death rates, along with consultation with businesses about economic impacts before lifting his closure order.

“This is not going to be a political decision for as to when to open,” Sisolak said. “We’re going to take it slow and steady and listen to the doctors.”

Source: GMB / AP