As COVID-19 lockdowns ease

Hard Rock could reopen Florida casino by late May

Employees will also be equipped with gloves and masks, the company said.
2020-05-15
Reading time 1:11 min
To guard against a resurgence of the coronavirus, the company plans to limit crowds to 50 percent of capacity, create sanitizing stations, keep some machines turned off to support social distancing, use dividers at tables, shields for dealers and begin thermal body imaging at its larger casinos.

As the U.S. gradually lifts lockdowns imposed to curb the spread of the coronavirus, Hard Rock International is beginning to plan the reopening of its Florida properties.

There is no definitive timeline for following suit worldwide, Hard Rock International Chairman Jim Allen told FOX Business' Dagen McDowell. 

"We are anticipating very large crowds," Allen said. "We saw opens last week in other parts of the U.S. and frankly, volumes are tremendous."

Allen's projection comes just after hundreds of people stood in line Tuesday waiting to enter a casino in central Oklahoma that was allowed to reopen with social distancing restrictions and sanitation safeguards in place.

To guard against a resurgence of the coronavirus, Hard Rock plans to limit crowds to 50 percent of capacity, create sanitizing stations, keep some machines turned off to support social distancing, use dividers at tables, shields for dealers and begin thermal body imaging at its larger casinos.

Employees will also be equipped with gloves and masks, FOX Business reports.

The company shuttered operations alongside competitors as governments imposed stay-at-home orders to curb large gatherings where the virus might be transmitted more easily. Hard Rock International has venues across 75 countries, including 180 cafes, 24 hotels and 11 casinos.

The shutdowns battered the hospitality industry, taking a toll on S&P 500 Casino & Gaming firms such as Las Vegas Sands, MGM Resorts and Wynn Resorts. In fact, casinos in Macao, the world’s largest gambling enclave, reported a record plunge in gaming revenue in February after a 15-day closure due to the virus, first identified in Wuhan, China.

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