After new New Jersey restrictions

Atlantic City's Borgata announces layoffs and hour reductions affecting 422 workers

Last month alone, Borgata raked in $67.5 million in sports betting, up more than 10% from the same month last year.
2020-11-16
Reading time 1:48 min
Casino president Melonie Johnson said the cuts in staff were in response to limits that took effect Thursday night under which indoor dining must halt from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. The resort city's top casino is laying off 73 workers and reducing the hours of 349 others.

In a letter sent to employees on Friday afternoon, the Borgata officials announced the casino is laying off or cutting the hours of 422 workers as a result of the strict new indoor dining limits imposed by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy.

On the same day, the state Division of Gambling Enforcement announced that the city's casinos and the three-horse tracks that offer sports betting collectively took in $803 million, the Associated Press reports. Last month alone, Borgata raked in $67.5 million in sports betting, up more than 10% from the same month last year.

But the amount of money kept by the casinos and tracks after paying out winning bets and expenses was $58.5 million, up over 26% from a year ago. That money is often split among sport book operators and other third party vendors, and is not pure profit for the casinos.

Casino president Melonie Johnson said the cuts in staff were in response to limits that took effect Thursday night under which indoor dining must halt from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.

The casino is laying off 73 workers and reducing the hours of 349 others.

Bob McDevitt, president of the main Atlantic City casino workers' union, said he did not know of any other casino that had done layoffs since the limits were announced on Monday.

“Regrettably, due to the adjusted operations and overall impact of the pandemic on business, we’ve been forced to modify our staffing levels,” Johnson wrote in her letter to workers.

“We are hopeful to return employees to work and increase hours when the executive order is lifted, operations expand and business demand returns," she wrote. "The governor has not yet announced when the order will be lifted so, unfortunately, we don’t know how long this may last and cannot fully assess any lasting impacts on our business levels.”

Murphy's order came as the coronavirus rate of infection and number of cases climbs higher in New Jersey and across the country. He said Monday that Health Department officials say indoor settings make it easier for the virus to spread compared with outdoors.

To comply with the order, the casino is closing its restaurants each night at 10 p.m. It also must stop serving beverages on the casino floor, which will remain open around the clock.

In-room dining will be offered all day Saturday and Sunday, and from 4 p.m. to midnight on weekdays.

Laid-off workers will remain on the casino's health insurance plan through Dec. 31.

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