Croupier Shortages Are Becoming A Serious Problem

Written on February 13, 2007 by admin

It was too good an opportunity for to ignore.

When the gaming tycoon’s arch-rival, Sheldon Adelson, chairman and chief executive of Las Vegas Sands Corp., sacked 160 dealers at the Sands in November for not being up to snuff, Ho was quick to take advantage.

He invited the former Sands dealers to apply for jobs, declaring that “it is our duty of care to the community to employ quality, talented local residents and to nurture them for a long and successful career with our company.”

His group, Sociedade de Jogos de , has since hired 110 of them, the company said.

Ho’s eagerness to hire Adelson’s former dealers highlighted a problem that gambling companies now flocking to face: Dealer jobs are reserved for local residents.

topped the Las Vegas Strip as the world’s largest gaming market by revenue late last year, but while the territory’s gaming revenue has tripled in the last six years, over the same period its population has increased by only 16% to 510,000.

This is not far off Las Vegas’ population of 590,000. But casinos in Las Vegas, America’s fastest growing major city, can recruit dealers from surrounding Clark County (population 1.9 million) or seek talent from across the U.S.

“If all the projects [under construction] open, are there enough Macanese to man the tables? No, there are not,” says one industry executive. “We need to discuss how we are going to staff this thing with the government.”

Management and support jobs at casinos and most positions at ancillary hotel and restaurant facilities can be held by nonresidents if they are issued “blue cards” by the government.

But industry executives complain that securing a blue card can take six months or longer.

“It’s the No. 1 one strategic issue for us — it’s very difficult to get them,” says one senior casino executive.

The labor shortages may have social ramifications for , critics say. Across , tales are told of university students forsaking tuition deposits and doctors’ receptionists abandoning their posts to take up casino jobs.

“Economically it represents development, but the consequences are unfortunate,” says Father Luis Xavier, whose 1885 church now sits in the shadow of Adelson’s Venetian .

When it opens this summer, the Venetian will have more than 700 tables, 3,000 rooms, a 1.2-million-square-foot convention center, and 850,000 square feet of retail space.

People who share Father Xavier’s concerns about his new neighbor, which is just one of many big “integrated resorts” in the pipeline, worry that risks becoming “a society of croupiers.”

Casino executives say that they are simply doing their best to service explosive growth in a tightly regulated employment market.

Galaxy — controlled by Hong Kong tycoon Lui Che-woo — ran around-the-clock training sessions for dealer trainees, the bulk of whom are in their late teens or early twenties, before the opening of two big casinos last year.

Ho’s Sociedade de Jogos de , which has been on the defensive ever since it lost its gaming monopoly in 2002, is under the most pressure. It has been losing dealers and market share to Adelson, Lui and Steve Wynn, who opened his Wynn casino in September.

The sackings at the Sands not only gave Ho a golden public relations opportunity, they also came just in time for the opening of first big new casino since the market’s 2002 liberalization. The Grand Lisboa opened Sunday.

Courtesy | LA Times

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