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Casinos Drop Live Shows, Buffets

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — A Pennsylvania casino shut down temporarily, some Las Vegas casinos closed their buffets and the Hard Rock chain canceled live entertainment at all of its U.S. properties for at least a month as the nation’s casinos grappled with the coronavirus outbreak.

The Valley Forge Casino in King Of Prussia, Pennsylvania, closed early Friday, saying it was complying with a directive from the state’s governor to close all public schools, entertainment venues and community centers in Montgomery County as a precautionary measure against the spread of the virus. The casino said it will reopen on March 27, and noted there have been no reported cases of the virus at the property.

Hard Rock, whose brand relies on live entertainment, said it is canceling all such entertainment at its U.S. properties for 30 days, including concerts in large and small venues, and nightclub entertainment.

The move came after New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, requested that all gatherings of 250 or more people be canceled.

Joe Lupo, president of Hard Rock Atlantic City, said the self-imposed entertainment ban is the casino’s way of complying with the governor’s request.

“We look at it as stopping gatherings of 250 or more people in a confined place,” he said. “You can still go into a grocery store, you can still go into an airport, and you can still go into a casino. There has been no talk of a casino closure at this point.”

A spokesman for the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office said the state has not imposed any restrictions on access to casinos, nor given individual properties any direction regarding the virus. Messages were left with The Casino Association of New Jersey seeking comment.

The Hard Rock entertainment ban will cancel scheduled shows by artists including Adam Sandler, T-Pain and Pitbull. Refunds will be given, and the casino hopes to re-book those shows in the future, Lupo said.

A major conference on sports betting scheduled for next month in New Jersey has been pushed back until early December, although organizers of a gambling industry conference planned for the same week in April in Atlantic City said it will go on as scheduled.

Atlantic City casinos recently installed hand sanitizer dispensers at entrances to their properties, and were conducting extra wipe-downs of slot machines and other frequently touched surfaces. An employee at a casino sports book told a customer that all the money in the drawer had been disinfected Thursday morning.

MGM Resorts International announced this week it will temporarily close the buffets at all of its Las Vegas-based properties starting Sunday, including restaurants at the Aria, Bellagio, MGM Grand, Mandalay Bay, Mirage, Luxor and Excalibur casinos. The buffet shutdown only affects the company’s Las Vegas properties.

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