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When Will The Dust Settle? Tough Times Continue To Plague Las Vegas This is not just a place where people are born and live. Las Vegas is an enterprise.
And so, it has been a shock as, quietly and slowly, everything has changed.
It is a deal people enter, a set of givens agreed upon: More is better. Biggest is best.
Like many U.S. cities, Las Vegas is watching its economy reel. Home values have plummeted. Foreclosures have exploded. Unemployment is the highest it's been in at least 25 years, an unprecedented 9.1% (8th highest in the nation, 126,000 out of work).
To live in Las Vegas is to stake your future on this enterprise -- for better or worse. For the last 20 years, it has been for better. The unemployment rate was minuscule. Gleaming new casinos were built on "old" casinos like so many sand castles on a beach. Hundreds of neat stucco houses promised a palm tree or a pool or both for nearly everyone with a paycheck.
For the first time in decades, the population has stopped growing. Casino projects are on hold. Planes full of free-spending tourists are landing with less frequency. Long the embodiment of American confidence, the city is now in limbo.
In Las Vegas, average people are versed in the statistics that impress relatives from back East and testify to the success of this enterprise: 39 million visitors, almost 140,000 hotel rooms, 10 new schools a year. It was a place that not only believed its own hype, but depended on it.
The bottom line is we are in the midst of the worst economic downturn in several decades and it is here to stay. Las Vegas will recover, but it will not be as soon as we would like. When will Vegas recover ... only time will tell but it will not be in 2009, nor 2010 at this point!!!