|
|
 |
 |
The Newsroom - 2010 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
Jim Murren: ‘Near-death experience’ nearly
pushed MGM Mirage to bankruptcy

January 28, 2010 -MGM
Mirage, the state’s largest employer and taxpayer, is rejoining the Las Vegas
Chamber of Commerce after a six-year hiatus.

Jim Murren, chairman and CEO of the company, told an audience at Preview 2010 on
Thursday that the decision to rejoin the chamber came after MGM Mirage’s
“near-death experience” during the construction of its CityCenter.

Murren said the company came within minutes of filing for bankruptcy protection
and shutting down the massive Strip resort that opened last month when partner
Dubai World filed suit against the company and said it wouldn’t make a debt
payment in early 2009.

Since then, Dubai World and MGM Mirage have reconciled, but the experience gave
Murren a new realization that it would require teamwork to solve the state’s
many problems.

“That corporate near-death experience was my wake-up call that rhetoric is no
longer enough,” Murren told the more than 2,000 persons attending the Las Vegas
chamber’s premiere networking event at the Cox Pavilion and the Thomas & Mack
Center.

Murren said he hopes MGM Mirage’s presence would build a team effort to confront
four key problems facing the state – education, sustainability, health care and
infrastructure. Murren said his company already has confronted a number of those
issues in their efforts to keep the company afloat and he said he would dedicate
company resources to help the chamber address them.

Murren was one of three local speakers for Preview. Earlier, Las Vegas
Convention and Visitors Authority President and CEO Rossi Ralenkotter told the
crowd that the LVCVA is projecting visitor volume in Las Vegas will climb 3
percent to 37.4 million people in 2010.

MGM Mirage left the chamber in 2003 after the gaming industry proposed a
broad-based business tax that the chamber wouldn’t support.

“It caused great division among gaming and the chamber and at the end of the
day, we didn’t get that business tax,” Murren said in an interview after his
presentation. “As of today, we still don't have a tax structure that works.”

Murren said that after construction on CityCenter nearly shut down, he had a new
appreciation for the value of business relationships to help solve problems. He
thinks working with the chamber would be valuable in addressing state problems
and he said the company would dedicate personnel as well as money to the effort.

“We’re assembling a team within our company,” Murren said. “We have a lot of
folks that are obviously quite versed in business issues throughout our
organization. They’re going to devote thousands of man-hours to this, working
with the chamber and its various committees. We’re going to work together to
form a plan, we’re going to be up in Carson City together and it’s going to be a
very spirited couple years out here and we’re looking forward, at every level,
to working with the chamber.

“I‘ve made it quite clear that alone, we will fail – as a company and as an
industry. Together, we have a pretty darn good chance at succeeding, but it’s
not going to be easy.”

Chamber President and CEO Kara Kelley said she wasn’t surprised by the company’s
decision to rejoin the chamber because Murren has worked on a number of issues
as a nonmember.

“What we saw today at Preview was a sincere commitment to improving the lives of
Nevadans and improving our economy,” Kelley said. “Jim and his family live here.
He is invested here, both economically in his business and as a Nevadan.”

Kelley said he doesn’t expect MGM Mirage or the gaming industry to be in full
agreement on every issue. She also feels having MGM Mirage back in the fold will
build appreciation for the company.

“There’s almost a universal lack of appreciation among the citizenry on the
relationship between the health of the gaming industry and everybody’s else’s
well-being,” Kelley said. “It is symbiotic in how we all prosper.”

In his presentation, Ralenkotter described a multifaceted strategy for
rebuilding the city’s decimated tourism economy, adding that the strength of the
Las Vegas brand would pull the city through its economic woes. He said the LVCVA
is working to market the city as a tourism destination through advertising,
special events and lobbying government leaders on public policy.

The consumer confidence index, the unemployment rate and monitoring the public’s
intent to travel are key indicators the LVCVA watches to measure progress, he
said.

Addressing the Preview audience in a talk-show format, Ralenkotter said, “The
first thing I want to say (about 2010) is that 2009 is over. It’s been the most
difficult economic challenge any of us have ever had. We’re going to win in
’10.”

The LVCVA’s part, he said, would be to continue to advertise the city with
clever television campaigns. He said the LVCVA’s “excuses campaign,” in which ad
characters come up with reasons to visit Las Vegas like celebrating “Chinchilla
Day,” would continue. Other themes will be showing Las Vegas as a value
proposition. The LVCVA also will reintroduce its popular “What happens here,
stays here” campaign with new ads.

Three new television spots were shown to the Preview audience.

Ralenkotter said the special events calendar has grown with a new event – the
Las Vegas Sevens international rugby tournament – joining Chinese New Year, the
Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition release and the NASCAR race in February
alone. |

Go Up »
 |
 |
 |
|
Our
Services |
 |
|
|
Applied Analysis provides professional services in urban
economics, market analysis, financial advisory services,
information technology and hospitality/gaming consulting
services.
Read More » |
|
|
 |
|
Our
Information |
 |
|
|
Reliable data is the foundation of any solid analysis.
We are the market leader in information and research. We
track economic, development and fiscal trends, and
publish the area's most comprehensive office, industrial
and retail market survey.
Read More » |
|
|
 |
|
Our
Clients |
 |
|
|
Applied Analysis has a broad client base, including both
public entities and private companies. We exceed our
clients' expectations by taking the time to listen to
their goals and then committing the time, resources, and
know how to help them find success.
Read More » |
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- |
 |
 |
|
|
|

Las Vegas Sun
 |
 |
 |
|
|

MGM Mirage CEO Jim Murren
speaks at Preview Las Vegas at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas
on Thursday, Jan. 28.
 |
|
|

Jeremy Aguero of
Applied Analysis presents at Preview Las Vegas at the Cox
Pavilion in Las Vegas on Thursday, Jan. 28. Photos by Tiffany Brown
 |
 |

Other events on the calendar are the Professional Bull Riders Association world
championships, the Miss USA pageant and Vegas Uncork’d, a rapidly expanding food
festival.

Ralenkotter said LVCVA officials have been busy talking with Washington
lawmakers to explain the importance of the meetings and convention industry to
Las Vegas.

“The conventions and meetings industry have been under attack, especially
incentive travel,” Ralenkotter said. “We had to fight for our position and
change the tone on Capitol Hill.”

Ralenkotter said the tourism industry has done that by explaining how many jobs
exist as a result of tourism.

Jeremy Aguero of Applied Analysis presents at Preview Las Vegas at the Cox
Pavilion in Las Vegas on Thursday, Jan. 28.

Choosing a health-care theme, Jeremy Aguero, principal analyst for Las
Vegas-based Applied Analysis, gave a list of 10 ways to get the Southern Nevada
economy off life support.

Heading his list: Getting the region focused on diversifying the economy. He
also recommended exploiting the area’s tourism infrastructure to grow business,
accept the reality of what the recession has done to values and reset pricing
accordingly and getting to work on the $5.2 billion in shovel-ready projects to
put people back to work.

Aguero also said Southern Nevada must invest in education and renewable energy,
focus on the area’s growing health-care economy started by the Nevada Cancer
Institute, the Lou Ruvo Brain Institute and the Cleveland Clinic and attract and
retain senior citizens to the area.

Today’s program also included a presentation by New York Times bestselling
author Steven Levitt, who co-wrote “Freakonomics” and “Superfreakonomics.”
   
« Go Back

Author: R. Velotta, Las Vegas Sun
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
|
|