The labour union representing tens of thousands of Las Vegas hospitality workers announced on Wednesday that it had reached a tentative deal with casino giant Caesars Entertainment.
The deal was a major breakthrough that could help avert an unprecedented strike at more than a dozen hotel-casinos on the Las Vegas Strip.
The announcement came after several months of tense negotiations and just days before the Culinary Workers Union’s deadline for a strike.
The union said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, that the agreement toward a five-year contract for about 10,000 workers came after 20-straight hours of negotiations.
A walkout could still happen if deals are not reached by 5am on Friday with MGM Resorts International and Wynn Resorts.
But the tentative agreement with Caesars could provide the momentum needed for the Culinary Union to win new five-year contracts for all 35,000 of its members who have been working under expired contracts at 18 properties owned or operated by the casino companies.
Negotiations with MGM Resorts were scheduled for Wednesday and Wynn Resorts on Thursday.
Caesars said in a statement that it was excited to reach an agreement that “recognises the integral contributions our team members have made to the success we have seen in Las Vegas over the last few years” with meaningful wage increases and opportunities for growth tied to plans to bring more union jobs to the Strip.
Bethany Khan, a spokesperson for the union, said terms of a deal with Caesars would be pending approval from the union’s rank and file and would be made public once approved.
A strike would cut to the heart of the city’s economic backbone and significantly disrupt operations at some of the most recognisable Las Vegas hotel-casinos as they prepare to host hundreds of thousands of people for next week’s Formula One debut on the Strip.
It would be the latest in a series of high-profile actions around the country in what has been a big year for labour unions, including walkouts in Hollywood and UPS’ contentious negotiations that threatened to disrupt the nation’s supply chain.
It would also follow hospitality workers walking off the job last month at Detroit’s three casinos, including MGM Grand Detroit.
“No matter if you’re auto workers, if you’re teachers, if you’re writers, if you’re screenwriters, the whole concept is we just want a fair way of making a living,” said Leslie Lilla, a cocktail server at the Bellagio.
“We want to provide for our families, so that is coming across loud and clear in America.”
The race course for the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix will feature sweeping views of many of the casinos at risk of walkouts if they do not strike deals with the union before Friday morning. That includes the Bellagio, Paris Las Vegas and MGM Grand.
The other properties that could be impacted by a strike are the Wynn and Encore resorts, as well as MGM Resorts International’s Aria, Excalibur, Luxor, Mandalay Bay, New York-New York and Park MGM.
The hospitality workers say they are willing to strike for as long as it takes to get fair contracts – from the housekeepers and utility porters who work behind the scenes to keep the Strip’s mega-resorts humming, to the bartenders and cocktail servers who provide the customer service that has helped make Las Vegas famous.
Bargaining has been underway since April over pay, benefits, job security and working conditions, but negotiations have ramped up in recent months after an overwhelming majority of union members voted in September to authorise a strike.