When Michigan’s three commercial casinos in Detroit reopen, poker won’t be an option for gamblers after the state’s regulators released reopening guidelines for casinos Monday.
According to a report from the Detroit Free Press, casinos will operate at 15 percent of its total capacity, administer temperature checks at entrances, force guests to wear a mask, ensure six-feet of social distancing between gamblers, and keep poker rooms closed. Casinos will also temporarily eliminate smoking on the gambling floor, self-serve buffets, valet service and coat checks.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer implemented some of the strictest lockdown orders of any state in the country in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. She signed an executive order in mid-March that forced casinos to close and has not given a date as to when the casinos will be open for business again.
Michigan Gaming Board Executive Director Richard Kalm said that the guidelines were built from other major regulatory bodies throughout the country.
.TEMPORARILY CLOSED. Our Poker Room features a variety of poker games to suit players of all levels: Omaha and Texas Hold'em. Please call 313-237-6735 or check on the Bravo Poker Live app for the days and times offered. No tournaments NLHE only Some VERY amateur players at times. I had 2 (once 3) callers on multiple occasions put in $50 pre-flop just to try and crack my big pair. They succeeded both times. Next it was off to MotorCity casino, perhaps the poker room of choice in Detroit. I think its best to some up my experience with MC by skipping right to the.
“In compiling these minimum guidelines, we considered CDC recommendations, Nevada Gaming Board guidelines and information from the National Indian Gaming Commission,” Kalm told the Free Press. “We required the casinos to propose reopening plans, and we consulted with the casino unions on the guidelines.”
The state’s biggest city is home to MGM Grand Detroit, MotorCity Casino and Greektown Casinos. The rest of the state’s casinos are tribal entities and are not subject to state regulations. Some have already reopened.
All around the country, the gambling markets have begun to take bets again, with many Las Vegas casinos opening last Thursday. The policy on poker rooms, however, has varied from state-to-state and even casino to casino.
In Florida, many poker rooms opened at the end of May with short-handed games, but some rooms are already transitioning to nine-handed play.
Las Vegas poker rooms were originally supposed to run four-handed games at the start of the reopening process, but regulators allowed five-handed games to run just a day after casinos opened. The poker room at The Venetian is the only room on the Las Vegas Strip currently operational. The Orleans, South Point and Golden Nugget have also reopened, while larger rooms wait for six-handed play before spreading games.
We are firmly in “OPEN FOR BUSINESS” mode in the United States because screw it, right? Gotta keep feeding that DOW JONES while we wish the COVID away. As part of the feeding of the capitalism machine, almost all of the nearly 1,000 casinos in the United States are open, including Detroit’s three commercial casinos: MotorCity, MGM Grand Detroit, and Greektown. And now two of them, unbeknownst to the Michigan Gambling Control Board, have decided that they are going to reopen their poker rooms.
Detroit was one of the cities that got absolutely slammed by the novel coronavirus in the spring. Its casinos, like the casinos in the rest of the country, closed in mid-March, but they were among the last to reopen because thankfully, Governor Gretchen Whitmer didn’t completely cave to armed right-wing nutjobs storming the capital, screaming at her to reopen the economy. Now, I still don’t think casinos should be open, but I also understand that it was inevitable. So at least it took until early August for Whitmer to allow Detroit’s casinos to welcome back customers at just 15 percent of capacity.
Like most casinos, the three Detroit venues have not reopened their poker rooms. Poker rooms are particularly appealing to COVID-19, were the virus an organism with a functioning brain, as poker players sit close to each other for hours at a time, exchanging chips and cards all the while. It is a wonderful place to catch a bug if you are into that sort of thing.
As was the case with general casino reopening, the casinos must have their poker room plans approved by the MGCB and be given the green light from Governor Whitmer to start dealing cards again. MotorCity, though, e-mailed customers last week, telling them that the poker room was going to open this week. And a spokesman for Penn National Gaming, owner of the Greektown Casino, told The Detroit News that it plans to reopen its poker room within a few weeks. The one holdout is MGM Grand, which has no plans right now.
Mary Kay Bean, a spokeswoman for the MGCB, said that the Board would discuss a poker restart when “one of the casinos indicates an interest in offering it.”
Neither MotorCity nor Greektown, according to The Detroit News, had contacted the MGCB to get any sort of process started.
In the meantime, the Venetian in Las Vegas has already gone so far as to host a live tournament series, running September 7 through September 27. The casino was one of four – along with the Orleans, South Point, and Golden Nugget – that opened its poker room the first weekend that Nevada casinos were allowed to reopen back in early June.
The poker rooms were under strict rules and could only have four-handed tables, but they asked the Nevada Gaming Control Board if they could up that by 25 percent, which they did immediately. In that same month, the Venetian had the first multi-table poker tournament in Las Vegas and now it has the first tournament series.
Stay safe, everyone!