2 Casinos In Connecticut
2 Tribal Casinos In Connecticut Roll The Dice And Reopen. Frankie Graziano; A hand sanitizing wipe station is seen next to the slot machines at the Mohegan Sun casino on May 21. 2 Tribal Casinos In Connecticut Roll The Dice And Reopen. By Frankie Graziano. 5:00am Jun 01, 2020. A hand sanitizing wipe station is seen next to the slot machines at the Mohegan Sun casino on. The Connecticut gaming facilities are the first to reopen in a part of the country hit hard by the coronavirus. More than 3,800 state residents have died from COVID-19. In addition to the Connecticut and California reopenings, the Detroit Free Press reports that several tribal casinos. There are two casinos in Connecticut and both of the casinos are affiliated with Native American tribes. Shown below are the two Connecticut casinos. Click on a name to see a page of detailed information about that particular casino. Oth Foxwoods Resort Casino and the Mohegan Sun have announced that, in response to a spike in the coronavirus across eastern Connecticut, they will continue to operate at 25% capacity even though Gov. Ned Lamont is moving to phase 3 on Oct. 8, easing some restrictions.
Tribal casinos in Connecticut reopening on Monday in defiance of state leadership. They are the latest to make that decision.
Two weeks ago, Viejas Casino & Resort in Alpine, Calif., was part of a wave of tribal gaming facilities to resume operations in that state even after Gov. Gavin Newsom wrote a letter trying to dissuade them.
Connecticut Casinos Reopening
Now, Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun are touting 'limited' re-openings despite Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont saying he thinks it's too early for them to do so.
2 Casinos In Connecticut Near
'I think the idea of opening up on June 1 is early,' Lamont said. 'It's earlier than Las Vegas, it's earlier than any of our regional casinos want to do. I'd like to have more time.'
Officials at Foxwoods were confident ahead of the June 1 reopening, particularly because the tribe's safety plan calls for 25% occupancy across the casino's more than 9 million square feet.
'We feel like we've put forward a plan to mitigate the risk,' said Rodney Butler, chairman of the Mashantucket Pequot tribal nation, the tribe that runs Foxwoods. 'Don't go with the perception of what casinos were. Let's focus on what we're doing, and you have to come and see it.'
Foxwoods patrons will have their temperatures checked at the door and will be required to wear masks. Ten miles west of Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun is instituting similar safety guidelines. Also, players at table games will be separated by plexiglass. Dice will reportedly be disinfected after each roll.
The Connecticut gaming facilities are the first to reopen in a part of the country hit hard by the coronavirus. More than 3,800 state residents have died from COVID-19. In addition to the Connecticut and California reopenings, the Detroit Free Press reports that several tribal casinos in Michigan are following suit.