


Hotel rooms aren’t available to the public for booking and all promotional events, slot tournaments and concerts have been postponed. Restaurants will offer reduced seating, disposable menus and demonstrate increased spacing between tables and chairs. Select restaurants will reopen with limited menus and no buffet options. The entire casino will be sprayed daily with an EPA registered broad-spectrum disinfectant that kills 99.9 percent of bacteria, including COVID-19.” The resort’s hotel rooms will not be available initially as the property begins a phased reopening.ĭuring this initial phase, according to the press release, “operational hours of venues will vary to ensure adequate time to sanitize every room, machine, door handle, counter, lobby and open space with hospital-grade sanitation products. Touchless transactions will continue throughout the property and all guests must be 21 and over to enter the resort and casino. The casino’s gaming floor will be open with fewer slot machines, going from 1,800 to 1,200 to increase distance between players.Īll table games will have a maximum seating of three per table. “As part of these protective measures, team members and guests will be required to wear a mask and undergo a temperature screening before entering the casino property.” “Based on these guidelines, Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino will reopen in a limited capacity with added sanitation procedures, social distance practices and increased safety protocols to protect team members and guests,” said a press release issued by the tribe on Friday. Since then, according to tribal officials, CEDA has continued to monitor the guidelines and recommendations made by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), California Department of Public Health and the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC). COARSEGOLD - The Chukchansi Economic Development Authority (CEDA) and the management team at Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino announced Friday the property will implement its first phase of reopening on June 1.ĬEDA temporarily closed the property on March 20 due to public and tribal health precautions surrounding COVID-19.
