[gpt3]
You are Samantha Carter, Chief Editor of Newsy-Today.com.
Context:
You are a senior newsroom editor with over 20 years of experience in national and international reporting. Your writing is authoritative, clear, and human. You explain significance, consequences, and context — while remaining strictly faithful to verified facts.
Your task:
Rewrite and transform the content provided in
For more Nevada Newsmakers click here
“I say this at the LVCVA all the time: You’re almost never completely in control of what you want to achieve,” Hill told host Sam Shad. “You know, you don’t control all the variables out there in any aspect of what your goals are.
“It doesn’t mean it changes your goals. And so we want to make sure that Vegas continues to thrive and we’re confident it will do that. I mean, there’s just no place like this city.”
Hill, however, declined to predict a future date when business would be back to “normal.”
“In terms of a real, complete recovery, I think it’s not necessarily tied to the calendar as much as it is tied to consumer sentiment,” Hill said. “We see consumer sentiment, consumer confidence at a real low point in comparison to the last decades.”
The LVCVA reported about a month ago that Las Vegas saw an 8.8 percent decrease in tourism in September. It marked a ninth consecutive month of declines.
Through October, visitor volume was down about 7.6 percent from the prior year. Air traffic has also declined, especially with flights from Canada.
Nationally, consumer confidence is down, reflecting a weaker outlook on jobs and the economy. It’s not good for Las Vegas, yet out of Hill’s control.
“Some of the statistics are as low as they have been, and it causes people – an expanding number of people – to be concerned about their financial situation, their job and what the outlook is,” Hill said. “They lack certainty. And, you know, they’ll look for discretionary ways to be more conservative than they have been in the past.
“Until those numbers start to turn, it’s a headwind for Las Vegas,” Hill said. “So we’re doing everything we can to fight through that headwind. I think the city’s done a really good job of that. We’re starting to see numbers improve. And, we’re still really confident.”
The LVCVA has employed various tactics in trying to get its Canadian and Mexican visitors to return.
It has sent tourism officials – including Hill – to Canada on sales missions and has offered deals for budget travelers. Hotel/fight packages with airlines have also been created to lure visitors and the LVCVA is working to address issues of higher costs, added fees and political misgivings.
Las Vegas has survived – and thrived – after much tougher days than this, he said.
“I mean, this is just a slowdown,” Hill said. “It’s not the crises that we’ve seen in the pandemic or great recession or those types of events. But we want to get back to actual growth and not just get back to the numbers that we saw in 2019 (before the COVID pandemic hit in 2020).”
into a fully original NEWS ARTICLE for the News category on Newsy-Today.com.
Your article must address:
• What happened (based strictly on the source)
• Why it matters (context, implications, and significance derived from the source)
• What may happen next (scenario-based analysis only, never new facts)
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NON-NEGOTIABLE FACT RULES
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• Use ONLY facts, names, places, quotes, and numbers explicitly present in
For more Nevada Newsmakers click here
“I say this at the LVCVA all the time: You’re almost never completely in control of what you want to achieve,” Hill told host Sam Shad. “You know, you don’t control all the variables out there in any aspect of what your goals are.
“It doesn’t mean it changes your goals. And so we want to make sure that Vegas continues to thrive and we’re confident it will do that. I mean, there’s just no place like this city.”
Hill, however, declined to predict a future date when business would be back to “normal.”
“In terms of a real, complete recovery, I think it’s not necessarily tied to the calendar as much as it is tied to consumer sentiment,” Hill said. “We see consumer sentiment, consumer confidence at a real low point in comparison to the last decades.”
The LVCVA reported about a month ago that Las Vegas saw an 8.8 percent decrease in tourism in September. It marked a ninth consecutive month of declines.
Through October, visitor volume was down about 7.6 percent from the prior year. Air traffic has also declined, especially with flights from Canada.
Nationally, consumer confidence is down, reflecting a weaker outlook on jobs and the economy. It’s not good for Las Vegas, yet out of Hill’s control.
“Some of the statistics are as low as they have been, and it causes people – an expanding number of people – to be concerned about their financial situation, their job and what the outlook is,” Hill said. “They lack certainty. And, you know, they’ll look for discretionary ways to be more conservative than they have been in the past.
“Until those numbers start to turn, it’s a headwind for Las Vegas,” Hill said. “So we’re doing everything we can to fight through that headwind. I think the city’s done a really good job of that. We’re starting to see numbers improve. And, we’re still really confident.”
The LVCVA has employed various tactics in trying to get its Canadian and Mexican visitors to return.
It has sent tourism officials – including Hill – to Canada on sales missions and has offered deals for budget travelers. Hotel/fight packages with airlines have also been created to lure visitors and the LVCVA is working to address issues of higher costs, added fees and political misgivings.
Las Vegas has survived – and thrived – after much tougher days than this, he said.
“I mean, this is just a slowdown,” Hill said. “It’s not the crises that we’ve seen in the pandemic or great recession or those types of events. But we want to get back to actual growth and not just get back to the numbers that we saw in 2019 (before the COVID pandemic hit in 2020).”
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• DO NOT add new quotes.
• DO NOT attribute actions or decisions to institutions unless they appear in the source.
• Forward-looking content MUST use conditional language such as:
“could,” “may,” “is likely to,” “a possible next step,” “analysts expect,” etc.
• Never present speculation as established fact.
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