VEGAS MYTHS BUSTED: Airport Weather Station Underreports Summer Temps

The highest temperature to ever scorch Las Vegas, 120°F, was recorded at 3:38 p.m. Sunday by the National Weather Service (NWS) weather station at Harry Reid International Airport. According to many conspiracy theorists, however, the actual temperature here routinely tops that number and goes underreported at the behest of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, which doesn’t want tourists knowing how hot Sin City really gets in the summer.

The NWS weather station at the main Las Vegas airport, named Harry Reid International since 2021, has been measuring Sin City’s official temperature since Dec. 18, 1948.  (Image: Shutterstock)

This goal supposedly gets accomplished by keeping the weather station’s temperature sensor in the shade instead of how most of those walking around Las Vegas experience the weather — in the blazing sun.

Some conspiracy theorists, such as one who commented below this recent video on the “Jacobs Life in Vegas” YouTube channel, go as far as insisting that the weather station was secretly relocated to the top of the air traffic control tower, where the air is cooler.

“Lies and misinformation,” insisted YouTube user @taylorlto806. “It’s ridiculous … The weather DOES and HAS exceeded 120 most summers, but it is no longer announced due to tourism.”

Weathering Heights

NWS meteorologist Daniel Berc monitors weather conditions to formulate a forecast in 2019. (Image: Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Yes, the temperature gauges at Harry Reid are kept in the shade. However, that’s true of all NWS weather stations.

“Historically, all temperatures are measured in the shade to be consistent, as the amount of solar radiation a location gets differs in different areas even when the temperature is the same,” NWS meteorologist Daniel Berc told Casino.org.

He added: “All official National Weather Service thermometers are kept in white, vented enclosures to reflect the sunlight. The shade, vents, and reflective paint allow the air to circulate freely so the thermometer can accurately measure the air temperature.”

Berc, who has worked in the agency’s Las Vegas office since 2012, says the air-traffic control tower theory is a new one to him. According to Berc, the official NWS Las Vegas weather station has never sat higher than five feet off the ground.

The first one began taking observations on Jan. 1, 1937, at Nellis Air Force Base. That was back when it was known as the Western Air Express Airfield and the NWS was called the US Weather Bureau.

That station was moved to Las Vegas’ civilian airport, then known as Alamo Field, on Dec. 18, 1948, two days before it was renamed to honor Senator Pat McCarran. The station was installed outside the Weather Bureau’s office at Alamo, with its sensors measuring the air at about five feet off the ground.

On Sept. 1, 1995, the weather service replaced this station with an automated weather station located a bit east of what is now the middle of the airfield — again, about five feet off the ground. Because it was automated, it no longer needed to be manually read. So NWS abandoned its airport office for its current one on Dean Martin Drive.

That weather station needed to be moved due to the construction and expansion of a new taxiway. So, since April 19, 2007, the official NWS Las Vegas weather station has operated, once again, with its sensors about five feet off the ground in the southwest corner of the airport

This weather station, known as an Automatic Surface Observing System (ASOS), is identical to the one operating at Harry Reid Airport. (Image: NOAA/NWS)

Of course, as any Las Vegas resident knows, the eastern side of Las Vegas, around Boulder Highway, tends to get hotter than the rest of the valley because it sits at a lower elevation. And occasional amateur readings of above 120°F may have given this myth some legs.

“While we do not have any official climate sites there, readings of 120°F or above would certainly be plausible, however rare,” Berc said.

Why Always at Airports?

Official weather stations are usually located at airports, Berc explained, because “weather is so important to the aviation community.” (Both North Las Vegas and Henderson, Nev. have airport NWS weather stations recording and reporting their official temperatures, too.)

In fact, from 1948 through 1995, Berc said, pilots would walk into the official weather office at Las Vegas airport and receive flight briefings directly from meteorologists. Then they would know they were getting the most accurate information possible.

This would distinguish those pilots of yesteryear from today’s conspiracy theorists, who get their information from social media, fake news sites, and misinformed friends and family members.

Look for “Vegas Myths Busted” every Monday on Casino.org. Visit VegasMythsBusted.com to read previously busted Vegas myths. Got a suggestion for a Vegas myth that needs busting? Email corey@casino.org.

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Station Casinos Gave Workers Free Steaks, Possibly to Sway Union Election

Just a couple of days before Station Casinos workers voted on whether to affiliate with the Culinary Union, management tried to get employees to oppose the union with the lure of tasty food.

A steak dinner
A steak dinner, pictured above, is an example of a meal Station Casinos to its workers before a union vote. (Image: Lana’s Cooking)

The company served the culinary workers more than 500 complimentary steaks in 2019. Each was branded “Vote No!”

The giveaway was in response to workers previously saying the food they had been served in a free buffet wasn’t tasty. Food had become an employee concern.

By giving out the steaks, Station Casinos was hinting meals in the future would improve if the employees rejected the union during the 2019 vote. It turned out, the workers did oppose the union by a 627-534 vote.

Company Must Negotiate

Earlier this week, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) further directed Station Casinos and parent company Red Rock Resorts to recognize and negotiate with the Culinary Union.

Management had taken part in “egregious and pervasive unlawful conduct” leading up to the union vote, the federal panel said.

The NLRB also claimed Station Casinos’ actions “stemmed from a carefully crafted corporate strategy intentionally designed at every step to interfere with employees’ free choice whether or not to select the [Culinary] Union as their collective-bargaining representative,” according to the federal ruling.

In response to the ruling, Culinary Secretary-Treasurer Ted Pappageorge said it “affirms what we have been saying for years — that Station Casinos violated the law and the company must bargain with the union because of its unlawful actions that corrupted the prospect for a free and fair union election.”

Vote Was Fair

Red Rock Resorts spokesman Michael Britt said the 2019 workers’ vote “was a fair outcome that reflected the wishes of a majority of the Red Rock Team Members then and reflects it now,” according to the Las Vegas Independent.

The NLRB’s decision “upheld the findings of its own NLRB hearing officer,” and wasn’t unexpected, Britt added. The company is likely to file an appeal.

The controversy involves three gaming properties, including Red Rock Resort, Palace Station, and Boulder Station.

Decertification By Workers

More than half of the approximately 600 unionized workers at Sunset Station Hotel and Casino reportedly said in April they wanted to drop the Culinary Union as their labor representative.

The employees were in the process of signing a decertification petition, according to Station Casinos. Decertification petitions were previously signed in 2020 by a majority of workers at Boulder Station and Palace Station.

Culinary Workers Union Local 226 and Bartenders Union Local 165, represent some 60K workers in Las Vegas and Reno, including guest room attendants, cocktail and food servers, porters, bellmen, cooks, bartenders, and laundry and kitchen workers.

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Station Casinos Brings Down Fiesta Rancho in North Las Vegas

Demolition of the Fiesta Rancho in North Las Vegas began this week, with most of the resort’s five-story hotel tower reduced to rubble. Owner Station Casinos announced last July that the Fiesta Rancho would be demolished along with its other North Las Vegas property, Texas Station, which was leveled in February.

Another Fiesta takes a permanent siesta. (Image: FOX5/Vegas)

Both casinos had been closed since the COVID-19 pandemic began, as was Station’s Fiesta Henderson casino. Despite the popularity of the casinos, Station said, their customers switched over to other casinos owned by the company. So they opted to sell the land to buyers who, as part of the deal, promised not to open competing casinos on the sites.

The Fiesta Henderson, which was also demolished in February, was purchased for $32M by the city of Henderson, which intends to use its 35 acres for an indoor youth sports facility. No buyer has been announced for the Fiesta Rancho or Texas Station sites.

“These properties have been an important part of our business over many years, so it is not without sadness that we announce these permanent closures,” Station Casinos president Scott Kreeger said in a statement last July. “We would like to recognize and thank our former team members who worked at these properties for making them a place where our guests always felt welcome. We are pleased that approximately one-third of the team members from each of these three properties are already working at another Station Casinos property, and we hope that number will grow. We also want to thank our loyal guests for their support.”

The ice rink at Fiesta Rancho will remain open, Red Rock Resorts said.

Doubling Up

Red Rock plans to double its Southern Nevada presence by 2030. The locals-focused casino giant opened a new a new Wildfire casino in downtown Las Vegas in February. And it pumped $750M into its Durango Casino & Resort, a new 73K square-foot casino, sportsbook, and 200-room hotel on Durango Drive in Southwest Las Vegas that’s on target to open later this year.

Red Rock also recently closed on the purchase of nearly 67 acres in North Las Vegas for $55 million, after it received approvals for a new 75,700 square-foot casino and 600-room hotel on the site. (That casino is likely to be much more upscale than the Fiesta Rancho or Texas Station.) And, in July, it purchased 126 acres south of the Strip for $172 million — boosting its unused land holdings in the Las Vegas Valley to nearly 430 acres.

Red Rock’s land portfolio shrunk by 21 acres when the company sold excess land surrounding Durango to a housing developer last December for $23.9M. Its total strategic landholdings now total about 522 acres, about 120 of which are under contract or being actively shopped for divesting.

In addition to the Red Rock Resort and Green Valley Ranch, Red Rock currently operates multiple gaming properties under the Station brand throughout the Las Vegas area. The company also runs 10 Wildfire casinos, including seven in Henderson.

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