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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Las Vegas makes pitch as international gateway

Oskar Garcia Associated Press

LAS VEGAS – Never mind “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” Perhaps the new slogan for America’s gambling capital should be “Stop over for a quickie in Sin City.”

A quick visit, that is. Las Vegas tourism officials are betting that a new air terminal will lure some travelers to use Las Vegas as a regular stopover en route to Asia or other foreign places.

Some might never leave McCarran International Airport, while others might decide to make casinos happy by hopping in a cab and spending a few hours gambling.

Either way is fine with the airport – it just needs enough people traveling here to justify a $2.4 billion expansion conceived when Las Vegas was much busier. The new terminal opens in June.

The city still expects most visitors to vacation here for longer periods, but the new pitch marks a big change from past years when Vegas could count on filling planes solely as a destination. Since the recession crushed tourism, airlines have canceled Vegas-bound routes and left casinos scrambling for customers.

The new terminal would also let travelers heading to Asia or elsewhere avoid longer lines at customs in Los Angeles or San Francisco and take advantage of cheap fares to Vegas.

At the same time, airport and tourism officials are pitching the new terminal to airlines based outside the United States as a destination for direct service, pointing to regular service from England, South Korea and Mexico as successes that justify more international flights here without stops elsewhere first.

The new terminal, conceived before the meltdown, will boost the airport’s total capacity to up to 53 million passengers a year. The airport’s existing international terminal with four gates will close once it opens, and more than 20 airlines already plan to use it, offloading some traffic from existing gates.

Korean Air flies directly from Las Vegas to Seoul three times per week, and is looking to increase to daily flights.

“We see Las Vegas not just as an origin and destination point, but also as another hub for us,” said John Jackson III, vice president of passenger marketing and sales for Korean Air’s Americas region.

The new terminal will not offer direct service to China. Tourism and airport officials cite visa requirements for U.S.-bound Chinese travelers as a big obstacle in developing that market, but they say they’re working on it and are in talks with Chinese carriers.

But at least one airline industry expert says it won’t be easy for Las Vegas to become the international gateway it aspires to be.

“I wouldn’t call the new terminal a white elephant, but it’s going to be quite empty for a long time if they’re looking for flights to Asia,” said Mo Garfinkle, chief executive of GCW Consulting, an aviation firm with expertise in business development in China and other Asian markets.

Beyond visa issues, Garfinkle noted that Vegas is not a hub for any major domestic airline. He said international carriers won’t bypass cities where they already have partnerships with other U.S. airlines.

Air traffic to Vegas has declined from its peak of more than 47 million passengers in 2007 to fewer than 40 million in 2010. But while domestic air traffic has been relatively flat over the past year and a half, international passengers have increased 18 percent. During the fourth quarter this year, capacity on foreign flights is scheduled to be 28 percent higher than the same quarter in 2010. The new terminal, roughly a half-mile long, will have a total of 14 gates, plus connections via underground tram within security to other gates at the airport. Electronic signage will make it easy to change ticketing and dropoff areas depending on who’s flying in.

“We could double (international flight capacity) before we start stressing out,” said Randall Walker, director of aviation for Clark County.

Las Vegas loves international travelers because they stay longer than Americans and spend more, an average of $400 more per person per trip, Tull said.