Who said you can’t mix business with pleasure? Well, the government, apparently. But Nevada Senator Harry Reid is changing that.

During the Bush administration, federal emails pushed to avoid having official meetings, conferences, and conventions in gambling cities across the nation, leaving Las Vegas on a kind of travel blacklist. Recently, Reid U.S. Representative Suzanne Kosmas (D-Florida) petitioned to President Obama to open the doors on business travel to Las Vegas once again.

The new bill, called “Protecting Resort Cities from Discrimination Act of 2009” will remove the city from the national black list, and possibly encourage more business conferences to hold meetings there, if it makes more economic sense for a company. Now, remote conferences can focus less on destination, and more on cost/benefit analysis when choosing a location.

© Cheapflights Ltd Andrea Mooney

About the author

Author Pleasance Coddington
Pleasance CoddingtonPleasance is a British travel writer and online content specialist in travel. She has written for numerous publications and sites including Wired, Lucky, Rough Guides and Yahoo! Travel. After working for six years on content and social media at VisitBritain, she is now the Global Content and Social Media Manager for Cheapflights.

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