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Your Monorail might soon have Teslas on its tracks

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Your morning commute might get a lot weirder, real soon.

Okay, so picture this: You're stuck in traffic on the Strip, the sun's already cooking the asphalt, and then you look up. Instead of the Monorail chugging along, you see Teslas zooming through what used to be its tracks. Real talk about this town, Elon Musk's Boring Co. Vegas Loop might just replace — or merge with — the Las Vegas Monorail system. They're talking about putting Teslas on those elevated tracks, whisking people around like something out of a sci-fi movie.

### What This Means for Las Vegas

Here's the deal, the Monorail has always been a bit of a local joke. It connects a few casinos, sure, but it never really took off for regular folks trying to get from, say, the MGM Grand to the Convention Center without walking a mile in 110-degree heat. This new plan, though, is something else.

* **Elevated Teslas:** Imagine a personal car service, but 60 feet in the air.

* **Monorail Tracks:** They're not building new tunnels; they're repurposing what's already there.

* **Goodbye Gridlock:** The idea is to cut down on the Strip's insane traffic.

Look, whether you think it's genius or just another tourist trap for the tech bros, it’s a big move. The Monorail was always meant to alleviate the Strip's legendary congestion, which is a nightmare for everyone from limo drivers to the service industry folks trying to punch in on time. If this actually works, it could change how people move around the heart of our city, for better or worse. It’s a gamble, like everything else here.

Vegas on the wire — the house always has a story.

My compadres on the Morning Wire are talking about this and more; you gotta check 'em out at mornings.live.

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More from Raul 'Ricky' Garza-Ibarra

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →