Apr 30 2009
All around Pennsylvania, casino investors are digging for their checkbooks:
"Pennsylvania's highest court says a ban on
political campaign contributions by casino owners and executives is
unconstitutional," reports the Associated Press.
"The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the ban violates the
state constitution's guarantee of free speech.
The ban was included in the state's 2004 law that legalized slot
machines. It was considered the nation's broadest such restriction.
A majority of justices agreed with the argument by Philadelphia-area
developer Peter DePaul, who sued to challenge the law in 2007. He's a part owner
of Foxwoods Casino Philadelphia, which hasn't been built.
DePaul argued that the ban was an overly broad and discriminatory
infringement of the rights of free expression and association.
The ban was touted as a major bulwark against the political influence
that the lucrative gambling industry can exert over policymakers."
And now? Exert away, I guess. So maybe this is now a moot point?:
"An investor in Philadelphia's casino industry is under scrutiny by the state
Gaming Control Board. The board's Bureau of Investigations and Enforcement is considering whether a
$1,000 campaign gift in December 2005 by attorney Richard Sprague to Lt. Gov.
Catherine Baker Knoll violated a ban on political contributions by gambling
interests. Sprague is a partner in HSP Gaming, the group behind the SugarHouse Casino
planned for Philadelphia."
... Want a job at the new Rivers Casino on the North Shore? Take a number:
"More than 4,400 people, many with resumes in hand,
packed the David L. Lawrence Convention Center ballroom [yesterday] morning looking to
land a job at the Rivers Casino. The crowd quickly filled the 1,500 seats in the ballroom
and overflowed into the lobby. The overwhelming size of the group caused casino
officials to hold a second, impromptu introduction so those who weren't in the
ballroom could hear it. Job seekers were greeted with the rock song, 'Get
Ready.' They included a wide range of ages -- those with jobs, unemployed, and
at least one retiree looking to get out of the house."
That's 4,400 people, for 1,000 available jobs. Steep odds -- but better odds than you'll find by actually gambling at the casino.
... The Rivers Casino is still scheduled to open in August, but will it be adorned with two big billboards when it opens?:
"A plan to install two jumbotrons at the Rivers Casino
needs sharper focus, according to city planners. The Planning Department has delayed action on a request
by the casino to attach the screens to the east and west sides of the venue's
parking garage until officials find out exactly what operators want to broadcast
from them. [During] a briefing before the planning commission two
weeks ago, architect Michael Stern said the casino hoped to use the 31.25-foot
by 17.5-foot screens to advertise events and restaurants inside the slots
parlor, to show new slot machines, and maybe broadcast live footage of concerts,
fireworks and other performances."
Dispatches from the border
The steady parade of bad news from Atlantic City marches on, horns a'tootin':
"The Tropicana casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, filed for bankruptcy today
after winning regulatory permission to try to sell the resort to Carl Icahn and a group of other investors. The bankruptcy should allow an auction of the casino before the end of June ... The bankruptcy is
necessary for a 'free and clear' sale of the Atlantic City casino, which is
operating profitably."
And with bad casino numbers, you have bad air traffic:
"Atlantic City's lights still sparkle but the prospect of extending that
postcard image to Bader Field [airport] - a redevelopment that officials believed would
forever change the future of the city - has faded along with the gambling town's
economic picture. ... If not for the rusty hangars, motorists speeding past Bader Field on the
Atlantic City Expressway would barely notice they were passing one of the
nation's first aviation facilities officially called an airport."
... slow and steady progress in Maryland.
"The chairman of a commission charged with awarding Maryland's five casino
licenses said Tuesday that 'there's more optimism' these days for a
gambling-related windfall to state coffers despite a recession and lackluster
initial interest from the private sector. Donald C. Fry, a former Harford
County delegate who heads the politically appointed panel, said he based his
hopeful prognosis on new expectations that a full-scale casino will come to
downtown Baltimore and on preliminary feedback from consultants hired to advise
the commission."
Oh, yeah, you can totally taste the optimism.
Odds and ends
Revenue reports from Presqe Isle, Mohegan Sun and The Meadows ... Pinnacle might close its Reno property ... It's not just the recession that's taking a toll on casinos and Las Vegas -- it's borrowing and construction debt ... The land-based Gary, Ind., casino is struggling to stay afloat pay its bills ...
Here's the flip-side to all that free flowing comp booze:
"Following two recent fatal accidents, the Mohegan Sun casino is increasing its
effort to spot gamblers who may be drunk. The casino president says Mohegan Sun is expanding its alcohol-related
employee training program and beginning an awareness campaign. Mitchell Etess says 800 people in the table gaming department are receiving
training to identify intoxicated customers. Etess says drink servers are
limiting patrons to two drinks, rather than three."
Apr 21 2009
It's hard to tell how much traction this bill will get, or if Gov. Ed Rendell is serious about supporting it, but you have to think that Philadelphia city fathers are sweating just a bit:
"Republican state senator from Erie took aim yesterday at Philadelphia's
pocketbook, trying to deprive the city of millions of economic development
dollars if it doesn't get its two slots casinos up and running soon. Sen. Jane Earll openly admits she's using financial
pressure to get the casinos, called Sugar House and Foxwoods, open and
generating revenue to reduce property taxes for Pennsylvania homeowners ... Mrs. Earl's Senate Bill 200 would deprive Philadelphia
of up to $64 million a year from a slots-generated economic development fund,
which is paying for an $880 million expansion of Philly's convention center. She
also might take aim at the $86 million a year the city gets in wage tax relief.
Both revenue streams would be shut off until the two casinos are open."
Did I just say it's hard to tell if the governor would take this bill seriously? It just became easier to tell:
"Gov. Ed Rendell no longer supports cutting off Philadelphia from the state's
slot-machine gambling revenues. Rendell said through a spokesman Monday that he believes there's been enough
progress toward building two licensed casinos in Philadelphia to make such a law
unnecessary. [A] state Senate committee voted 10-to-4 Monday to cut off Philadelphia from
any gaming revenues that support civic development projects. Last month, Rendell said he would sign such a bill out of frustration with
political opposition to the construction of SugarHouse Casino and Foxwoods
Casino Philadelphia."
... on this side of the state, it's not the lack of contruction that's infuriating critics, but the nature of it:
"It's bad enough that the promised first-class jewel that
the North Shore casino was supposed to be is dwarfed by an oversized hulk of a
parking garage. Now the owners want to hang two jumbotrons on the sides to
advertise what's going on inside the slots parlor. The building's architect [last week] presented plans for
two screens, each 31.25 feet wide and 17.5 feet high, one that would face
Downtown and the other on the side facing the West End Bridge. ... The casino operators want to use their signs to
advertise events and restaurants inside the facility, perhaps to show new slot
machines that are available and possibly to display live shots from concerts or
other performances. We think those intentions far exceed what the city allows in
an identification sign," writes the Pee-Gee's editorial board.
... Also from the P-G, state Republicans are asking for yet more revisions to the state's five-year-old gaming law:
"For two years, House Republicans, including Rep. Ron Marsico of Dauphin County,
have been insisting on changes in the 2004 law that authorizes 14 slots casinos
in Pennsylvania. Now they're getting help from Mr. Marsico's cousin, Dauphin County District
Attorney Edward Marsico, who wrote to Gov. Ed Rendell and legislative leaders
last week urging them to correct what he sees as weaknesses in the law. [Both] Marsicos want the Legislature to revise the way that the financial and
criminal backgrounds of casino license applicants are investigated."
Doing so, they said, would allow state investigators to have full access to a casino applicant's criminal
history.
... one more, from the P-G's Tom Barnes:
Members of the state's Gaming Control
Board, including Chairwoman Mary D. Colins, got a good scolding this week from
state Sen. Jane Earll, R-Erie, who was upset over their spending
practices. Specifically, she was upset at a trip
that four board members and a staffer took to Rome last September, spending
$32,000, just a few days after Gov. Ed Rendell imposed a ban on out of state
travel.
Ms. Colins said it was an important
international gaming conference and plans had been set to attend before Mr.
Rendell issued his edict. The governor allowed the trip as an exception to his
ban. Mrs. Earll said board officials
have spent $135,000 on travel, meals, car rentals and other costs recently,
including another conference in Nevada, and that's too much. Mrs. Earll chairs the Senate's Committee on Community,
Economic and Recreational Development, which oversees
gaming.
Board members said their costs aren't paid for with taxpayers'
dollars, but are covered by casino owners. Mrs. Earll said the gaming board
should be more attentive to the way things look to ordinary citizens who are
strapped for cash. "There is still a perception of
extravagant spending and lucrative salaraies and other costs,'' she said. "It's
irrelevant that you are not spending tax dollars.''
Besides, the more that casino owners
have to spend on board expenses, the less they can invest in their casinos, she
said. The gaming board expenses for the owners come on top of the state's 55
percent tax on slots revenue -- 34 percent for property tax relief, 5 percent
for an economic development fund, 12 percent for the horse-breeding industry and
4 percent for host counties and cities.
Girls! Girls! Girls!
How are you supposed to organize a halfway-decent bachelor party weekend if there's no strip club within walking distance of the casino?
"Two companies that want to build a strip club near the
new casino on the North Shore have filed a federal lawsuit against the city,
alleging that its process for obtaining zoning permits are unconstitutional. Pennsylvania Avenue Pittsburgh Properties LLC, which has
the right to acquire property at 1620 Pennsylvania Ave., as well as
HDV-Pittsburgh LLC, which hopes to lease the premises, filed the complaint
yesterday. ... HDV hopes to open a 'cabaret-style nightclub that would
feature live, non-obscene, female exotic dance performance,' including clothed,
topless and possibly fully nude women, the lawsuit said."
... No Dice, the local anti-casino group, is planning an informational session on the North Side:
"Gambling counselor Lindsay Hargrove, an inspiring and effective speaker,
has agreed to participate. Norm B., the faithful leader of
Gamblers Anonymous in the Pittsburgh area, and
Bill Kearney from Philadelphia have been
invited."
The event is scheduled for 7 p.m., Tuesday, June 16, at Calvary United Methodist Church.
Dispatches from the border
News from New York:
"Delaware North took confidential information and used it against former partners
in its bid to develop a major casino at a downstate racetrack, its former
partner alleges in a new lawsuit. The court action comes as Gov. David A. Paterson has asked Delaware North and
others to again submit bids to operate the casino at Aqueduct racetrack. It
accuses the privately-held Buffalo company of breach of contract and other
misdeeds that derailed the attempt of other firms interested in the lucrative
deal."
Delaware North is the same company that was in line to run the planned casino at Seven Springs, which never opened.
... in Atlantic City, it seems that it's gonna get worse before it gets better:
"Revenue is plunging at a record-breaking pace. Nearly
3,100 jobs have been lost in a year. And it's only going to get worse: A new slots parlor in
Bethlehem, Pa., is opening next month that's sure to draw northern New Jersey
customers who used to go to Atlantic City. The latest blow came Thursday when statistics from the
state Casino Control Commission showed another record-setting decline in the
amount of money won from gamblers in March. The 19.4 percent decline shattered
the previous record of 19.2 percent that was set just a month earlier."
The only thing that may rescue Atlantic City, it seems, is legalizing sports books:
"A new poll shows state residents favor legalizing sports betting in the nation's
second-largest gambling market by a more than 2-to-1 margin. The Fairleigh Dickinson University PublicMind poll comes shortly after a
state lawmaker, an online gambling association and others sued the U.S. Justice
Department to overturn a law that restricts sports betting to only four states."
... more movement out of Ohio:
"Signature collectors should be out in earnest, seeking registered voters'
support of a ballot issue allowing casinos in Ohio's four biggest cities. The Ohio attorney general signed off on the final petition-related documents last
Wednesday, allowing the group to launch its signature drive."
De Scandal in De Poconos
A week ago, perjury charges against Louis DeNaples were dropped after he agreed to hand his stake in the casino over to a trust in his daughter's name. This week, his attorneys say Mr. DeNaples' suspension from state gaming activities ought to be lifted, since those charges were dropped:
"Lawyers for Mount Airy Casino Resort have petitioned state gambling regulators
to lift the suspension of owner Louis A. DeNaples' state slots license and
dissolve a 14-month trusteeship at the casino. The petition cites the
withdrawal of perjury charges against DeNaples by the Dauphin County District
Attorney's office as the reason. DeNaples' license was suspended in
February 2008 after he was charged with perjury."
Odds and ends
Expect a protracted legal battle if Connecticut tried to outlaw smoking at its Indian casinos ... In a down economy, the casinos are struggling, but the new penny slots are a big hit ... Casino revenues dropped in Detroit last month ... In Mississippi, the numbers are up month-to-month, but down year-over-year ... "A newly unemployed casino veteran launches a free website that links job-seekers
to casino employment Web sites, with 5,291 jobs available in its initial posting.
The website is http://www.AllCasinoJobsONLINE.com ."
... total buzzkill here, but here's yet another reminder that the house nearly always wins, and often it takes your dignity along with your money:
"Prairie Meadows has provided welcome cash for Polk County governments
and Iowa charities, but it's been a bad bet for Mitch Henry. Henry,
51, of Des Moines, is a problem gambler who has lost thousands of
dollars playing slot machines at the Altoona complex. During his worst
days in June 2005, he would often gamble until he was broke, return
home to desperately try to find more money, then drive back to Prairie
Meadows and keep gambling until he had lost every dime."
... This sounds interesting:
"Casino-Free Philadelphia will put the casino industry on notice. Residents of
Philadelphia and allies from around the country will cover new ground -- inside
an existing, operating casino in the region -- and conduct ourselves in ways
that focus the public's attention on the heart of the controversy. The event,
called Beat the House, will use various tactics that can be replicated at any
casino anywhere in the county, including the two casinos proposed for
Philadelphia, SugarHouse and Foxwoods, whether they open here in our City or
elsewhere. Working in teams, participants in this event will enter a nearby
slots parlor and use a series of actions to expose the predatory practices used
by the gambling trade."
So if you're visiting a casino on June 6, be sure to say hi to these fellows.
Apr 15 2009
Yes, you've been able to gamble on slots at The Meadows for almost two years. But that casino was temporary. This one is permanent -- and bigger:
"The Meadows Racetrack & Casino opened its $175 million permanent facility to the public at 9:45 a.m. today, when a crowd of several hundred surged inside the spacious building in Washington County. 'This is really impressive,' said Pat Doyle of Delmont, visiting the food court and surveying race horses warming up on the track outside while he waited to play some of the 3,100 slot machines. On a drizzly morning, the crowd was much smaller than for a test run on Monday or for the opening of the Meadows' temporary facility in June 2007."
Here's the story on that soft opening:
"By 10 a.m., the line to enter The Meadows Racetrack & Casino was 250 people deep. By 11 a.m., the line was measured in miles -- automobiles clogged the mile-long stretch of Racetrack Road between the casino and the highway, and the queue to exit Interstate 79 was a full mile-and-a-half heading north. It was Opening Day of a different kind in Washington County. Nobody seemed to care that the Pirates were playing their first home game of the 2009 season in Pittsburgh -- not when the new, 3,700-slot casino was opening at 11 a.m. yesterday to an invitation-only test crowd. The invitations, 17,000 in all, were distributed by Washington County's volunteer fire departments. The proceeds from yesterday's soft opening will benefit those fire departments."
That's great news for the slots players, but for those who like to bet on the ponies, the opening of the new casino means that racing is back:
"Racing resumes at The Meadows at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday after the early April shutdown to prepare the new building. Casino officials say they've designed the 350,000-square-foot structure to highlight the horses as a major entertainment feature beyond the Double Diamonds and Wheel of Fortune machines and new dining options. Two restaurants and a food court on the casino's upper levels overlook the track, with both indoor and outdoor seating. The old-fashioned grandstand behind glass, used during four-and-a-half decades of racing, has been replaced by three rows of stadium-style, outdoor seating putting hundreds of patrons close to the home stretch."
... From the P-G's Tom Barnes, writing out of Harrisburg:
Lawrence County Commissioner Dan Vogler watched in amazement Wednesday as more than 100 people from Philadelphia screamed and hollered at a Gaming Control Board meeting to protest two slots casinos proposed for their city. The Philadelphians said they didn't want gambling parlors in their city.
Mr. Vogler said the attitude of people in Lawrence County toward gambling is 100 percent different than the protestors from Philly. Unlike the Philadelphians, people in Lawrence County definitely do want a casino proposed for their area. "There is almost unanimous support for the proposed racetrack/casino in Lawrence County,'' he said. "When the gaming board held a hearing last summer in the county, 35 people testified in favor of it and no one was against it. The economic impact to the county would be signifcant,'' in terms of construction jobs and permanent gaming jobs.
Mr. Vogler has attended every gaming board meeting for months, in hopes that it would award a slots license for his county. An Indianapolis company named Centaur has received a Pennsylvania Harness Racing Commission license to build a new harness racing track west of New Castle, near the Ohio line, but the project can't proceed until the gaming board awards Centaur a slots license.
These days, racing isn't too popular but slots gambling certainly is. Centaur's racing license has been extended until September 2010, but it won't even be considered for a slots license until it proves to the gaming board that it has the financial backing to build the $400 million project. And Centaur officials, pointing to the severe recession and lack of lending by financial institutions, don't know how long it will take them to get the necessary financing.
Once the racino opens, another group, led by New Castle developer Carmen Shick, wants to build an indoor water park next to the slots facility, creating a new destination entertainment complex. But until Centaur gets its financing, and the board gives it the slots license, Mr. Vogler, and everyone else in Lawrence County, are forced to just wait.
... Same writer, different story:
"It looks like Nemacolin Woodlands in Fayette County is sticking with its decision not to seek a resort hotel casino license from the state. 'We never say anything is a 100 percent dead deal, but it's not very probable,'' Nemacolin spokesman Jeff Nobers said. Speculation had bubbled up last week when former state Rep. Jeff Coy, who now is a state Gaming Control Board member, moved to open up applications for the final resort hotel slots license to more than just the lone current applicant, Bushkill Group, which wants to put a resort hotel casino in the Poconos."
At one time, both "resort" casinos -- allowed no more than 500 slot machines -- were to be built in Southwestern Pennsylvania, one at Nelacolin and one at Seven Springs Mountain Resort. But both resorts withdrew their applications.
Around the state
Speaking of resort licenses:
"The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board [last week] awarded the 12th of 14 available slot machine licenses to Valley Forge Convention Center Partners, L.P., according to a news release."
That's in the King of Prussia.
... The latest on De Scandal in De Poconos:
"Dauphin County District Attorney Edward Marsico [has announced] two major developments regarding Louis DeNaples, owner of the Mt. Airy slots casino in Monroe County in the Poconos. He said that perjury charges against Mr. DeNaples, which were filed in early 2008, are now being dropped, in exchange for Mr. DeNaples, a wealthy Scranton businessman, giving up all ownership in the casino. ... Mr. DeNaples agreed to give up his ownership and control at Mt. Airy and turn over 100 percent of his interest to a trust set up in the name of his adult daughter, Lisa DeNaples. This agreement is subject to approval from the state Gaming Control Board."
Perfect. Because if his daughter owns it, there's no way he could profit from it, right?
Dispatches from the border
West Virginia casinos want to change the way they comp their customers:
"Gov. Joe Manchin will now decide whether West Virginia's racetracks can entice slot machine players with 'free play' credits ... Prior to today's conclusion of the regular session of state Legislature, members approved a measure that would allow the state's four racetracks to offer free play credits just as casinos do in nearby Pennsylvania. ... Critics objected to the provision legalizing free play, but racetracks in the Northern Panhandle had sought to offer free play credits as they scramble to compete with casinos in the Keystone State. Slot machine players are being drawn to Pennsylvania casinos with the promise of $20 to $50 in credit being applied to their players' cards. This credit has no cash value for tax purposes and comes at no cost to Pennsylvania casinos."
Atlantic City is dealing with the same issue -- Pennsylvania casinos give away comps without taking a tax hit.
Odds and ends
The Joliett, Ill., casino is reopening after a fire ... The Sands casino in Bethlehem, Pa., is opening next month ... The lousy economy means cutbacks at two horseracing tracks ... The Bay State is warming to the idea of casinos ... Ohio begins to flesh out the details of its latest casino push ... The Answer is Alan Iverson. The question is: Who just got banned from Detroit's casinos?
"Allen Iverson has been banned from both MGM and Greektown casinos in downtown Detroit, the Detroit News reported on its Pistons blog. A regular casino visitor since he arrived in town, the blog said Iverson has been 'banned mostly for his boorish behavior. He is a bad loser, and he loses a lot, often throwing his chips or cards at the dealer. He has been warned about improper behavior at the tables repeatedly. He is often loud and disruptive, according to witnesses, rude to dealers, other players and the wait staff.'"
Never understood why some people take out their gambling frustrations on the hired help. Why can't you just drink those frustrations away, like Charles Barkley does?
Last, if you're a blackjack dealer, it's best not to make smalltalk about the ecomomy:
"Joe Corbo, president of the Casino Association of New Jersey, says the last thing gamblers need to be reminded of is the tanking stock market or how much money they have lost recently. Making small talk with customers about the current national concern may seem like a good way to bond with them, but 'not really,' Corbo says. 'Our customers come here to escape. They don't want to be reminded of declining 401(k) balances or investment portfolios,' he wrote. 'If we engage them in discussion about the economy - or even worse, our personal circumstances - we're reminding them of the very things they're trying to forget.'"
In other words -- forget about your groceries. Keep gambling!
Apr 06 2009
What better way to celebrate the end of Lent -- and the end of all those self-imposed Lenten prohibitions on booze, beer, fatty foods and what not -- than by stuffing your face and liver at The Meadows next week?
Here's schedule, released today:
Monday, April 13
5:59 a.m. - Temporary casino closes
9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. - Media tour of new casino
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Invitation-only testing of the new casino
Tuesday, April 14
Temporary and permanent casinos closed
2 p.m. employee pep rally in former temporary casino
Wednesday, April 15
9:30 a.m. - Ribbon-cutting ceremony
10 a.m. - New $175-million casino opens to the public
... And here's the very latest out of Philadelphia, which has been under fire for moving so slow on casino construction:
"The developers for one of Philadelphia's two proposed slots parlors plan to open
a temporary casino next year. SugarHouse casino's developers say they hope to open the 1,700-machine
temporary facility before the middle of 2010. The temporary slots parlor would
be incorporated into the final design for the site on the Delaware River
waterfront. The developers say they can move forward with construction after the state
Gaming Control Board approves the design changes. The temporary parlor will take
about nine months to build."
... For all the controversy that The Rivers' garage has caused, you'd think they would have taken special care to make sure the thing remained upright:
If the huge parking garage being built behind the Rivers
Casino on the North Shore seemed a bit out of kilter recently, your eyes didn't
deceive you. Parts of the nine-level garage were found to be leaning
by nearly a foot, prompting intervention by the U.S. Occupational Safety and
Health Administration and a plan of action by contractors to straighten things
out.
Despite the problems, OSHA found the garage to be "safe
and structurally sound," Acting Area Director Frank Librich said yesterday. "At
no time during erection were employees in danger of a building collapse." The agency became involved after receiving an anonymous
tip in February saying that floors seven through nine in the garage were out of
plumb, or leaning.
... "With seven of the state's 14 authorized casinos open,
slots gambling hasn't hurt state lottery sales, at least not yet, state Revenue
Secretary Stephen Stetler told a legislative panel. 'Overall, lottery ticket sales remain steady at about 1
percent higher compared to last fiscal year,' he said. That's better than in
many states, because lottery sales are down 2 percent nationwide. For the first eight months of fiscal 2008-09 (through
the end of February), lottery sales were $2.044 billion, or $27.3 million more
than the first eight months of the previous fiscal year."
Around the state
Gov. Ed Rendell is still pushing for poker machines that pay out:
"Though his plan hasn't gained much traction, especially among local
lawmakers, Gov. Ed Rendell is continuing to pitch his proposal to legalize video
poker machines in bars and private clubs and use the revenue to offset tuition
costs for some college students. At recent stops, including one last week in Reading, Rendell detailed the
plan [to] legalize the
thousands of currently illegal video poker machines operating throughout
Pennsylvania and to authorize others. The proceeds, according to Rendell, would generate about $550 million a year
for the state to be used to offset tuition costs for students the 14 state-owned
universities or any community college in the state."
To be clear, the poker machines are legal, as long as they are used for recreation only -- and many of them are not.
... From the P-G's Tom Barnes:
A group of Asian-Americans in Philadelphia is angry at the
state Gaming Control Board for moving up the time of a meeting next
Wednesday.
The board wants to hear from officials of two would-be
Philadelphia casinos about why it's taking them so long to get the casinos built
-- and producing funds to reduce property taxes for
Pennsylvanians.
The board was going to meet Wednesday at 11 am, and a
busload of Philly residents -- probably most of them against casinos -- plans to
attend.
But now the meeting has been moved up to 9:30 a.m. which will make it
more difficult, the Asian group said.
Asian Americans United said "it's shameful that the board
plans to hold a public meeting on Philadelphia casinos outside our city. But
this latest move further demonstrates the board's determination to thwart public
participation.''
The group doesn't like the possibility that Foxwoods,
one of the two proposed casinos, will move from its original site in South
Philadelphia, along the Delaware River, to one of two locations in Center City,
just a couple blocks from the city's Chinatown. Some Asians say many people of
Asian heritage seem to demonstrate a particular weakness for gambling, and
putting a huge slots casino virtually next to Chinatown is a bad
idea.
... More from Philly:
"The Army Corps of Engineers has agreed with archaeologists for the SugarHouse
casino that the project's 22-acre Philadelphia site along the Delaware River
does not hold remnants of a British fort from the Revolutionary War or an
18th-century men's social club."
Which means it's OK to build there.
Dispatches from the border
We're inching closer to a new casino measure in Ohio:
"Attorney General Richard Cordray approved language to be used on petitions
for the issue to establish casinos in Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and
Toledo. It was the second round of wording submitted by the Ohio Jobs and Growth
Committee. The coalition of casino owners and business interests wants to put
the question on the ballot this fall. Cordray rejected the first submission, saying it didn't specify the casino
locations and was unclear about taxing winnings."
...Gambling "purists" should like this news, out of Atlantic City:
"It used to be the signature sound of gambling: the clacking of coins spilling
into metal trays on slot machines. But newer electronic machines that spit paper
vouchers or credit winnings to cards now emit only canned noise. Now Atlantic City's oldest casino is bringing back the real clang amid
indications that some gamblers miss the way things used to be ... [The] coin experiment is definitely swimming against the tide in the
casino industry, where nearly 90 percent of the 900,000 or so slot
machines in use in north America do not accept or pay out in coins."
Odds and ends
Not the best timing for slots in Maryland ... Horse troubles in Maryland, too ... Pennsylvanians support table games, according to these polling numbers ... Pennsylvania's monthly casino revenues are up in some spots, down in other.
It's not any easier to win, but at least it's cheaper to lose:
"Up until a few months ago, the minimum blackjack table at the Seneca Niagara
Casino in Niagara Falls had been $10. Now, Western New York's biggest casino advertises that $5 blackjack tables
are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The recession is bringing hard times to the gambling industry, [but] it appears bad times are good for gamblers, at least those who still have
money."