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Posted At : January 28, 2009 12:06 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories:
Tilman Fertitta,Regulation,Station Casinos,Tribal,Economy,Louisiana,Texas
After years of seeing players flee in droves to Lake Charles, Shreveport and Oklahoma, businessmen in Texas have finally had enough and are stumping for a vote to authorize casinos in the Lone Star State. It's a long shot but in these desperate times, I'd no longer bet heavily against it. Prudently, the proposal would redress a longstanding wrong (and sidestep a lawsuit or three) by restoring gambling rights to Texas' Native American tribes, some of the many victims of l'affaire Abramoff.
The Las Vegas Review-Journal's Howard Stutz adds that the Frank Fertitta Jr. clan (including presumably Frank III and brother Lorenzo) is in on the action. True, Station Casinos itself is tapped out but the Fertittas are sitting upon bushels of money made either through the UFC or the Station buyout.
If the Las Vegas Fertittas really do have their eyes on Texas, it'd not only present a business opportunity but a chance to stick it one more time to cousin -- and rival -- Tilman Fertitta. The latter, a scion of the Galveston Fertittas, has coveted a Texas casino for some time. One can only imagine how the irascible Tilman might take to seeing young Frank III and Lorenzo setting up shop in his backyard, especially after they covertly helped Tim Poster and Tom Breitling run up the price of the Golden Nugget purchase.
Regulation? Who needs it? If, as Nevada Gaming Control Board Chairman Dennis Neilander maintains, his agency is operating at 1991 staffing levels, then Gov. Jim Gibbons proposes to take the NGCB back into the 1980s. Perhaps Midnight Jim is feeling nostalgic for the heyday of Lefty Rosenthal. Who knows?
Whatever the case, Gibbons' proposed cuts would make it more difficult for the Control Board to account for the tax revenue that Midnight Jim claims he is at such great pains to conserve and maximize. Then again, trying to reconcile what Gibbons says with what he actually does has been an impossibility from the get-go.
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