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Posted At : June 18, 2009 02:23 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories:
Labor,Tropicana Entertainment,Colony Capital,International,Atlantic City,Charity,Alaska,Regulation,Harrah's,Columbia Sussex

Bloomberg News reports the following: Harrah's Entertainment, the world's biggest casino company, may build a resort on the Azov Sea, Vedomosti reported Tuesday.
Harrah's may join U.S. construction company Asati in building a complex in Azov-City, one of four gambling zones planned in the country, Vedomosti said, citing Asati founder Alex Kogan.
The resort, which will include a casino, hotels and conference centers, will cost between $50 million and $100 million, Kogan said.
Wow! Try building a U.S. resort -- or even a Macanese one -- for so little money. I've asked Harrah's for confirmation but have yet to hear back. Although several overseas ventures have gone belly-up, the company continues to persist.
However ... despite the Russian government's decree that all casinos be moved to special zones, scattered around the far reaches of the empire, little headway has been made: "One Russian publication sent a reporter to check out progress on one of the zones, who discovered open fields filled with grazing cows." The Azov-City project, for one, has a long way to go.
And how is Harrah's/Asati going to build a casino for $100 million or less? One word: tents. "Several foreign investors have begun preparatory work, including the Austrian company Asati. The company plans to build on the 20 hectares of inflatable structures, area of 100 thousand square meters," explains one investment site, "... the inflatable structure can be a casino and a water park and the congress hall. In addition to inflatable structures Asati company intends to build a 17-storey hotel and 34 bungalows."
If there's to be gambling under a big top, I'd suggest they call the place Circus Circus, but Jay Sarno got there first. Potential feeder markets for "Harrahs' Azov" would include Kiev and Odessa, but the closest major city appears to be Stalingrad ... er, Volgograd.
Yung & the restless: Closer to home, in Kentucky, the grand vizier of Columbia Sussex, CEO William J. Yung III, is loaning out the corporate locomotive for charitable causes. Company locomotive? No, we're not making this up.
Restiveness marks the labor situation at one of the distant outposts of Yung's hotel empire. Both in the slow pace of negotiations and the demand for employee give-backs, it's very reminiscent of the scrumdown that was the Culinary Union/ColSux stalemate of two years back. At least Scott Butera intervened to make peace before it reached the point of a Tropicana Las Vegas boycott.
Small beer? Just what Resorts International in Atlantic City needs ... more regulatory problems. C'mon, guys. We hook up beer kegs all the time here at LVA. It's not rocket science. Then again, it's difficult to "misunderestimate" Colony Capital.
Corporate CEO buys a custom-made toy for at least hundreds of thousands of dollars, has it moved a thousand miles to his corporate headquarters, then offers it for use by charities, which charge for rides on the toy to raise funds. Corporate spokespersons laud it as an example of the CEO's personal munificence:
"Our owner Bill Yung has always been a train enthusiast... It's a pretty neat ride." said corporate spokesman Scott Cooney. "The idea here is to let charitable organizations use it as a fund raising vehicle. Our first group comes in this Saturday which is the point out of Covington."
- Wouldn't it be cheaper for the shareholders for the company just to shovel some cash to the charities, & issue a press release?
-- Uh, I forgot: Yung wouldn't be able to ride the toy train in-between charity engagements.
Never mind.