Grasping at straws in his attempt to wrest control of the Tropicana Casino & Resort back from the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, the CEO of Tropicana Entertainment, Scott Butera, has seized upon a letter from state Sen. Richard Codey. In his Nov. 14, 2007 missive, Codey requests that Unite-Here Local 54 be allowed to intervene in NJCCC hearings against TropEnt owner Columbia Sussex (which, back home, was the beneficiary of some rare — but no doubt welcome — good news).
Codey’s letter, Butera’s lawyers contend, smacks of “political interference” and tipped the scales of justice against ColSux.
But Local 54 was only allowed to make a statement toward the proceedings’ end, not be an active participant, as Codey wished. ColSux lawyer Paul O’Gara was given the opportunity to object to this at the time — and didn’t. TropEnt also revives the old Bill Yung whine that it doesn’t understand what New Jersey law means when it requires every casino to have an independent audit committee.
Let’s see … Independent. Audit. Committee. Not a difficult concept to grasp, save possibly for ColSux, which ultimately formed a committee of one, that one person being a lawyer it already had on retainer (which shoots the “independent” requirement right in the ass). Sounds like the New Jersey Supreme Court isn’t buying it, either.
Those must have been some NJCCC hearings, too. According to The Associated Press, they “presented evidence of roach and bedbug infestation in hotel rooms, floors and appliances caked with mud and dust, and long waits for slot jackpot payouts following massive job cuts …”
Is that what Bill Yung meant about his being “ahead of the curve”?
Phil Ruffin is back in the news. Like other dog track owners — and the State of Kansas — he’s in a financial bind. He contends it’s not a viable economic proposition to run races at this two Kansas tracks. Ergo, he’d like his cut of the dog-running revenues upped to 58% from the current 40%. But a cash-strapped Kansas Lege may not want to dicker — or, worse yet, Topeka-bound lawmakers may see this as opportunity to repeal Kansas’ casino law. That alarming prospect alone should make gambling advocates wary of Ruffin’s proposition, even if you don’t think dog racing should be abolished.
Poultry in motion. In “I hate G2E,” I sang the praises of the tic-tac-toe-playing rooster, late of Atlantic City. Seems he was furloughed a while back from the A.C. Trop (no, Bill Yung didn’t fire the chicken). But Harrah’s Entertainment was astute enough to snap up our feathered friend and install him at Tunica’s Sheraton Casino Hotel. According to Raving Consulting, Harrah’s staked $100K and sent out a “Chick Tac Dough” mailer, inviting all comers to try their luck against the mojo-bearing bird in the “Final Chicken Challenge.”
No sightings of the rooster at G2E, though. I’ll keep you posted.
