Wrong again. There I was, thinking the proposed $10 million upfront fee for table games in Pennsylvania was a done deal
when the GOP-controlled state Senate upped it to $15 million (and if you don’t pay by June 1, it goes to $20 million). Chalk that up as a “loss” for casino owners.
The latter did, more or less, get what they wanted on taxes, where they’ll pay an aggregate state/local rate of 14%. Despite publicly requesting a 34% tax rate, Dems in the lower house are muttering that one in the “high teens” might be acceptable. The question is: In return for what?
Casinos also banked a “win” when the state Senate ashcanned an amendment that would have tripled the slot base at “resort” casinos. Since this amounted to preferential treatment for a tiny percentage of the Keystone State casino industry, it’s good to see it get the back of Lege’s hand.
Power play in New York. In the competition for the racino contract at Aqueduct Race Track, those in the hunt include MGM Mirage, Penn National Gaming, Harrah’s Entertainment and Seminole Tribe-owned Hard Rock Entertainment, along with numerous and sundry joint-venture partners.
But none of them seems to have the juice of Larry J. Woolf‘s Navegante Group. After the New York Lottery Division had deemed Aqueduct Entertainment Group (in which Navegante is a partner) unqualified, Gov. David Patterson‘s underlings put the word out that the five-member consortium is indeed qualified. Somebody in Aqueduct Entertainment’s got pull, that’s for sure.
A win for Adelson. While no casino company was remotely near the top of Newsweek‘s ranking of the 500 greenest companies, Las Vegas Sands can claim a victory of sorts. Sheldon Adelson‘s firm clocks in at #128, well ahead of MGM Mirage (#164) and Wynn Resorts (#176). Given the extent to which MGM has publicized its green-friendly initiatives, particularly with regard to CityCenter, finishing so far behind LV Sands is tantamount to a smackdown by proxy.
Several years after the publication of Beneath the Neon (now available in e-book format) publications are still shocked — shocked! — to learn of Las Vegas‘ large (and growing) subterranean community. Alas, we no longer have the Hooverville that had sprouted about a half-block north of LVA HQ. Those hobos were a tidy bunch and made our street seem halfway populated.
Marie Osmond pix. I’m just sayin’.
