'Sin Fund' falls upon evil days

Not so long ago, journalists like yours truly, were hailing the early success of the Ladenburg Thalmann Gaming & Casino Investment Fund (GACFX). Unfortunately, since its apogee in the fall of last year GACFX has been in a steep decline, losing roughly a third of its peak value.

As one observer commented, upon bringing this to the attention of S&G, “[It] makes money placed in a piggy bank look like a good investment!”

Your Columbia Sussex moment of Zen: An LVA reader writes, “I understand that the River Palms, Tropicana Express in Laughlin are now owned by the Columbia Sussex Corp. I visit these hotels regularly and have noticed that they are slipping in quality. By that I mean the maintenance, i.e. carpets are worn, rooms need remodeling, buildings need paint, and buffets at both Laughlin properties have declined dramatically.”

Hmmmm … sounds an awful lot like my last visit to the Tropicana Las Vegas.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Current, Laughlin | Comments Off on 'Sin Fund' falls upon evil days

Desperation in Florida

Is Isle of Capri‘s racino a disappointment (especially for horsemen)? Is Boyd Gaming taking Florida expansion off the table? Is Magna Entertainment threatening to close overextended Gulfstream Park? What’s a Florida lawmaker to do?

Why, legalize every form of gambling short of cricket fighting, of course. Statewide slots, a lottery, regulated “adult arcades,” high-stakes poker — it’s all on the table as Sunshine State solons head back to Tallahassee, no doubt looking forward to two months of nonstop eye-poking and head-slapping between Gov. Charlie Crist (R) and archenemy House Speaker Marc Rubio (R), as they tussle over a shrinking state budget.

Rubio’s still trying to rein in Crist’s Class III compact with the Seminole tribes, but that horse may have long since left the stable. The Seminoles are proceeding as though they’d never heard of Marc Rubio. Should he get a court to overturn the compacts, Florida lawmakers who have had a taste of once-forbidden Seminole gambling lucre may already be hooked and repudiate Rubio (who’s a lame duck, anyway).

As for the absence of cricket fighting from the list of proposed fiscal remedies, I’d guess that’s just an oversight.

The Schmuck Report: On a humorous note, sports reporter Peter Schmuck takes a glance at the gleaming façades of Florida’s racinos and declares that “the experiment with increased gambling in Florida appears to be a success.” This is either disingenuous boosterism for bringing racinos to Maryland (an on-again, off-again quest) or else Schmuck is happily inhabiting a parallel universe.

Corzine opines. New Jersey’s governor goes on the record as favoring smoke-free casinos. He also backs the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority in its quarrel with Atlantic City over whether or not to sell Bader Field to Penn National. (Turns out Penn wants additional land re-zoned for casinos, too.)

Financing is sufficiently concrete, Corzine says, for both Revel and MGM Grand Atlantic City, and he’s bullish on Pinnacle Entertainment‘s postponed megaresort. And playing the stock market isn’t gambling, he says: “We made probability judgments about the viability of assets.”

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Florida, Horseracing, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Politics, Tribal | Comments Off on Desperation in Florida

Isle: Goldstein out, Perry in; Trump pummeled

Isle of Capri Casinos announced widening Y/Y losses today, along with the retirement of CEO Bernard Goldstein after 16 years at the helm. He gives way to board member James Perry, former CEO of Argosy Gaming and (briefly) Trump Entertainment. Along with COO Virginia McDowell, Perry presided over Argosy’s glory years, ones in which it emerged as the Rolls-Royce of riverboat-casino companies, eventually making it a takeover target for Penn National Gaming.

Perry faces a daunting task at Isle, whose stock is trading at a seven-year low. According to Isle, Perry has a turnaround plan in place, whose components include reintroducing the Lady Luck brand (to connote second-tier markets), upgrading amenities — not currently regarded as one of Isle’s strengths — and a downsizing at the corporate level.

However, in a possible allusion to the scorched-earth business methods of competitor Columbia Sussex, McDowell says, “We recognize, however, that companies cannot save their way to success and we continue to reallocate our resources in order to improve the overall guest experience,” etc.

Isle’s net revenues were up, but largely on the strength of newly opened or acquired properties (like its Waterloo, Iowa casino, above). One of those is the Casino Aztar boat in Caruthersville, Missouri, which the state wouldn’t let Columbia Sussex acquire in the Aztar Corp. buyout.

Back out the new properties and the balance sheet looks a whole lot worse, with revenue -11% instead of +17%.

Louisiana and Mississippi revenues are down, as casino competition returns to pre-Katrina/Rita levels. In Iowa, Isle is experiencing the same malaise as nearly everyone else — a plight that’s bound to worsen if the state approves as many five new casinos. Nearly $5 million went down the tubes in a futile tilt at the Pittsburgh market and a foolish run at Singapore.

Trump Entertainment Resorts was also feeling the pain today, as losses grew a jaw-dropping nineteen-fold (yes, 19X) on a 6.4% slip in revenue, coming in 2% below analyst expectations. The loss was swollen by a $147.4 million in “intangibles,” plus a $91.3 million write-off on the declining value of Trump Marina. “There’s no question Atlantic City is a difficult environment to operate in, and some properties had a difficult fourth quarter,” remarked Bear Stearns analyst Carlo Santarelli, displaying a genius for understatement.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Donald Trump, Iowa, Isle of Capri, Louisiana, Marketing, Mississippi, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Singapore, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Columbia Sussex strikes back

This could become a Hammer Studios-esque series of updates. Just contemplate the possible titles: The Curse of Columbia Sussex, Columbia Sussex Has Risen from the Grave, Taste the Blood of Columbia Sussex, Columbia Sussex and the Monster from HellColumbia Sussex Must Be Destroyed, Brides of Columbia Sussex, to be followed of course by Son of Columbia Sussex  or even Jesse James Meets Columbia Sussex’s Daughter … culminating in the inevitable I Was a Teenage Columbia Sussex.

(OK, so Jesse James Meets Frankenstein’s Daughter wasn’t a Hammer movie, even if it was a real one, directed by the infamously expedient William, “One Shot” Beaudine. But you get the idea.)

Aaaaaannnnyyyyyway … you’d think William Yung III‘s debt-lumbered lodging/casino company, with bondholders nipping at its heels, would be glad to get the cash it’s due from the upcoming sale of the Atlantic City Tropicana. You would think wrong. Yung has thrown another hissy fit, in the form of a 60-plus page lawsuit. He wants that casino back and accuses the New Jersey Casino Control Commission of lacking impartiality, and also of “ad hoc rulemaking and standard-setting.”

Barring a full reading of the complaint, the best line has to be the accusation that the NJCCC behaved in an “arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable” manner. Pot, thou hast called the kettle black! If anybody’s operating methods are “arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable” it is those of Columbia Sussex, at least if its own testimony before the NJCCC is any yardstick.

“The one-member audit committee that Tropicana put in place in June of 2007 has been in widespread use by other New Jersey casinos,” whines a company press release. Maybe so, but the problem with the Trop’s ostensibly independent committee of one is that it consisted of an attorney (Jeffrey Silver) who was on retainer to Columbia Sussex, a conflict of interest that did not emerge until later that summer.

Oh, and anyway, “such a requirement is not sufficiently spelled out in the New Jersey Casino Control Act, and therefore is not something Columbia-Sussex could have complied with,” according to a Philadelphia Inquirer report.

In other words, ‘We didn’t break the rules. And if we did, it’s because we didn’t know what they were.’ (Funny how Columbia Sussex has butted heads with regulators in almost every state — New Jersey, Indiana, Missouri and Nevada — where it sought casinos of late. Must be a vast conspiracy, no?)

Another non-argument is the contention that the NJCCC didn’t take into account a 94% occupancy rate. So? Harrah’s Atlantic City runs at 90%+ but at least 70% of those rooms are comped. The company also complains that the NJCCC overlooked “the firm’s financial stability,” which may be a tough case to make when you’re staving off bankruptcy.

In a final, maudlin touch, Columbia Sussex ends its press release by “decrying the virtual absence of interrogation about the company’s business plans and aspirations that is ordinarily a staple of renewal hearings.”

Oh dear, this is too tragic. Yung is conveniently forgetting that his stewardship of the Trop was hanging by a thread when he came before the NJCCC. The latter had been presented with a recommendation from the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement that Columbia Sussex be allowed a provisional, one-year renewal — based on the satisfaction of 26 conditions. In other words, Yung’s best hope was to get off with probation, and he didn’t. (Trop lawyers asked for a five-year, unconditional renewal but, given the circumstances, that was an unrealistic expectation.)

What might those “aspirations” have been? Yung had already sent the property Columbia Sussex described “as key to the company’s future, generating more than a third of total operating revenue and 36 percent of total operating profits” into a tailspin, off $19 million in the first six months of last year.

His Tropicana Entertainment casino portfolio was down -5.6%, year over year, for that same period despite adding four ex-Aztar Corp. properties to its stable. What The Press of Atlantic City called Yung’s “slash-and-burn business model” was fluffing up profit margins in the short term, but at the price of depressed revenues.

By the third quarter, not only were revenues down even further (-9% Y/Y), so were profits (-8%). In what looked like a desperation move, Yung started to peddle the Atlantic City Trop’s most highly praised asset, its $280 million The Quarter, to pay down debt. (He was subsequently dissuaded, perhaps because the first offer he got was for only $70 million.)

Anyway, it seems that Columbia Sussex’s attempted default on its $750,000 fine to the State of New Jersey was just a ploy to buy time until its lawsuit was filed. If so, the NJCCC has decided that two can play that game. Overruling its own conservator, it has ordered Columbia Sussex to pay up, starting now — even if it means dipping into the Trop’s cash flow. Such regulatory choler is not difficult to understand, as it appears that stalling on the initial $125K payment was yet another chapter in a long history of Yungian dissembling when it comes to cooperating with the Garden State’s regulatory structure.

In the most recent issue of Casino Lawyer, respected attorney Frank Catania uses Columbia Sussex as “a textbook example of how to lose a casino license.” Catania’s analysis doesn’t bode well for Yung’s chances in a court of law, as he finds that Yung’s “arrogance was reflected in [Tropicana Casino Resorts’] poor presentation at Tropicana’s licensing hearing, where the testimony of the company’s witnesses was found to be poorly prepared, inaccurate, evasive, unbelievable, hollow and, in one instance, perjurious.

Or, as one NJCCC member wrote, “I was left with the impression that the applicant felt that the process was just an inconvenient formality.”

Yung might also want to stock up on ginko biloba before he gives any further testimony, too. Before the NJCCC, he pleaded to being ignorant and out of the loop on how his company operated — a sorry performance by the president, CEO and sole director of Tropicana Entertainment.

However, before Yung gets his day in court, he’s got until the end of the month to A) restructure $690 million in debt or face Chapter 11 and B) sell his Casino Aztar riverboat before the State of Indiana seizes it. So what’s Yung’s endgame?

That’s a subject for another day … although a small casino up at Lake Tahoe could hold the key to Columbia Sussex’s fate.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Indiana | Comments Off on Columbia Sussex strikes back

'Terrible' timing

By golly, it seems like a mere nine days ago that a local newspaper story was reporting disproportionately strong lottery sales at a California-border store owned by Herbst Gaming. "Since taking over the store, the location's total lottery ticket sales have been more than $8.9 million," said the newspaper, although Herbst executives refused to take any of the credit that was being foisted upon them. "It's something to which we haven't given much thought," disclaimed one.

Fast-forward six days and it turns out Herbst is "evaluating financial strategic alternatives," with the help of Goldman Sachs. Why? It would seem that Nevada's partial ban on smoking in public places (aka Question 5) has delivered a dagger thrust to Herbst's slot routes, whose performance is off by one-fifth. Which partly answers the question of how slot routes would fare in Question 5's aftermath.

Last week, it also emerged that one of the moves being contemplated is the sale of some or all of Herbst's casino empire, mostly amassed in the last 14 months through the absorption of three castoff MGM Mirage properties in rural Nevada and the Sands Regent brand. That's a debt load that Herbst can ill-afford to carry if its slots routes continue to tank.

Standard & Poor's cut Herbt's credit rating to CCC today, in part because of "continued weak operating performance at the company's riverboat and land-based casinos." Already WHO-TV, in Des Moines, Iowa, is reporting that one casino is openly for sale. It reminds me of another company that grew too fast too soon …

Columbia Sussex driving out business? A 104-year-old hardware store and a paint store are shutting down and (in the case of the paint store) moving, all to make room for a casino that might be built if the Kentucky state senate and the voters of the Bluegrass State approve a proposal currently before lawmakers. Oh, and if Covington, Ky., is awarded one of the nine licenses and if that license goes to Columbia Sussex. If not, Columbia Sussex owner William Yung III will have himself a $7 million collection of empty buildings, albeit at the mouth of a freeway exit. So it's not totally a spin of the roulette wheel. Just mostly.

And now for some positive thinking. Naysayers who freak at the thought of a 9.75% casino tax rate might want to consider the influx of investment — albeit somewhat attenuated at the moment — into Atlantic City, where the tax rate is 9.5%. MGM Mirage isn't wavering from its high-profile commitment and not only is Penn National willing to go all in, it's wagering that it can lure three other casino companies … provided it gets all of Bader Field as a precondition.

True, Pinnacle Entertainment is hesitating and the Curtis Bashaw/Wallace Barr project seems to have been indefinitely back-burnered. But, in the former instance, icy credit markets are primarily to blame. As for the latter, the Bashaw/Barr duo is presently in the hunt for the Atlantic City Tropicana, which would make a good strategic fit with Bashaw's Chelsea Hotel redevelopment. So it's far too early to pronounce Barr & Bashaw's south-Boardwalk casino-hotel D.O.A. … unless they land  the Trop, in which case a nice little 'flip' awaits them.

Whoever thought Atlantic City would be the Land of Opportunity?

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Herbst Gaming, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment | Comments Off on 'Terrible' timing

Columbia Sussex dodges bullet

Yes, Columbia Sussex is in default on $960 million in debt, says a Delaware court. But it's not in immediate default, giving the hotelier at least another month to wriggle out of that tight spot. However, a source for the Las Vegas Sun says the verdict “is probably the death of Columbia Sussex's equity interest” in the Las Vegas Tropicana.

If a receiver has to be appointed, it won't happen a moment too soon. The LV Trop has fallen into dire condition, seemingly more through indifference than anything else, and parts of it are appallingly filthy and/or dilapidated. It's several decades behind the rest of the Strip. Even though people like to deride Circus Circus, Jay Sarno's labyrinthine monument to coulrophobia, it's at least 100X nicer than is the Trop at present.

One potential buyer Casino Aztar, in Evansville, Ind., has been tipped. Racino owner Centaur Inc. could make a logical suitor for the riverboat. The Indiana market has been diluted by the addition of racinos and a casino resort at French Lick, the latter hitting Casino Aztar fairly hard. And Centaur's Jim Brown used to run Casino Aztar.

But Centaur is apparently close to exhausting its $1 billion gaming-acquisition fund; with Kentucky taking a good, hard look at legalizing casinos, a Hoosier State riverboat on the Kentucky border just might not be the prize purchase it once was. And Columbia Sussex may have less than a month to cut a deal before its Indiana license is yanked. (Currently, Casino Aztar is operating with a staggering number of job vacancies, including internal auditor and director of security.)

More and more, Columbia Sussex's overambitious attempt to absorb Aztar Corp. is looking like one of the biggest debacles in casino history.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Indiana, Kentucky, The Strip | Comments Off on Columbia Sussex dodges bullet

MGM Grand to make a big splash

Our "ace in the hole" source has caught wind of a major expansion of the pool area and water features at MGM Grand, extending toward the Signature condos. The official verbiage is as follows:

The plans depict a recreational area that includes pools, spas, cabanas, and accessory buildings in conjunction with the MGM Grand Resort Hotel. The new recreational area is located on the north side of the existing pool complex and in between the Signature resort condominiums and the Convention Center building. Along with the pools and spas, 4 independent manmade decorative water features are proposed that range in size from 40 square feet to 496 square feet for a total of 1,227 square feet of water features. The water features according to the applicant cannot be used for human contact due to the small size. The applicant has attempted to integrate the pools and spas with the water features, but due to design and engineering constraints it was determined to keep them as separate features. Per Title 30, the MGM Grand Resort Hotel is allowed a maximum of 25,699 square feet of water features; however, the resort is under the allowed limit for water features.

Indiana passes "Bill Yung" bill: The Columbia Sussex fiasco in New Jersey caught the Hoosier State flat-footed. What if a casino owner were to either A) lose its license,  B) go bankrupt or C) simply flee the state? A bill to designate state-appointed trustees just passed the Indiana House overwhelmingly and now goes to conference committee. An additional provision in the law would prevent the Indiana Gaming Commission from imposing further "transfer taxes," as it did in the sale of Indiana Downs.

Rashomon Dept.: A source says local impressionist Larry G. Jones is packing it in tomorrow night after a 1,600-show run at what used to be Fitzgerald's, to return at an unspecified Strip venue sometime in the near future. The Fitz's official site offers no elucidation but an affiliated Web site has him there at least through March 4.

Turns out … our source is right. Which means you've got two nights left to see Jones in action. And if that Strip thing doesn't pan out, I hear Tilman Fertitta has a showroom to fill over at the Golden Nugget.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Downtown, Indiana, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on MGM Grand to make a big splash

Train to nowhere

Just when it looks like the long-discussed magnetic-levitation train from Anaheim to Las Vegas (circumventing the parking lot that is I-15) is finally picking up steam — there’s an obstacle. Seems that bothersome local influence peddler Sig Rogich is throwing his weight behind a rival project, a diesel train that would run from Vegas to Victorville.

Woo-hoo! Can’t you feel the excitement? Las Vegans can hop aboard and make tracks for … outlet malls and car dealerships (two things which Vegas has in abundance). Californians, for their part, can eagerly look forward to driving in from L.A. or San Diego and then leaving their cars at what had better be the world’s largest Park-and-Ride.

On the other hand, a train to/from Anaheim would bring us that much closer to Disneyland, Knott’s Berry Farm and more thrill rides than you can shake a dipstick at. It would also enable my masochistic relationship with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, who continue to raise my hopes every September, only to dash them in October, when their pitchers turn into quivery heaps of Jell-O or human piñatas.

As for Rogich, when he’s not providing rhetorical cover for LVCVA screw-ups, he’s carrying water for the vagabond Voyager Wheel. I hope he has better luck with the train than he’s had with the Ferris wheel.

Posted in California, Politics | Comments Off on Train to nowhere

Racinos a bum deal?

They are if you’re a horse owner at The Isle Casino & Racing @ Pompano Park, which not only left trainers and owners out in the cold, as far as slot revenues are concerned, it just slashed purse amounts by 35%, reports the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Pompano Park, it should be noted, is an isolated case. The track, owned by Isle of Capri Casinos, argues in its own defense that slot revenues were lower than expected. But will racing be driven out in the process? Again we are faced with the question of how viable horse racing actually is (I’m looking at you, Kentucky) if massive subsidies from slot machines are what’s needed to keep it alive. And while not contractually obligated to do more than it’s done for the horsemen, at first blush it looks as though Isle of Capri has pulled a bait-and-switch here.

My 18-year-old son is in the news again. Oh wait, that’s Florida House Speaker Marc Rubio, fighting a dogged rearguard action against Gov. Charlie Crist’s gambling expansion in Florida. Rubio is arguing that A) Crist’s revenue projections won’t pencil out and B) “it is morally wrong to balance the budget on the backs of the poor and the working class.”

It’s a good day whenever a Grover Norquist-type conservative like Rubio comes out against regressive taxation. Unfortunately, Rubio’s remedy is to dismantle the Florida state government. Also, he’s made a habit of opposing fellow Republican Crist whenever possible (the two are vying for the mantle of Jeb Bush) and when Rubio says he’s against “transferring” disposable income, it sounds to me like code for “By all means, let’s keep it away from the Seminoles,” whose Class III compacts Rubio is challenging in court.

So forgive me if I doubt Rubio’s altruism just a bit. (And, no, I don’t have an 18-year-old son.)

If he’s lost Schwartz, he’s lost Middle America. The lone media defender of Columbia Sussex CEO Bill Yung has left the building. UNLV’s Dr. David Schwartz finally loses patience with the Kentucky hotel baron after reading about Yung bragging on his ability to fling $1 million at the feet of Kentucky’s new governor in the same week that Columbia Sussex stiffed the state of New Jersey for 750 large. Is Yung’s company really that hard up or is this a passive-aggressive way of getting back at the Garden State?

Excessive federal zeal in prosecuting gambling rings finds an unsympathetic ear at the Supreme Court. If there’s a reason some Americans are distrustful of expanded federal law-enforcement powers, whatever the premise or the administration (the Clinton-Gore administration had its intrusive proclivities, too) it’s because, inevitably, they will be pushed past the breaking point.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Florida, Horseracing, Kentucky, Politics, Sports, Tribal | Comments Off on Racinos a bum deal?

Criticism of Yung begins to sting

Editorial pinpricks, like a Cincinnati Enquirer jibe about “pay to play,” evidently took their toll on Columbia Sussex CEO William Yung III. Defending his high-profile push for a Kentucky casino, which has included strewing more than $1 million in the path of Gov. Steve Beshear, Yung told The Associated Press: “I’ve got a First Amendment right to spend my money any way I want to spend it.”

And he’s absolutely correct about that. Yung’s efforts may be ham-fisted but there’s nothing the least untoward about them.

Beshear’s granting of preferential access to the hotel mogul is another thing entirely. When you have to do as Beshear did and say there’s “no quid pro quo,” you’re basically closing the door to the perception barn long after the horse has bolted.

That perception of a Beshear-Yung embrace appears to have stiffened the winds into which Beshear’s casino proposal is sailing. Already a House subcommittee has proposed trimming the governor’s mooted 12 casinos to nine. An uphill fight in expected in the state Senate and even then Beshear would still have to make his pro-casino pitch to voters. At least he knows a few deep-pocketed donors who would be happy to help him sell the idea.

As for Yung, he runs rings around the AP reporter, making it sound like he’s calling the shots on the Atlantic City Tropicana sale. He also succeeds conflating the two-dozen Trop suitors with the unknown duo who have supposedly shown interest in Casino Aztar, in Evansville, Ind. — a market that’s certain to be grateful for cross-river competition from the Bluegrass State.

Local businessman hopes to spend $700 million bringing back the Moulin Rouge but can’t pony up child-support payments? I sure hope this isn’t a metaphor for events to come. Then again, Las Vegans have learned to take an “I’ll believe it when I see it” attitude where the resurrection of the Moulin Rouge is concerned.

Glad that’s settled. AEG Live/Concerts West President John Meglen has pronounced the IRS raids on the offices of Pure Management Group nothing more than a few “disgruntled employees stirring it up.” Yep, keep moving everybody. Nothing to see here.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Kentucky, The Strip | Comments Off on Criticism of Yung begins to sting

Ameristar scraps project: "Et tu, Missouri?"

Ameristar Casinos has pulled the plug on $100 million or more in renovations and expansion of its Kansas City riverboat complex, including the addition of a hotel tower, taking a $4.5 million write-down in the process. It cited a combination of factors in its decision, which came during a quarter which saw profits come in 30% below Wall Street expectations.

One factor, of course, the specter of casinos across the state line in Kansas. The other is blow from closer to home. Earlier this week, the Missouri Gaming Commission gave unanimous approval to a 14th casino license. The casino would be in nearby Sugar Creek and so far the only applicant is a Des Moines company, Wild Rose Entertainment.

Ameristar must now pin its hopes on a bill by Missouri House Rules Committee Chairman Shannon Cooper that would cap the number of Missouri casino licenses at 13. In return, loss limits would be repealed. It’s a foot race to March 19, when the 14th license will be awarded.

Ameristar execs evinced a sense of betrayal, with CEO John Boushy saying they were “really scratching our heads trying to understand the decision-making criterion being used by the Missouri Gaming Commission.” The company fears losing $60 million a year in business to Sugar Creek alone.

With a nod to Wild Rose’s plan for a casino costing one-third as much as Ameristar’s, company co-chairman Gordon Kanofsky railed at the commissioners: “After requiring and encouraging operators to invest in their properties as they have and then destroy their ability to make a return on that investment by allowing a bare-bones facility in the marketplace, it just doesn’t seem fair.”

End of an era? Former Gov. Evan Mecham (R-AZ), impeached 20 years ago, died yesterday. His signal accomplishment was to unilaterally revoke the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, a move that brought opprobrium and boycotts upon the state of Arizona (as did Mecham’s use of racially offensive language). Today an African American is the Democratic frontrunner for president and Mecham is virtually forgotten outside Arizona. We’ve come a long way.

Posted in Ameristar, Election, Kansas | Comments Off on Ameristar scraps project: "Et tu, Missouri?"

Tropicanned

I've spent the morning at the Las Vegas Tropicana and may be too tired (and too dehydrated) to blog worth a damn. Jeez, that place is humid!

Oh well, so as not to leave readers empty-handed, here's a copy of the Culinary Union's handout detailing (D. Taylor-ing?) the preposterous demands the Culinary alleges are being made by Trop owner Columbia Sussex.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, The Strip | Comments Off on Tropicanned

Equal time for dogs

Given the groundswell of interest in the misadventures of Chubby, our would-be office cat, and Mojo, our fearsome ‘watch lizard,’ I’ve been asking around about other Huntington Press critters. Bethany Coffey, our marketing guru sans pareil, offers this contribution about her dog Flocki.

He’s a four-year-old German Wirehaired Pointer mix (mixed with what, I couldn’t guess, he may even be a purebred for all I know). I adopted him last October from the Adopt A Rescue Pet organization. They save dogs from being put down at the other shelters and then pay to have them boarded in private facilities. A very good organization.

“While his breeding says he’s a bird dog, he hasn’t been clued in himself. He’s never even noticed a bird, though they’re all over the place in the park near our house. Additionally, he has webbed feet for swimming but is afraid of the water. He does point  —  at his food dish when he wants it filled. Also at anything that remotely resembles a toy that might be thrown for a fun game of catch (or keep-away if he’s feeling ornery).

“When I adopted him he weighed in at 48 pounds and was told by one of his caretakers that he’d gotten very depressed since he’d been put in the kennels and wasn’t eating much. His mood has picked up, apparently, because he now tips the scales at a very healthy 70 pounds. He’s no purse puppy, but he doesn’t know it. He loves to crawl on my lap while I’m at the dining room table or on the couch.

“And if I weren’t afraid that Flocki would eat Chubby, I’d take her home myself.”

In other news, City Life teases my next report.

Posted in Charity, Pets | Comments Off on Equal time for dogs

Labor troubles at Station, Trop

Ever since the Las Vegas Business Press was made subordinate to the business desk of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the latter had ‘dibs’ on any of the former’s stories it coveted — or so it was explained to me at the time. (I didn’t care to stick around to see this in effect and, thankfully, was spared that experience.)

All of which is prologue to wondering why the bigger paper passed on (or missed) the opportunity to snatch up a Valerie Miller story about a class action suit leveled against Station Casinos. Three ex-Station employees are suing the locals giant, accusing it of Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Station Casinos | Comments Off on Labor troubles at Station, Trop

Neon Museum on hold

From the pages of the Las Vegas Sun

For want of $1.5 million, work on the long-awaited Neon Museum has ground to a halt. Mind you, this is a museum that would preserve many of the most evocative relics of an industry that raked in $12.8 billion in gambling win in the Silver State last year.

With so much money pouring into casino coffers, you’ll never convince me that a spare million and a half can’t be spared to make an hommage to the Strip icons of yesteryear. Heck, Steve Wynn probably loses that much under his sofa cushions.

South Point owner Michael Gaughan is the point man pushing for rescinding the ban on cell phone use in Nevada sports books. It’s an idea worth debating but there is one small fly in the ointment: Enforcement of the proposed new rule would rely on the honor system. We’re given the less-than-reassuring assurance that “most locals know the rules and don’t violate them.”

Yes, and most people obey practically every law (except maybe speed limits). All it takes is a few rotten apples and — kaboom! — the majesty of the law is down upon Nevada and Delaware, not to mention any other state (like New Jersey) that is considering the legalization of sports betting. I’m just sayin’.

Bo Belinsky remembered. For some of us, he will be best known as the ex-husband of 1965 Playmate of the Year Jo Collins. (No, tasteful nudity does not lurk beneath that link. Sorry, guys.)

Elsewhere …

Dictator steps down, U.S. still cutting off nose to spite face. Political posturing, si! Commerce? Free exchange of ideas? Cuban cigars? No! I mean, Cuba is a dangerous superpower, not a free-speech-loving, human-rights-promoting, democratic, economically non-threatening, anti-Communist little country — like China. (Or, if you’re my age, “Red China.”)

Local columnist Hugh Jackson points out (in Jacksonian fashion) that a post-Fidel Cuba is probably A Good Thing for the casino industry. For American sugar beet producers … not so much.

Las Vegas CityLife, which “lends its dubious endorsement” to S&G, among other fine blogs (including VegasTodayAndTomorrow.com) is launching a new rotating blog of its own.

Posted in Charity, Current, International, Sports | Comments Off on Neon Museum on hold

New condo tower slated for Strip

Remember that second tower of Allure Condo Las Vegas that was supposed to be built, then was scrapped? It’s back … after a fashion. Developer Andrew Fonfa has consolidated the 2.3 acres where Allure Phase II was to have gone (at a cost of $17.4 million) and intends to build a 1,340-unit condo/casino/hotel tower, with the emphasis on “hotel.” There will be nine stories’ worth of underground parking and a 67,800-square-foot casino floor. Other amenities will include a health club, a showroom and a 37,000-square-foot convention center.

Presumably because of the project’s small footprint, the casino, restaurants, retail, back-of-house operations and showroom will be stacked through the first eight floors, with hotel rooms and condo units starting on the ninth floor. The property owner, Sahara Investments LLC, has requested — among other things — a non-restricted casino license and a zoning variance within the McCarran Airport overlay, following in the footsteps of the Christopher Milam-James Packer Crown Las Vegas tower.

S&G has obtained copies of the justification letter sent to the City of Las Vegas and of the building plans. The letter characterizes the planned hotel-casino as providing “quality new hotel-casino and residential development in the Downtown area.” I dunno about you, but in my experience the nexus of Las Vegas Boulevard and Sahara Avenue is a heckuva long way from Downtown proper … barely within city limits, in fact.

Oscar to farmers: Drop dead! Although the local chapter of the Flat Earth Society has put down its quill pens long enough to jeer at a Scripps Institution of Oceanography study of falling water levels in Lake Mead, the study continues to gain traction in terms of public discourse.

Well, I’m not sure the latest from Mayor Oscar Goodman might be called “discourse,” but Hizzoner sure spoke his mind, as he is wont to do. With characteristic Goodmanesque tact, he proclaimed that “Imperial Valley farmers will have their fields go fallow before our spigots run dry.”

Needless to say, Hizzoner’s comments kicked up quite a ruckus in Southern California, roiling age-old tensions. Seems to me like all concerned would be better occupied coming up with proactive solutions (did anyone say “desalinization”?) than squabbling over a dwindling supply of water from the Colorado River, at least until the good Lord sees fit to replenish the snow packs and other sources of H2O that used to feed Lake Mead.

Posted in Downtown, The Strip | Comments Off on New condo tower slated for Strip

Clintons: 'Burn it down'; Save the Rio!

Well, actually that was the motto of Black Power activist Stokely Carmichael … but, in essence, that's the message coming out of the camp of Sen. Hillary Clinton, favored candidate of Harrah's Entertainment. I knew in my heart that the Clintons were willing to tear down the Democratic Party to get the presidential nomination, no matter how tarnished, but I never thought their surrogates would come out and say it. Shameful.

If you feel as I do, wash out that bad aftertaste with this.

Speaking of Harrah's, every day I walk by The Rio on my way to work. After four and a half months, I can't hold my tongue any longer: As swanky as it is on the inside, The Rio's exterior is looking like The Casino That Harrah's Forgot. Simply put, the paint is peeling. Not a flake here and there, but big, long strips all over the place, especially where that Jack Daniels wraparound billboard used to be.

We know that Harrah's is going to have to count its pennies, now that a leveraged buyout has left it with enough debt to choke the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Also, thanks to a series of reports by the Las Vegas Review-Journal's Joan Whitely, we've learned that maintenance hasn't been Job One at Harrah's lately. But would it wreck the balance sheet to go down to Ace Hardware, pick up a few cans of paint and touch up The Rio? (I exaggerate, but you get my point.)

Every so often, one rumor or another surfaces to the effect that Harrah's is trying to offload The Rio, whether to Boyd Gaming or George Maloof or whomever. These rumors may be more entertaining than true. Yet, a decade ago, it was Harrah's prize Vegas acquisition, the resort property that was going to entice regional players to cash in their Total Rewards points here. Now it looks like a red-headed stepchild.

It shouldn't be this way. The Rio still a great property with the most beautiful hotel tower in town … after dark, anyway.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Election, Harrah's, The Strip | Comments Off on Clintons: 'Burn it down'; Save the Rio!

Columbia Sussex roundup

It’s difficult to figure out CEO William Yung III‘s endgame in his high-profile pursuit of a casino in Kentucky, as it could potentially further complicate the attempted sale of Casino Aztar in Evansville, Ind. So far, suitors have proven to be thin on the ground.

It actually might be in Yung’s best interest if the Kentucky state senate ashcans Gov. Steve Beshear‘s proposed casino legalization. After all, the closer Kentucky gets to casino gambling, the more it inherently depresses the value of Casino Aztar in an, um, watered-down market. There’s a reason Columbia Sussex was able to buy its Vicksburg casino for $28 million and re-sell it for $35 million: Ain’t no casinos coming to Arkansas now or in the foreseeable future.

Meanwhile, the Tahoe Daily Tribune has an eyewitness report of the opening salvos in a lawsuit whereby Columbia Sussex seeks to hang onto its lease on Horizon Casino Resort. As in Atlantic City, the perceived failure to maintain a “first-class facility” is a central point of contention. To that end, landlord Park Cattle Co.‘s lawyers produced photos of Horizon that may be worth several thousand words (or dollars). Also, a former casino operations manager averred that Yung “was past trimming off the fat and had resorted to whacking at the bone.” (Sound familiar?)

There’s a possibility that the payroll hiccups at the Las Vegas Tropicana may have been caused by miscommunication between Columbia Sussex HQ, back in Kentucky, and local management. Hypothetically speaking, Friday’s payroll may have been handed on Wednesday, which might explain the “Don’t cash for 48 hours” scenario. If this is the case, an innocuous explanation from Columbia Sussex could have doused the fire. Instead, the company chose to get all shirty about the matter. God knows why.

If you need a laugh (or several), check out new Planet Hollywood headliner David Spade doing Daniel Plainview in “There Will Be Oscars.” It’s a riot. He drinks your milkshake!

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Indiana, Movies, The Strip | Comments Off on Columbia Sussex roundup

More trouble for LV Trop

Its popular “Bodies” exhibition has become the focus of an ABC News investigation, with reports airing both on Good Morning America and tonight’s edition of 20/20. Veteran reporter Brian Ross raises some very disturbing questions about the provenance of the cadavers used in the much-praised display, the handiwork of Premier Exhibition.

At least there’s a twofold silver lining for Tropicana owner Columbia Sussex: The exhibit is an inheritance from predecessor Aztar Corp. and, human nature being what it is, this newfound notoriety might make foot traffic at “Bodies” even heavier.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Current, The Strip | Comments Off on More trouble for LV Trop

Case Bets for St. Valentine's Day

Liz Benston crunches the numbers on the much-touted "40,000 new rooms" and finds only two-thirds that many. I mean, 26.6K hotel rooms isn't shabby but, if you threw the numbers together the way civic boosters do (mixing completed projects with chimerical ones), you could arrive at double that number.

Speaking of chimeras, the giant arena-cum-casino project that REI Neon hopes to build where much of the downtown Arts District used to be has received yet another extension from Oscar Goodman. At $10.5 billion, REI Neon's project makes CityCenter look almost thrifty. REI has never executed anything remotely on this scale, hence the penumbra of skepticism that dogs the project.

Steve Wynn's tipping policies are earning a second look from Nevada Labor Commissioner Michael Tanchek. Mind you, it's a narrow look, but it could be the wedge that pries open the door for additional legal challenges. Or not.

Equal time for Sheldon Adelson. In case you missed it, Two Way Hard Three (home of the best critiques of Palazzo) has the entire Power Point presentation from Las Vegas Sands' Investors Day, last Monday. Oh, and a complete Webcast, too. I feel so 20th century.

Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy year. Not only is the local prospect disturbing, but some of Vegas' and Reno's prime feeder markets are getting hit very hard, too.

More bad news for the thousands (from maids to casino managers) displaced by Hurricane Katrina. FEMA trailers may be contaminated. When are these people going to catch a break?

John McCain picks up the support of his most bitter rival. I don't think the Romney supporters are going to take this very well. They're a passionate bunch.

Darn it! We're not in first place anymore.

Posted in Detroit, Downtown, Election, Louisiana, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn | Comments Off on Case Bets for St. Valentine's Day