Toronto Star

Province not closing door on waterfront casino plan

No official proposal yet, but mayor says he’d fight any downtown location

- SAMANTHA BEATTIE With files from Rob Ferguson and David Rider

Ontario Finance Minister Vic Fedeli is not ruling out the possibilit­y of a casino on Toronto’s downtown waterfront.

There has been no official proposal or announceme­nt, but Premier Doug Ford is reportedly considerin­g a casino as part of revitalizi­ng the waterfront or Ontario Place, echoing a past casino proposal he and thenmayor Rob Ford fought for in 2013.

Mayor John Tory stands firmly against the idea.

“Prime waterfront land and downtown period is not a place for a casino,” Tory told reporters Friday.

Asked Thursday if the province and Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporatio­n (OLG) would consider allowing a casino on the downtown waterfront, Fedeli said, “I don’t open the door and I don’t close the door. There’s been a spike of interest in it (in the media), and so you have to have these types of discussion­s.”

Fedeli said he hasn’t spoken to Ford about a casino.

Tory was skeptical that the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government would seriously consider a downtown casino, noting that Ford did not campaign on it and hasn’t publicly embraced the idea.

“We will have to see whether it unfolds as a real issue or whether it’s speculatio­n fuelled by the gambling industry,” said Tory. “We don’t need one. We don’t want one.”

Having another casino in Toronto could take business away from Woodbine Racetrack, which is already being revamped to include a fullfledge­d casino and entertainm­ent-hotel complex in north Etobicoke, Tory said.

OLG is currently focused on the developmen­t of the Woodbine location, said spokespers­on Tony Bitonti.

When Ford was a city councillor, he and his brother pushed for a multi-billion-dollar casino-resort in 2013.

Council overwhelmi­ngly rejected that proposal, which came in the midst of the Rob Ford crack cocaine scandal.

Fedeli said the province is ready to talk about the waterfront area with the city, the Canadian National Exhibition, OLG and other groups.

Ford set his sights on Ontario Place this summer, when sources told the Star that he wants an internatio­nal competitio­n to rethink the sprawling green space along Lake Shore Blvd. W.

“I’m proud to announce we’re going to work in conjunctio­n with the CNE, redo Ontario Place and make it the most spectacula­r destinatio­n anywhere in North America to visit,” he announced in August. Since then, officials have been tight-lipped about what’s planned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada