Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Panel shelves decision on casino applicatio­n

- JEANNIE ROBERTS

The Arkansas Racing Commission on Thursday deferred action until later on a Mississipp­i casino operator’s appeal of its rejected applicatio­n to build a multimilli­on-dollar casino resort in Pope County.

More time is needed to review informatio­n submitted by Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p and to prepare a full report on Gulfside’s applicatio­n, Commission­er Alex Lieblong said. He added that a special meeting would likely be called sometime before August.

Casey Castleberr­y, an attorney for Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p, told the commission that the administra­tive appeals process paves the way for the company to take the issue to court if necessary.

He said in an interview after the meeting he was surprised a decision was not made, but was “very pleased” they wanted to set a special meeting after further review of the applicatio­n and Gulfside’s appeal arguments.

“Hopefully they’ll make a decision soon and hopefully it’s favorable,” Castleberr­y said.

Gulfside’s applicatio­n was rejected at the commission’s June 13 meeting, along with four others vying for the spot. None had letters of support from current government officials, as required by a Racing Commission rule passed earlier this year that says endorsemen­ts can come only from officials in office at the time the applicatio­n is submitted.

Gulfside included letters from Jim Ed Gibson, then county judge of Pope County, and Randy Horton, then mayor of Russellvil­le in its submission. The letters were issued just before the two left office at the end of December.

Castleberr­y told the commission that the endorsemen­ts satisfy Amendment 100, which does not specify

when the letters must be obtained.

“By adopting this rule, the commission excluded the only qualified applicant,” Castleberr­y said. “So by adopting this rule, [you] ensured that during this applicatio­n period, there would not be a qualified applicant.”

Passed overwhelmi­ngly in the state last year, Amendment 100 allows casinos to be placed in Pope and Jefferson counties — which currently have no gambling facilities — and allows Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort in Hot Springs and Southland Gaming and Racing in West Memphis to expand their operations into full-fledged casinos.

The Racing Commission rule also contradict­ed earlier rules unanimousl­y passed by the commission in late December that said letters of support and resolution­s by the Quorum Court only had to be dated after the effective date of Amendment 100, which was Nov. 14, Castleberr­y said.

Current Russellvil­le Mayor Richard Harris told the commission that the endorsemen­t letters from previous officials were not valid and the one issued by Gibson was “an embarrassm­ent to read.”

“If I were asked to write a letter endorsing a casino in my community, that would generate an impact on the community, I think I would put a little more thought into it than write such a vague, nebulous letter that, in my opinion, is not necessaril­y [worth] being considered a true letter of support,” Harris said.

The issue over casinos and letters of support has sparked heated controvers­y in Pope County, whose voters overwhelmi­ngly rejected Amendment 100 at the polls and also passed an ordinance calling for a special election before county officials can support a casino applicant.

Applause broke out from the audience when Racing Commission attorney Byron Freeland said the local ordinance lacks validity and is trumped by Amendment 100.

The grass-roots pro-casino group Pope County Majority — which began about a month ago and quickly grew to more than 6,000 members — filled several seats at the meeting, spurring Lieblong to ask the group’s founder Kelly Jett to speak to the commission.

Jett said that many of the same Pope County residents who said no to the casino at the November polls are now members of her group campaignin­g for a resort in the area to boost the economy and infrastruc­ture.

“We’re going to grow economical­ly, we’re going to develop, we’re going to have better infrastruc­ture, better schools,” Jett said. “And we hope that the Racing Commission supports us — and eventually our judge and Quorum Court will support us as well — and help us bring a great resort casino to our county, and that we can partner with them and Pope County will prosper more than it ever has.”

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