Chicago Sun-Times

O’Hare Airport the wrong spot for a casino in Chicago

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If and when Chicago gets a casino, it should anchor a bustling entertainm­ent district, not be hidden behind airport security barriers.

In a recent interview on WBBM- AM, former Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy, who now is running for mayor, called for putting a Chicago casino at O’Hare Airport, where anyone who wants to gamble a few bucks first would have to go through the U. S. Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion’s security checkpoint­s. That requires having an airline boarding pass, which means any gambling enthusiast­s, including tourists, who are not at the airport to fly in or out of town would be denied admission.

McCarthy argued that such a casino could be a moneymaker for the city, while preventing any casino- related problems such as organized crime, prostituti­on and illegal drug sales from spilling into the surroundin­g community. More people would be flying in and out of O’Hare now that the airport is scheduled to get an $ 8.5 billion makeover, with new concourses and 25 percent more gate capacity.

McCarthy envisions travelers waiting for connecting flights by spending hours at blackjack tables, for example, generating revenue for the city without adding new costs for security.

But according to federal law, any money raised at the airport must be spent there. Revenue from an airport casino, that is to say, could not be used for schools, to shore up underfunde­d pensions or to help out with other important city needs. An airport casino would not be the budgetary shot in the arm the city envisions with a land- based casino.

Interest in a city casino is spiking again because the U. S. Supreme Court is considerin­g whether to allow all states to legalize betting on sporting events. In the case of Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n, the state of New Jersey is asking the court to allow sports betting by overturnin­g the Profession­al Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992, which bans sports betting in most states. If the court allows sports betting, much of that betting could take place at casinos, depending on how state laws are written.

State Rep. Lou Lang, D- Skokie, who is working on legislatio­n to regulate sports betting in Illinois on the chance that it is approved by the U. S. Supreme Court, estimates that people spend $ 5 billion a year on illegal sports gambling in the state. If sports betting is legalized here, that could mean a substantia­l new stream of revenue for local government­s.

The court’s ruling could come any day, although possibly not before the state Legislatur­e’s spring session ends on May 31.

In the years since legalized gambling has been expanded in the United States beyond such hubs as Las Vegas and Atlantic City, planners have learned that casinos designed to keep customers inside — like at an airport — do little to boost business for nearby restaurant­s, theaters, music venues and stores. If Chicago gets a land- based casino, it should be part of a larger economic developmen­t push, designed to encourage patrons to flow back and forth between the casino and other businesses.

For years, gambling dollars have flowed out of Chicago to the suburbs, Indiana and Wisconsin because Chicago does not have its own casino. Past bills introduced in the Legislatur­e to give Chicago a casino, along with new casinos elsewhere in the state, have not passed or have been vetoed. Casino talks are again underway in the Legislatur­e, though no legislatio­n has been introduced.

At this stage of the game, says state Rep. Martin Moylan, D- Des Plaines, investors might be wary of sinking money into new casinos. They worry that our local gambling market might be saturated, especially given the introducti­on of video gambling in many Illinois towns outside Chicago since that form of gambling was legalized by the state six years ago.

If a casino does come to Chicago, though, it should be an anchor of economic developmen­t, not a way station for travelers blowing through O’Hare.

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 ??  ?? Garry McCarthy
Garry McCarthy
 ??  ?? Rep. Lou Lang
Rep. Lou Lang

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