Chicago Sun-Times

CHICAGO CASINO’S ODDS IMPROVED WITH TAX FIX, VEGAS CONSULTANT SAYS

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

Although Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s opening roll for a Chicago casino came up snake-eyes, a new tax structure keeps her in the game.

But it’s too early to tell whether she winds up making her point or sevens out.

That’s according to the Las Vegas consulting firm that previously declared that the “exceptiona­lly onerous” taxes originally written into state law last summer would mean no dice for the city as it tried to attract developers to the table for a shot at the longsought megacasino.

Union Gaming Analytics now says the revised Chicago structure that passed the Legislatur­e during a shortened spring legislativ­e session in May is “significan­tly more palatable for potential developers,” lowering the effective tax rate on gaming revenue from a whopping 72% to about 40%.

That should be “attractive enough” to draw proposals from gaming developers — and the city should start soliciting informatio­n from them, analyst Grant Govertsen wrote for Union Gaming in a report released this week.

In other words, it’s time for the city to show its cards.

“While the Chicago casino fix is already ‘old news,’ having been signed into law in late June by Gov. [J.B.] Pritzker, we believe it received scant attention on the part of casino developers,” the updated report says. “The combinatio­n of COVID-19 casino shutdowns, emergency financings to bolster balance sheets, and putting developmen­t plans/ teams on ice, has resulted in the Chicago casino opportunit­y largely flying under the radar.”

The firm recommende­d the city issue nonbinding requests for informatio­n from developers this year and request formal proposals early next year. That would put the casino on track for Illinois Gaming Board approval by the end of 2021 and an opening by 2025, according to Union Gaming.

A spokeswoma­n for Lightfoot’s office said the city is reviewing the firm’s report but declined to comment on their claims or recommenda­tions.

Lightfoot nabbed the casino that eluded a generation of Chicago mayors before her with the passage of a massive gambling expansion signed into law last summer by Pritzker. Revenue is earmarked for Chicago’s desperatel­y underfunde­d police and firefighte­r pensions and to help bankroll Pritzker’s $45 billion capital improvemen­t plan.

While Union Gaming determined a downtown gambling mecca could rake in upward of $1 billion annually, their initial state-mandated report claimed the tax burden would prevent any developer from turning a profit.

Lightfoot jostled state lawmakers in May to tweak the state and city takes on the Chicago casino’s slot and table game revenue and to stretch out the time the developer has to pay back a hefty “reconcilia­tion fee.”

Now that the taxes and fees have been hammered out, plenty of wrangling awaits to determine where the eventual developer will break ground in Chicago. Lightfoot’s office has promised “a robust community engagement process,” including a series of public meetings to gather residents’ input.

Industry insiders agree the casino must be located close to the city center to maximize profits, but last year Lightfoot offered up five South and West Side sites — a list she stressed is “not definitive” — for Union Gaming to evaluate.

The sites included the Harborside Golf Course area at 111th Street and the Bishop Ford Freeway; Pershing Road and State Street; Roosevelt Road and Kostner Avenue; and the former U.S. Steel parcel at 80th Street and Lake Shore Drive.

Lightfoot also pinpointed the former Michael Reese hospital at 31st Street and Cottage Grove Avenue, which Union Gaming predicted would be most lucrative of the bunch drawing more than $800 million annually — but that site is off the board, instead pegged for a new research center.

A “centrally located casino that is in close proximity to high-quality hotels and other notable tourist attraction­s” would be most profitable, to the tune of $1.2 billion per year, the consultant said. But the convention and tourism industries have opposed that idea.

The freshman mayor has said she envisions the developmen­t “as a large entertainm­ent district — not just the box of a casino.”

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