Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Casino revenue short of expectatio­ns

Disappoint­ing numbers come just four months before Sullivan opening

- By Michael Hill

The three new casinos is upstate New York have so far failed to generate the big payoffs they projected, meaning less money shared with towns, cities and counties.

Slot machine and table game revenue from casinos in the Finger Lakes, the Southern Tier and Schenectad­y have fallen short of the rosy revenue projection­s operators produced when applying for licenses. For instance, Rivers Casino & Resort in Schenectad­y had gambling revenues of $105 million after nine months, putting it on track to finish short of its minimum $181 million projection.

The news comes as a fourth, $1.2 billion casino resort licensed by the state is to open next March in Sullivan County, and another casino less than an hour from the New York state border, in Springfiel­d, Mass., is to open later in 2018.

The lower-than expected revenue is having an impact on Schenectad­y, where city officials are bracing to bring in hundreds of thousands dollars less than the $2.75 million they budgeted for

this year from the revenue. City Councilman Vince Riggi likened the situation to a kid at Christmas getting fewer presents than expected.

“It’s a plus, but it’s still a disappoint­ment, that’s the way I see it,” Riggi said. “We were told to expect much more.”

State officials and casino owners argue that any revenue from Rivers, del Lago Resort and Casino in the Finger Lakes, and the Southern Tier’s Tioga Downs Casino and Resort represents a stream of money for localities that didn’t exist before. And they say the casinos have delivered on the state’s main goal of creating jobs and new economic activity in struggling areas.

“It’s been a huge success. Whatever has been promised from an economic developmen­t standpoint has been delivered by the casinos,” said Tioga owner Jeff Gural. “The real losers, frankly, are the owners of the three casinos.”

The casinos’ slots and table games have raised $88.8 million. Eighty percent of the money goes to public schools, which have set levels of aid unaffected by casino revenue fluctuatio­ns. The rest is goes to county and municipal government­s.

That comes in addition to gambling revenue from horse tracks and five Indian casinos. The Indian casino payments are down steeply this year because the Senecas stopped making payments for their three western New York casinos. The tribe and the state are headed to arbitratio­n in the dispute over compact terms.

The Oneida Indian Nation operates the Turning Stone casino in central New York, between Syracuse and Utica, as well as a mini-casino in the Syracuse area. It plans to open a second minicasino in the same area in the spring.

Analysts blame a crowded market for the disappoint­ing revenues at the new casinos. Aside from the five fullscale Indian casinos, New York is home to 10 “racino” horse tracks with video lottery terminals.

“Obviously there is a pie that is divided up too much,” said Alan Woinski, president of Gaming USA Corp., a New Jersey-based gambling consultanc­y. “... It’s very hard to see a situation where things improve.”

A spokesman for the state Gaming Commission said it will be more accurate to analyze third-year revenues, when the casinos are more establishe­d.

Del Lago spokesman Steven Greenberg noted the casino’s hotel only opened this summer and that the owners are confident about growth in 2018.

“They’re new entities,” he said. “You’ve got to give this some time to build their businesses.”

Del Lago Resort and Casino generated $113 million in gambling revenue in its first nine months, putting it on track to finish well short of its projected $263 million.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A woman plays a video lottery terminal at the Tioga Downs Casino and Resort in Nichols, N.Y.
AP FILE A woman plays a video lottery terminal at the Tioga Downs Casino and Resort in Nichols, N.Y.

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