Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Cities weigh whether to allow new mini-casinos

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia’s days-old law expanding its casino industry has set off debates in cities and towns around the state about whether to try to lure one of the 10 new mini-casinos created by the law, or ban them.

It’s part of an aggressive new expansion of gambling that will bring casino games to Pennsylvan­ians’ cellphones and tablets and the state’s airports, truck stops and farther-flung parts where gambling at a real casino has, for the past decade, meant driving an hour or two.

Now, cities like York, Lancaster, Reading, Gettysburg, Johnstown, Altoona, Williamspo­rt and State College could be targets for the state’s existing casino operators to seek out a new customer base in Pennsylvan­ia, already the nation’s No. 2 state for commercial casino gambling revenue behind Nevada.

Boosters say a casino will bring tourism, millions of dollars of investment in constructi­on, permanent casino jobs and spin-off economic developmen­t — not to mention a cut of casino profits for the host city.

Lancaster Mayor Rick Gray said he probably will recommend to City Council that it vote to ban a casino. He doesn’t like gambling as a revenue source.

“I’m a strong believer that if you want revenue, you should raise taxes,” Gray said. “You shouldn’t really impose a regressive fee on the hopes of poor people.”

In Williamspo­rt, Mayor Gabriel Campana has not yet read up on the law. But, he said, he would rather find revenue through choices that residents make than through raising taxes.

“I’m a strong believer that if you want revenue, you should raise taxes. You shouldn’t really impose a regressive fee on the hopes of poor people.” — Lancaster Mayor Rick Gray

“I’d like to have the opportunit­y to sit down with citizens to discuss how they feel about it, because every time you bring gambling into a community, there’s some pros and there’s some cons,” Campana said.

Towns and cities in Lawrence County may not be on the casino owners’ A-lists, but county officials are pulling together their own marketing to attract attention. A casino in Lawrence County also could attract Ohioans just across Pennsylvan­ia’s western border, said county commission­er Dan Vogler.

Some areas of Pennsylvan­ia are off-limits.

One provision of the law scratches out much of northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia around Mount Airy Casino Resort, founded by billionair­e Louis DeNaples, as well as Armstrong County, perhaps inadverten­tly. Fayette and Montgomery counties are also banned because both are home to a resort casino — Valley Forge Casino and Lady Luck Casino Nemacolin — that are similar in size to the new mini-casinos.

Then there’s a 25-mile prohibitio­n around the existing casinos. That means Pennsylvan­ia’s most heavily populated areas are off limits, unless a casino operator wants to put its own mini-casino nearby, such as an Erie lakefront location for the nearby Presque Isle Downs Casino.

First up is the deadline for municipali­ties to decide whether a casino is for them. Under the law, a municipali­ty can approve a resolution before Jan. 1 prohibitin­g one of the new casinos. It can undo the decision later, but then that’s it — it cannot reconsider.

By Jan. 16, the Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board must hold the first blind auction for one of the licenses. The minimum bid is $7.5 million, and only Pennsylvan­ia’s licensed casino owners can submit the sealed bids. The auction winner gets their choice of site, with a prohibitio­n against any other new casino within a 15-mile radius. A table games permit costs an extra $2.5 million.

Pennsylvan­ia casino owners are wary about discussing their plans. They, like the public, first saw the gambling expansion bill just hours before lawmakers approved it last week and sent it to Gov. Tom Wolf, who signed it Monday.

Most vocal is Pennsylvan­ia-based Penn National, owner of Hollywood Casino in suburban Harrisburg. The company said it is considerin­g suing because the mini-casino licenses represent a unique threat to its business, whose customers do not come from a concentrat­ed area but are spread out across central Pennsylvan­ia. As a result, the company may use a minicasino to protect its customer base.

“The playing field has yet to be truly determined at this point,” said Eric Schippers, a Penn National spokesman. “But I will tell you we are in the uniquely awkward position of figuring out how to protect our market share.”

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