Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Going all in

Ousted politician­s should have no say in casino

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TNWA DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE he steam rising high above Pope County these days may not limited in origin to the cooling towers of Arkansas Nuclear One.

Some of it may be emerging from the ears of residents who don’t care for the idea of a casino operating there.

Arkansas voters’ decision in November to legalize four casino gambling operations in the state combined with Pope County voters’ decision in the same election to put up barriers to one in their back yard is generating quite the reaction in Russellvil­le and its surroundin­gs. It’s not that the idea of a casino has become entirely radioactiv­e, but the ol’ political Geiger counter on the wall seems to be clicking at a high rate.

A quick rundown: Arkansas voters said yes to four casinos. Two will be at racing tracks in Hot Springs and West Memphis, where people ostensibly are already used to the presence of betting opportunit­ies. A third would be in or near Jefferson County’s Pine Bluff, where so far it seems people view a gaming operation as naturally as one expects to see stripes on a zebra; and the fourth, according to the new constituti­onal amendment, would be in Russellvil­le or nearby.

Pope County voters, however, didn’t take kindly to folks outside their community — even outside their state — trying to dictate. The amendment required a letter of support from a county judge or the quorum court in Jefferson or Pope counties before the state will consider a casino applicatio­n. If a casino is proposed within a city, the applicatio­n must also include a letter of support from the mayor. Voters in Pope County adopted their own measure in November, though: Before the county judge or quorum court can offer support, the question must be referred to local voters.

On the state casino question, a majority of Pope County voters said no, reflecting an anti-casino lean.

The most offensive wrinkle: The Pope County judge, 20-year incumbent Jim Ed Gibson, and Russellvil­le’s mayor, Randy Horton, were both booted from office in November’s election. After the election but while they remained in power, both men wrote letters to the state giving their support to a casino applicatio­n from a Mississipp­i-based company called Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p.

This, fellow Arkansans, is the kind of greed-based political shams one can expect when casinos are part of the mix. Hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake, so it’s hardly a surprise there’s serious gamesmansh­ip going on.

The good news from the Arkansas Racing Commission, charged with overseeing the casino applicatio­n process, is their proposed rules apparently will require letters of support from officehold­ers at the time a casino applicatio­n is submitted. That, if adopted, would negate the shenanigan­s by lameduck officials like Gibson and Horton.

To earn the votes of Arkansans for the constituti­onal amendment, its authors clearly wanted to provide a sense that local attitudes about casinos would be, if not controllin­g, at least respected. In Pope County particular­ly, the anti-casino sentiment shouldn’t be ignored or be allowed to be swept aside by one or two rejected political leaders.

A casino unwanted by a majority of local residents, it seems, wouldn’t really be a very good bet.

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