Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Stakeholde­rs bet on Atlantic City

Highlights include reopening of former Trump Taj Mahal as a Hard Rock resort

- By Wayne Parry

Hard Rock bought the former Trump Taj Mahal from billionair­e Carl Icahn, who had shut it down in October 2016 following a bitter strike with the city’s main casino workers’ union. Atlantic City legacy of Trump, his friend and fellow billionair­e. Icahn plans to tear down the former Trump Plaza casino on the boardwalk at the foot of the Atlantic City Expressway to make way for an as-yet undefined economic developmen­t project.

The demolition could happen in 2018, but Icahn’s request to use $5.6 million in state investment credits toward the $13.2 million demolition has met with opposition from state Senate President Steve Sweeney, who called on the state to reject the request, leaving the timetable uncertain.

At the northern end of the boardwalk, 2018 could finally be the year the starcrosse­d former Revel casino reopens. Colorado developer Bruce Deifik leads a group planning to buy it for $200 million and reopen it. The group shared its plans with Moody’s Investors Service, which reported the would-be owners will invest an additional $175 million into the property, which closed in 2014 after little more than two years of operation.

Yet despite growing evidence that a sale is nearing, Glenn Straub, the Florida millionair­e who owns Revel, insists he has no deal to sell it to anyone. He is still waiting for a state appeals court to rule on whether he needs a casino license in order to reopen the property.

One thing to watch closely: Can Atlantic City’s casino market handle the reopening of two casinos that shut down so recently without harming some of the seven current operators in a slimmed-down market?

Five of the city’s 12 casinos closed from 2014 to 2016, and the surviving casinos have stabilized their revenue and earnings; analysts are mixed on the potential impact of reopening more casinos.

David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, said the new competitio­n could hurt the seven casinos that currently operate but benefit customers with more choices.

Giannanton­io acknowledg­ed that two reopened casinos could cause “a short-term blip for everyone.”

But he said they should bring in enough new customers to grow the market and not just steal customers from existing casinos.

One big opportunit­y: The U.S. Supreme Court will rule between now and June on New Jersey’s case seeking to legalize sports betting; it’s legal only in four states that met a 1991 deadline to approve it: Delaware, Montana, Nevada and Oregon.

And one big potential threat faded last month when Sweeney, the state senate president, told The Associated Press that he doesn’t plan to seek a second statewide referendum on whether to allow a casino in northern New Jersey “anytime soon, if ever.”

Sweeney, a New Jersey Democrat, said he doesn’t see sufficient support for the measure, which was rejected by nearly 80 percent of voters in a 2016 ballot question.

November 2018 is the earliest proponents can try again to place the matter before voters. But even Jeff Gural, who operates the Meadowland­s Racetrack, where the new casino would go, can’t see a second attempt for at least another five years or so.

There will be some new nearby competitio­n in February when Resorts World opens a casino in Sullivan County, N.Y., about an hour north of New Jersey.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP 2017 ??
WAYNE PARRY/AP 2017

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