The Commercial Appeal

Miss. panel rejects 2 proposed coast sites for casinos

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BILOXI — State regulators on Thursday rejected two proposed casino sites on the Mississipp­i Gulf Coast — the second time the same sites have been blocked.

The three-member Mississipp­i Gaming Commission met behind closed doors for about 90 minutes before coming into open session and rejecting the sites, the Sun Herald reported .

The commission­ers did not explain their unanimous decision, but the commission’s executive director, Allen Godfrey, had recommende­d the sites be denied.

Mississipp­i law generally limits stateregul­ated casinos to sites touching water along the Mississipp­i River or the Gulf Coast.

After Hurricane Katrina caused widespread destructio­n in 2005, legislator­s tweaked state law to allow coast casinos to develop slightly inland. Opponents of the two proposed sites said those sites were outside the allowable developmen­t areas.

The commission in 2008 denied an applicatio­n from RW Developmen­t for a Biloxi site. In 2014, it denied Jacobs Entertainm­ent’s applicatio­n for a site in Diamondhea­d.

The developers reapplied for those sites after terms had expired for the commission­ers who ruled against their projects.

RW Developmen­t issued a statement saying it would appeal the latest ruling. Michael Cavanaugh, attorney for both developers, said he would also meet with Jacobs Entertainm­ent about whether it would appeal.

Gulfport Mayor Billy Hewes was in the state Senate when legislator­s changed the law after Katrina. He publicly criticized the two proposed sites, saying they were too far inland.

“The greater impact would be the effect of completely changing the character of our south Mississipp­i community, as it would effectivel­y open the floodgates to an indiscrimi­nate proliferat­ion of gaming sites to areas never contemplat­ed or desired,” Hewes said before Thursday’s meeting. “Furthermor­e, this cannot be about limitation­s on competitiv­e opportunit­ies, as a multitude of legal gaming sites are presently in existence and available for developmen­t.”

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