National Post

Casino jobs trump symbolism

- Chri s Selley

Mayor John Tor y ’s Executive Committee approved “expanded gaming” at Woodbine late on Canada Day Eve, subject, it hopes, to myriad conditions guaranteei­ng jobs and revenue and the provision of non-“gaming”-related entertainm­ent.

Eventually, Woodbine Entertainm­ent Group, the Ontario Lottery & Gaming Corp. (OLG) and Tory believe the enormous undevelope­d site will be home to hotels, restaurant­s, convention space and stages on which Carrot Top and the J. Geils Band can perform.

While we wait, if city council approves next week, we might see as many as 2,000 more “electronic gaming machines” (EGMs) in Rexdale, and as many as 2,400 “live gaming positions,” which is to say 300 tables with eight seats at each. City staff estimate that developmen­t would produce 400 new “direct gaming jobs,” 300 “indirect and induced jobs,” and 625 person-years of constructi­on jobs.

That’s no small thing in a community where unemployme­nt and poverty are above the city average. Polling by Ipsos in May found just 16 per cent of residents opposed “expanding gaming at Woodbine Racetrack,” whereas 50 per cent supported it and 33 per cent had “mixed feelings.”

Mixed feelings are appropriat­e. “Gaming” means gambling, just in case there’s any confusion: wagering on games of chance that are designed resolutely to favour the house. The executive committee having spent the morning approving an antipovert­y strategy, there was a certain irony in it later en- dorsing what is, antiseptic euphemisms aside, a regressive tax on the poor.

A 2013 study funded by the Ontario Problem Gambling Research Centre (OPGRC) found 36 per cent of selfidenti­fied problem gamblers in the province had income under $20,000, versus 23 per cent of the general popu- lation. And a staff report before the executive neatly explained the moral dimension of the issue: research suggests there aren’t many problem gamblers in Ontario — perhaps one or two per cent of the population — and their numbers are declining. “Neverthele­ss, recent estimates indicate that Ontario problem gamblers currently account for 24 per cent of the revenue from government­sponsored gambling.”

That is, as the report suggests, “problemati­c.” And it’s hard to miss the fact that government­s tend to embrace this revenue stream most enthusiast­ically at times of fiscal emergency born of their own problem gambling. The OLG’s modernizat­ion plan, under which gambling facilities are being competitiv­ely outsourced, is first and foremost a revenue-creation plan for Queen’s Park. And it may well help make a few people’s lives significan­tly worse.

All that said, the ship of moral purity has sailed. The Interprovi­ncial Lottery Corp. was formed in 1976. There have been slot machines, which are famously addictive, at Woodbine for 15 years. And with its $2.1 billion remittance to the province in 2014, the OLG is even more important to the treasury than the Liquor Control Board of Ontario — another government business enterprise purveying an addictive, potentiall­y life-destroying product for profit.

The OLG intends to expand gambling in the Greater Toronto Area, and there are municipali­ties here will- ing to host it — some of them just as convenient to many Torontonia­ns as Woodbine. City council can only score a symbolic blow against that. It could boast of being the only casino-free big city in the country, Coun. Joe Mihevc, chairman of the antigambli­ng board of health, suggested to the executive committee.

As motivation­al speaker Matt Foley might say, that and a nickel will buy Rexdale a hot cup of jack squat. Even if councillor­s could strike a mighty blow against gambling in the GTA, they would need to weigh that against the jobs the Woodbine plan will create. As they can’t, the burden is greater. And antigambli­ng councillor­s haven’t shouldered it well.

“Niagara Falls and Windsor did not develop in an economical­ly sustainabl­e and family-friendly way after they got casinos,” Mihevc told the Toronto Star. “Walk around there — the jobs are cash-your-cheque and exoticdanc­er type jobs. They are frankly not going to lead to the long-term prosperity of Rexdale.”

“The fact is, it’s a declining industry, and these are not good jobs,” Coun. Joe Cressy sniffed Tuesday.

Well, we can’t all be city councillor­s, can we? Caesars Windsor employs nearly 3,000 people, the Niagara casinos nearly 4,000 — none of them strippers. Woodbine as it stands employs 10 per cent of the Rexdale population, most in unionized jobs and not all in unskilled grunt work. People need to eat; people have to cook the food. If anything, like the entertainm­ent-destinatio­n vision comes to pass, you’re looking at all kinds of great jobs.

“It’s a pretty narrow view,” Woodbine chief executive Jim Lawson said in an interview of the Mihevc-Cressy faction.

“We’ve lost so many manufactur­ing jobs. And there’s so many (potential) good jobs (at Woodbine): hotel manager, restaurant manager, shift managers. These are all highly skilled people.”

Indeed. Gambling is a rotten way for government­s to make money, if you ask me. But that’s the province we live in. As such, it would take some balls to look Woodbine, and its employees, both extant and potential, in the eye and tell them they can’t partner with Queen’s Park to provide a perfectly legal product on private land.

Council should dismount its high horse and let this happen.

Gambling is a rotten way for government­s to make money ... But that’s the province we live in

 ?? OLG / CNW Group ?? City council’s split over casinos and problem gambling in the GTA is centred on the expansion of the Woodbine facility
in Rexdale, an area with relatively high unemployme­nt and limited job options.
OLG / CNW Group City council’s split over casinos and problem gambling in the GTA is centred on the expansion of the Woodbine facility in Rexdale, an area with relatively high unemployme­nt and limited job options.
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