The Philippine Star

Trump Taj Mahal casino closing as losses, union conflict persist

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Atlantic City’s Trump Taj Mahal casino, owned by Carl Icahn, will close at the end of the summer, the billionair­e investor’s company said on Wednesday.

Closure of the casino, which is in the midst of a strike by its unionized workers over wages and health insurance costs, would be another blow to the struggling New Jersey beach resort. Four of its 12 casinos remain shut after closing in 2014, though one of them reopened as a hotel only.

“Currently the Taj is losing multimilli­ons a month, and now with this strike, we see no path to profitabil­ity,” Tony Rodio, chief executive of Tropicana Entertainm­ent Inc. said in a statement.

The board of the Taj and Icahn Enterprise­s “cannot just allow the Taj to continue burning through tens of millions of dollars when the union has single handedly blocked any path to profitabil­ity,” said Rodio, whose company is controlled by Icahn.

He said the company intends to send required layoff notices to workers before this weekend, adding that Icahn’s company has lost nearly $100 million “trying to save the Taj.”

The casino was once owned by Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump, who lost his stake in it during its bankruptcy.

Bob McDevitt, president of Unite Here Local 54, which represents about 1,100 workers at the casino who will lose their jobs, called the closure “petty” and an attempt to break their labor strike.

“The great dealmaker would rather burn the Trump Taj Mahal down just so he can control the ashes,” McDevitt said in a statement.

“In the end he’ll have to live with what he’s done to working people in Atlantic City,” he said. “The Boardwalk is littered with empty monuments to his greed.”

Atlantic City, once the US East Coast’s only casino gambling site, is struggling to pay its bills and has until November to devise a fiscal recovery plan or else face possible state takeover.

Its property tax base eroded when its gambling industry lost value because competing casinos began opening in neighborin­g states.

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