Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Hawthorne Race Course officials still not backing off plan for 2024 opening

- By Robert McCoppin rmccoppin@chicago tribune.com

Plans for a casino at Hawthorne Race Course in the western suburbs remain in limbo, with officials saying they are trying to complete financing for the project but still plan to open next year.

The racetrack has demolished much of the inside and the front glass face of Hawthorne’s grandstand in preparatio­n for building the casino in the grandstand of the Stickney racetrack.

But blaming inflation, high interest rates, supply disruption­s, the COVID19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and market volatility, Kevin Kline, CEO of Gaming at Hawthorne, told the Illinois Gaming Board that the track has not been able to get financing for the deal.

The project now is “shovel-ready” for a 14-month renovation, he said, once they finalize financing.

Last year track President Tim Carey said constructi­on would begin before the end of 2022. Carey said Thursday officials remain “committed and determined” to see gaming and racing thrive in Stickney.

On Friday Hawthorne issued a statement to the Tribune saying that officials with the track have completed due diligence with institutio­nal investors and remain confident they will open the casino in 2024.

“The financing status of our project remains very strong and demonstrat­es the inevitabil­ity of our developmen­t (pending regulatory approval),” the statement read. “We have invested significan­t capital to date to ensure our 400,000-squarefoot facility is constructi­on ready for developmen­t of a permanent casino, racing and entertainm­ent destinatio­n.”

Gaming board members at Thursday’s meeting had no questions or comments about the project.

Illinois lawmakers approved a statewide casino expansion in 2019, including allowing casinos at horse tracks. The gaming board gave Hawthorne preliminar­y approval in 2020, and plans originally called for a “best in class” $400 million racetrack and casino, or “racino,” to open in 2021. But initial financing fell through.

In 2019 Hawthorne announced plans to build a new south suburban racetrack and casino with video gaming operator and real estate developer Rick Heidner. But state officials halted those plans after a Tribune investigat­ion revealed Heidner’s long-standing dealings with a convicted bookie and a banker with alleged mob ties.

Meanwhile, the former Fairmount Park racetrack in downstate Collinsvil­le, now called FanDuel Sportsbook and Horse Racing, announced plans to begin constructi­on of its casino this summer, to open by the end of 2024.

Plans call for renovating and expanding 16,000 square feet in the clubhouse to initially hold up to 600 slots and table-gaming positions, regulatory compliance officer Lynne Marburger said.

A planned second phase would add 17,000 square feet for up to 900 gaming positions. Officials plan to submit financial and constructi­on plans to the gaming board “very soon,” Marburger said.

Meanwhile, other companies have gotten the go-ahead for new casinos in Chicago, Waukegan, East Hazel Crest and Danville.

Temporary casinos opened in Waukegan and Rockford, and existing casinos in Aurora and Joliet announced plans to build new replacemen­t casinos in their cities.

Hawthorne has opened new PointsBet sportsbook­s at the track and three off-track betting parlors, and resumed thoroughbr­ed racing this month, with plans to convert to harness racing in September.

 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Bettors consider their wagers at Hawthorne Race Course in Stickney on Dec. 16.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Bettors consider their wagers at Hawthorne Race Course in Stickney on Dec. 16.

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