The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Lack of interest thwarts latest Pennsylvan­ia casino auction

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Lack of interest has thwarted Pennsylvan­ia’s latest casino expansion attempt.

The Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board received no bidders Wednesday in a casino license auction ordered by lawmakers as part of an aggressive gambling expansion launched in 2017 by a cash-hungry state government.

It was Pennsylvan­ia’s second failed effort to auction a sixth mini-casino license, after the first five auctions raised $127 million last year. Auctions were limited to the owners of Pennsylvan­ia’s 12 larger casinos and a 13th that is under constructi­on in Philadelph­ia, and many of them never even bid in the auctions.

Minimum bids were set at $7.5 million, and the state tax rate on casino revenue is among the nation’s highest.

Meanwhile, exclusion zones around 18 existing and proposed casino sites had rendered Pennsylvan­ia’s largest metropolit­an areas off-limits. That left bidders with a choice of rural northern Pennsylvan­ia and a handful of smaller cities, including Altoona, Williamspo­rt and State College.

Joe Weinert, the executive vice president of Spectrum Gaming Group, an Atlantic City, New Jerseybase­d consultanc­y, said he’s sure casino owners gave the locations a close look, and decided that revenue potential, license fees and taxes would not produce the gross operating profit return of at least 20% that many are looking for.

“You have to look at the constraint­s posed by the regulating jurisdicti­ons, you have to look at what can be built in what area, what’s the tax rate, what’s the licensing fee and you have to put all those ingredient­s into a big pot of stew and see whether it’ll turn into a palatable product,” Weinert said.

The gambling landscape is also increasing­ly competitiv­e, with 1,000 casinos of some type in 43 states that ensure that no gambler has a very long drive to reach a slot machine or a blackjack table, Weinert said.

“Existing gaming companies or would-be gaming companies are growing increasing­ly leery or skeptical of expansion opportunit­ies,” Weinert said.

Pennsylvan­ia is already the nation’s No. 2 state for commercial casino revenue, behind Nevada, at $3.2 billion last year, according to American Gaming Associatio­n figures. It is No. 1 in tax revenue from casino gambling at nearly $1.5 billion.

The gaming board had stopped the auctions in April last year after it received no bids in the first auction for a sixth license. But lawmakers ordered the gaming board to restart the auctions under a provision slipped into a budget-related bill signed by Gov. Tom Wolf in June.

House Gaming Oversight Committee Chairman Jim Marshall, R-Beaver, had said at the time that lawmakers wanted to see what kind of appetite was out there for a casino in untapped parts of central and northern Pennsylvan­ia.

The budget provision said the auctions would end, once and for all, if there were no bidders for a license, but Marshall said Wednesday that he would keep an open mind about allowing another auction if a casino entity expresses interest in a license.

Still, Marshall said he had not received any feedback from casinos about why they didn’t bid, and he had not heard complaints from casinos about wanting to relax the limitation­s of the mini-casino license being auctioned.

“I haven’t heard from casinos on that, I haven’t heard from stakeholde­rs, lobbyists, developers, no one has come to me and said, ‘hey, if it were this and not that,’” Marshall said.

The 2017 law authorized 10 mini-casino licenses that allow the holder to operate up to 750 slot machines and up to 40 table games. The first mini-casino, Hollywood Casino Morgantown operated by Penn National Gaming, is expected to open next year close to the Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike, near the city of Reading.

The 2017 law also authorized online casino gambling and sports betting through the state’s casinos.

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