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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Amherst: Believing the Fairy Tale?

Why would anyone think they are 'different' when evidence abounds?

Palmer appointed a Citizen's Casino Study Committee that determined the annual costs to host Mohegan Sun would be $18 MILLION to $39 MILLION per year [conservatively].

That, in addition to the estimated $50 MILLION cost to bring water from the Quabbin.

When the Town Council viewed the report, they refused to make it public.

The insolvent tribe has finally found someone willing to fund their fairy tale and is spreading their fantasy, just like other developers.



Although the estimates are high, these are far short of the over zealous claims repeated by others [originated in the Spectrum Report]:

According to Mohegan’s estimates, the project would create more than 1,000 construction jobs and more than 2,500 permanent jobs.

From: Casino executive pitches Palmer plan to Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce

Mohegan Sun CEO Mitchell Etess talks Palmer casino with Amherst Chamber of Commerce

Jim Kinney, The Republican By Jim Kinney, The Republican
on January 16, 2013
 
AMHERST — Mitchell G. Etess, CEO of the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority, on Wednesday contrasted his company's “rural” concept for a $600 million casino in Palmer with competing proposals for sites in Springfield and West Springfield.

After all, he said, the casinos in Connecticut, like Foxwoods and his company's Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, are not in urban downtowns.

“That's the type of facility that people like to go to,” Etess said Wednesday at a luncheon sponsored by the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce. “It's what people are used to and what has been successful in this region.

By building in Palmer, Etess said, Mohegan Sun has a better chance at improving the economy of the entire region.

“Not just to work on fixing things in a concentrated urban area,” Etess said.

His speech to about 100 chamber members gathered at the Lord Jeffery Inn here came just one day after the state's deadline for gaming applications and for the nonrefundable $400 application fee. The proposed project is one of 11 casino proposals that have paid their non-refundable $400,000 fee to the state.

MGM Resorts in Springfield, Penn National Gaming, also in Springfield, and Hard Rock International at the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield are the others competing for the lone resort casino license in Western Massachusetts. Paper City Development, which is considering sites in Holyoke and Chicopee, has appealed to the state for an extension of the filing deadline.
Etess said he always knew he'd have competition for the lone Western Massachusetts casino license.

He said Mohegan's experience in the New England casino market and its site on 152 acres located right on Exit 8 in Palmer make Mohegan the best choice.

“You get off the highway and we are right across the street,” Etess said. “We know we can win this.”

But Palmer officials were questioning whether the project would move forward. Mohegan didn't pay its $400,000 until the deadline was nearly here. While the Mohegan Sun project has been talked about for years, The Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority was one of the last local applicants to pay the $400,000. The tribal organization partnered with New York City-based Brigade Capital management.
Etess said, “We didn't see any advantage in paying the fee and making the application any quicker.”

The Mohegan Palmer site is 20 miles, or about a half-hour drive, from Amherst. Many chamber members sounded skeptical Wednesday about Mohegan's impact on downtown business and the spectre of a spike in problem gamblers. One attendee asked about college students and problem gambling.

Etess said Mohegan's facilites in Pennsylvania and Connecticut card underage gamblers and allow problem gambles to self-exclude. The minimum age for gambling in Massachusetts casinos will be 21.

He also gave a spirited defense of his company’s rural casino model contrasted with the Penn National and MGM proposals in Springfield.

“We believe the rural casino model is what is attractive to people,” he said. “That's what people are used to.”

Amherst Town Manager John Musante said leaders here are still mulling whether to go for mitigation money in the casino process.

“There will be impacts,” he said. “All the basics when it comes to traffic and other things. Also, as manager of a college town I'm concerned about problem gambling and its impact on young people.”

Musante said he doesn't yet know how differently he feels about those impacts whether the casino is in Palmer or Springfield or West Springfield.

Tony Maroulis, executive director of the Amherst Chamber, said a casino might cut into trade show and entertainment business at the Mullins Center on the University of Massachusetts campus.
Etess said there are no plans for a big entertainment venue at Mohegan Sun Palmer.

Etess said local businesses, like restaurants, might lose a few customers to a casino. But that business is more than made up by money spent by casino employees who now have jobs.

Oh?

Steve Perskie from NJ Gambling Commission at May's Gambling Commision educational seminar:

"Let me make you a promise. Your legislation requires that operators put up a $500m investment. With that kind of money, you can be sure they're going to build an impressive structure with restaurants, bars, nightclubs, shops. Make no mistake: the delicatessan down the street is going to go out of business. The nightclub around the corner is going to go out of business. Nothing the Mass. Casino Commission can do is going to change that."

From Wynn's Plans for Bridgeport, CT

"Get it straight," he said. "I think I know how to bring people to Bridgeport, and keep them coming, but there is no reason on earth for any of you to expect for more than one second that just because there are people here, they're going to run into your store, or restaurant, or bar.

"That didn't happen in Atlantic City," he said. "It should never have been promised in Atlantic City. It is illogical to expect that people who won't come to Bridgeport and go to your restaurants or your stores today will go to your restaurants and stores just because we happen to build this building here."

 


In the years after the first casinos were built, Atlantic City went from having the 50th-highest per capita crime rate in the United States to being No. 1 on the list.


Maroulis said he hopes to have the other potential casino operators in to talk as well.
http://www.masslive.com/business-news/index.ssf/2013/01/mohegan_sun_honcho_talks_palmer_casino_w.html

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