With the introduction of the Alton Belle casino, Illinois became the second state to allow riverboat casinos. Argosy's Alton Belle Casino was the first riverboat casino in Illinois, opening its doors in 1991. Now there are 9 major casinos in Illinois, home to riverboat casinos. Taxed at the highest rate in the nation, Illinois casinos have been limited by the government's restrictions and the state is now at the maximum limit for gaming licenses. In spite of restrictions, Illinois casinos still provide guests with a wide range of gaming options to choose from.
Impossible to answer in a few words, unless those words are: RUN, don't walk, away from this proposition. There are a few "unlesses", such as;1. Unless the school funding "designations" are part of the state constitution because they'd better be. If not, the state will find ways and reasons to spend this windfall outside of schools. BELIEVE me. That money will go to a general fund so fast that voters will have no idea what hit them.2. Is there assistance in place for gambling addiction? You say "slots," and everyone thinks of some harmless one-armed bandit. We've got blue-haired retirees sitting in front of slot machines at our three local casinos day and night, pissing away their hard-earned retirement, because they regard the casino staff as "family" and because, frankly, they have nothing better to do. Not to mention, of course, that they are completely and utterly HOOKED.3. "...legalized in a limited way..."? HA!!! Your state legislators will get a taste of this easy money, and the slots will pour down like April rain. Mark my words. Five locations!? Give it a year. They'll be wanting to put them in grocery stores. Mark my words. Maybe I already said that.
Can you win big money on slots?
YES! Our largest jackpot to date is $375,179.87,won in June 2006! And we had the first Ca$hola jackpot winner of $318,760.55, won in July 2007! Click here to see our BIG WINNERS!
What is the minimum age to enter the casino?
You must be 21 years of age to enter the slot facility.
Using the very conservative figure of $300 a day per machine--far below what the Delaware tracks take in--slots could bring in from $438 million (for the 4,000 machines proposed in the legislature this year) to $547 million (for the 5,000 machines DeFrancis wants) annually. Under the Delaware model--with the state lottery agency owning the machines and paying out nearly 50 percent "commissions" to the track owners--DeFrancis could rake in between $219 million and $273 million a year.
In the first five months of 1998, the slot machines at the three Delaware racetracks--Delaware Park, Dover Downs, and Harrington--have each netted an average of $361.10 every day. If slots here show that level of play, that could up DeFrancis' take to between $262 million and $327 million.
DeFrancis says the numbers are deceiving, and that it wouldn't be pure profit. But if he staffed each track at approximately the same level as Dover Downs, his payroll would be about $20 million, including all benefits. That would leave him with upwards of $200 million a year, which would mean he could pay for all renovations necessary to accommodate slots within the first year and be completely in the black.
5 comments:
I don't know, duck. Philosophically, I think slots should be legal, just as I feel about recreational drugs... but there definitely should be safe guards.
I'm leaning toward no, but mostly out of a Pollyannaish belief that there HAS to be a better way to fund education. There has to be.
Pro-slot forces always trot out the same line:"Why should our money go to Delaware?"
Look at all the Marylanders who go to gamble in Delaware. Do we ever ask "If gambling is such fun, why don't they move to Delaware?"
No, we don't, because we know why they don't want to live in Delaware, too. Nice place to visit.
The only legal gambling I support is private gambling.
Well, take Education out of the equation, completely then. I think I still believe legalizing gambling is okay.
My opinion goes to the heart of the matter, and disregards any ancillary stuff like where the funding will eventually go.
but, then again, I'm a social Libertarian. I'm against outlawing drugs, prostitution, gambling, or any other activity that takes place between two consenting adults.
I am against slots in MD for moral reasons. Let people go to Delaware or West Va. and waste their hard earned money. Fools.
Post a Comment