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CCA News - Wednesday August 12, 2009

 

NEVADA ECONOMY: Gaming revenue at 2004 level

lvrj.com - August 12, 2009

Nevada's monthly gaming revenues have sunk to levels not seen since 2004.

Harrah's considers race track for casino

the-news-leader.com - August 12, 2009

Now that Ohio has decided to allow expanded gambling at seven horse racing tracks, a major casino operator has expressed interest in operations in Ohio -- specifically, in the village.

Ohio needs open casino gambling

cantonrep.com - August 12, 2009

Slot machines in the existing horse racetracks are not the best answer to gambling in Ohio, but at least they are a start. The best approach would be an open public bid for the best casino development proposals that would result in maximum return in investment and jobs for Ohio. But at least this is a start.

Decision on Erie County slots revenue plan upheld

philly.com - August 12, 2009

A Commonwealth Court judge has upheld a lower court decision saying Erie County government officials cannot distribute half of the slot machine revenue the county receives any way they want.

Pittsburgh casino's opening day 3rd biggest in Pa.

whptv.com - August 12, 2009

Pittsburgh's new slot machine casino had the third busiest opening day of any of Pennsylvania's new gambling halls.

Lawmakers gearing up for gambling fight

milforddailynews.com - August 12, 2009

As another legislative battle over gambling looms this fall, Massachusetts lawmakers are working to separate the fact from fiction around gaming’s revenues and social costs, while well-financed casino developers hire lobbyists and set their sights on the Bay State.

 

 

 

 


Volume 6 Issue 8:  November 2008

2008 Election Review Special Edition

 

 

The Results Are In...

Tuesday’s election returned a solidly Democratic Congress and a Democratic President for the first time since the initial years of the Clinton Administration.  As The New York Times reported in a lengthy front page article (September 27, 2008), the casino industry bet heavily on John McCain.  Barack Obama’s victory deprived it of the satisfaction of seeing the Republican candidate installed in the White House as First Player, but gambling wasn’t an issue in the Presidential race.  Voters in six States (Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Missouri and Ohio) decided specific gambling initiatives: the decisions are reviewed below.  Gambling’s absence in the national election does not mean that its outcome is without implications for the readers of this journal, however. 

 

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