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Opening the Doors to Casinos in New York City; Video Terminals to be Installed at Aqueduct Racetrack



After nine years of on-again, off-again movement, the Aqueduct casino project now seems all but certain to be a done deal.

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, as expected, has given his approval to Genting New York’s bid, the final of three sign-offs needed in order for the state to now move ahead and sign a memorandum of understanding with the company.

Sisa Moyo, a spokeswoman for Silver, said the Democratic leader informed Gov. David Paterson of his approval on Aug. 11, a day after Democrats in control of the Senate backed the Genting bid. The development plan for Aqueduct needed the unanimous backing of both legislative leaders and Paterson, who has already signaled his support for Genting.

The final approvals were expected after Genting became the sole bidder standing in what was the fourth process in the past nine years to try to get a casino opened at Aqueduct. Genting offered the state $380 million in an upfront franchise fee payment — $80 million more than the floor set by the Paterson administration’s lottery division, which handled the bidding process.

Genting has said it can get 1,600 of the 4,500 slot machines up and running within six months of signing an MOU, which is expected in the days or weeks ahead. The remaining slots would be operating six months after that. Genting, which is a subsidiary of a Malaysian-based casino company, has signaled an interest in a larger casino facility on the site in the years ahead – which is subject to state approval.

The Aqueduct casino was first approved about a month after the 2001 terrorist attacks in New York; state officials saw the racetrack-based casinos as cash generators for the government. While other racinos popped up across the state in the years since, Aqueduct’s facility became stalled due to a host of political and financial factors. The latest round won by Genting is the fourth bidding process during three different gubernatorial administrations.

For the New York Racing Association, the Genting selection represents a potential way out of its annual cash flow mess, which this year led to threats of having to shut down racing operations before another state cash bailout in the form of a loan.

This is the start of something big.

And I’m excited. As a New York City kid (born in Brooklyn, y’all)… and someone who likes to gamble I am happy to see the approval of Genting USA’s plan to  install VLTs at Aqueduct racetrack.

Now, we all know this is about money. Tax money. Lots of tax money.

And a state desperately in need of closing the budget gap.

So what’s a Governor to do?

Legalize gambling.

Which in New York City, could be a very cool place to have  a casino.

For state officials, the Genting bid represents an immediate flow of cash of $380 million to be used to hopefully help keep the state’s precarious finances balanced.

We’ll see.

I’ll keep you posted.

OR, those of you reading this who are from New York, let me know what you’re hearing about a possible casino in the big Apple.

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