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1619-5-10 Does Florida need casinos ? Herald Campaign Editor John Pancake contributed to this report. KEYWORDS: GAMBLING CASINOS LAW TAG: 9403150852 133 of 285, 33 Terms mh DOES FLORIDA NEED CASINOS? 10/23/1994 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, October 23, 1994 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: VIEWPOINT PAGE: 1M LENGTH: 113 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Seymour GELBER SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: SEYMOUR GELBER Special to The Herald MEMO: NO DOES FLORIDA NEED CASINOS? As a public official, I was intrigued when the casino gambling blitz first hit this state. Casinos would bring rivers of money to increase the size of our police force, repair our rotting infrastructure and build new parks and schools. It sounded good. Too good. Then the promoters came out of the woodwork. Basically they were the same group of gamblers who had turned Las Vegas into a gambling factory and Atlantic City into a glorified slum. Once all the implications became clear, the prospect of having casino gambling frightened me. I envisioned 500 buses a day coming in from Kissimmee, clogging Miami Beach streets and burdening our city. I realized that this monster would co-opt and control our city's life. Our economy, our politics, our social and cultural pleasures would all play second fiddle to the needs of casino gambling. Miami Beach is the casino proponents' main target, but they are salivating at the thought of devouring Florida in its entirety. These are pirates coming to plunder. Are ‘`you willing to pay the price? Las Vegas is a city with one of the highest school dropout rates in the country, and it has a new class of compulsive gamblers. Its need for social services has skyrocketed. How about Atlantic City? Here's a city that had hit rock bottom before casinos, and it's still as bad off as ever. Those are our two models. Take your choice. Do you know what a gambling casino is really about? It's not the glamour of a croupier at a baccarat table, or Humphrey Bogart in a tuxedo shooting craps with Ingrid Beryman rooting him on. It's slot machines. That's where the real money is. How many slot machines in Vegas? Try 130,000. Another fright. Once you vote this in, the Florida Legislature must adopt laws governing casino operations. Then watch the money flow to state legislators, local officials and lobbyists. A few years ago TV videos showed some South Carolina legislators stuffing their pockets with gambling money. And The New York Times reported that some Louisiana legislators openly received $2,500 campaign contributions from the gaming boys on the floor of the Legislature. Big-time corruption will become a cottage industry in Florida. But what's the bottom line? What's the payoff for Joe Citizen? Maybe it's so big we can live with the devil. Tax revenues? According to the estimates provided by the gambling forces, in 1997 casino gambling will provide Florida $400 million in direct taxes. Sounds good, although it is only half of what our state lottery currently brings in. Florida gets 38 percent from lottery ticket purchases while gambling casinos average only a 7.5 percent tax nationally. State casino taxes will constitute, at best, only a little more than one percent of our total state revenues. Jobs? There will be some added construction jobs at the beginning but, at best, the new casino jobs will only equal the ones lost. In a study of employment in 12 Illinois cities with riverboat casinos, 11 cities showed a net loss of jobs. Simply put, gambling casinos induce people to spend their money solely on slots, not on clothing, food and items ordinarily purchased in neighborhood businesses. In Atlantic City, within 10 years after the arrival of casino gambling, 40 percent of its restaurants went out of business. Let me quote an expert, Steve Wynn, the dean of casino gambling, who explained the facts of life to a group of Connecticut businessmen: "Get it straight. There is no reason to believe that people who come to patronize casino gambling will patronize your local stores." Everyone agrees that while casino hotels will thrive, the others will suffer badly. Miami Beach hotels, like most good hotels in Florida, charge on average $150 a night. Casino hotels charge about $50 for lodging and provide fine food at inexpensive prices. They are self-contained, designed solely to keep you inside, a prisoner of the slots. How will other hotels compete? What the low rate on gambling casinos really means is that the state will, in effect, subsidize casino hotels. And what about the Indians? Do we really need to circle the wagons, or in fact is it the Las Vegas cowboys from whom we need protection? True, Indian gambling on reservations is on the rise and their revenues are not taxable. But there still is a long legal battle ahead and they may yet lose. The irony is that the only way the Indians can get casino gambling in Florida now is for us to pass this pro-casino constitutional amendment. And then there's the catchall when all other arguments fail: "If we don't do it, someone else will. " * The riverboats? Some few people in North Florida will drive to Biloxi to play the riverboat slots. But so what? Most riverboats have nothing to do with the river and aren't boats. They are a gimmick to make people think that somehow the slot machines aren't contaminatingr the city proper. * Cuba, when Castro is gone? (They're digging hard now. ) Pre-Castro Cuba had some of the biggest mob-run gambling casinos around. People came here to vacation and some went off to Havana for a weekend. Just as tour companies now arrange that extra trip to the Bahamas or other gambling islands, so they'll visit post-Castro Cuba. It's no big deal. * Other states will beat us to it? Most of the new casinos are in the Midwest and on the Mississippi River. Of the locations where casinos are planned, only Chicago and New Orleans vie with us for conventions, but neither one has the sea, the sun and the sand that we offer. Casino gambling will not automatically bring the mob down to run our cities, although the Gambino family was reputedly involved in 17 indictments in Louisiana for skimming profits from video poker gambling. To prevent this the states of Nevada and New Jersey provide gaming commissions at a cost of about $50 million. The early history of casinos in Las Vegas shows that the mob built and ran them. I suggested to gambling proponents that perhaps there would be more acceptance of the European-type casino, where gambling is treated as an amenity. This would mean that some of the larger hotels would have small casinos, with restricted hours, limited attendance, tight controls and no slots. Just a few tables for casual gambling. They laughed at my naivete. One told me: "We're out to make big bucks. If tourists want amenities at a hotel, they can go to the tennis courts or to the sauna." We are at a crossroad. Ask yourself, "Can we afford this risk?" Let's not be taken in by the lure of easy money. This disaster can be avoided by simply saying "No" on Nov. 8. Miami Beach Mayor Seymour Gelber, a former judge, is Dade County chairman of No Casinos, the statewide anti-casino campaign. He wrote this article for The Herald. KEYWORDS: OPINION STATISTIC TAG: 9403150327 134 of 285, 42 Terms mh CASINO FRIENDS, FOES GIRD FOR HIGH-STAKES VOTE 12/27/1985 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1985, The Miami Herald DATE: Friday, December 27, 1985 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: FRONT PAGE: 1A LENGTH: 210 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Miami Beach marquees supported casino GAMBLING in 1978 (-LEGALIZED DADE) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: MARK SILVA Capital Bureau Chief DATELINE: TALLAHASSEE MEMO: see also THE EIGHT BIGGEST BACKERS, LIFTER profile, WORDING 12A CASINO FRIENDS, FOES GIRD FOR HIGH-STAKES VOTE Pat Mason of Hallandale won $1 million, her prize for pulling three sevens on a slot machine in Las Vegas. Jim Teets of Loxahatchee is pocketing a $100, 000 check once a year for 10 years, thanks to his winning night at Nevada's Barbary Coast Casino. Now, big money is riding on the perennial bet of a handful of hoteliers that Floridians like Mason and Teets someday will stay home, and that thousands of tourists will flock to Florida, tb take their chances at the Sunshine State's own casinos. Floridians again will have a chance to vote, next November, on casino gambling. And once more, the political, religious and business leaders who scuttled an attempt to legalize casinos seven years ago promise a new crusade. "This state, with all of its problems, has a bright future. I don't think you can do anythingbut cloud it with casino gambling," says former Gov. Reubin Askew, who led the overwhelmingly successful fight against casinos in 1978. "A state that seeks to build an economic base on exploiting the weaknesses of its own people -- that does not represent sound thinking. " The persistent, big-spending hotel owners who have campaigned for a decade to open Florida to casino gambling count on finding new support among newcomers. More than a third of Florida's residents are new to the state since voters crushed casino gambling nearly three-to-one in 1978. "When our politicians come out and say (casino gambling) is no good for Florida, I could spit in their eye, " says Sunny Isles Resort Association president Charles Rosen, a longtime casino advocate. "Our hotels are getting old and broken down. They're closing up. We need to get hope for the area. " Casino backers are placing their money this time on a new proposal: allowing casinos to open only in the largest hotels, with 500 rooms and more, and only in counties where voters approve them locally. They also have a jump