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Thread: Pennsylvania Mini Casino Licenses

  1. #1

    Pennsylvania Mini Casino Licenses

    Wahh wahhh Penn National is crying they may get competition as they are located in the middle of bumfuck. So they shell out $50 Million to maintain some of their middle of no where monopoly and to continue to give our shitty comps and people will like it. You could have come north and I would have gladly patronized those shitty comps, but no they are being little cry babies about it! *Yawn*



    Justine McDaniel, Staff Writer
    Philly.com

    With the winning bid Wednesday for Pennsylvania’s first mini-casino license, a Harrisburg-area casino operator sought to maintain its grip on that region’s gamblers — even as it argues in federal court that the entire concept of mini-casinos should be thrown out the window.

    Mountainview Thoroughbred Racing Association LLC, a subsidiary of Penn National Gaming and operator of Hollywood Casino in Grantville, bid a whopping $50.1 million at an auction in Harrisburg. It chose an area of York County about an hour from Hollywood in which to place a potential mini-casino, blocking off that area to competitors. In doing so, the company signaled its anxiety to retain its market and desire to solidify its dominance in central Pennsylvania.

    “We were really looking at this from one eye on defense, one eye on offense,” said Eric Schippers, senior vice president for public affairs at Penn National Gaming. “In terms of defense, we looked at, were a competitor to come into that area, it would have caused significant cannibalization of our business. In terms of offense, we looked at where could we drive incremental value for our shareholders.”

    First Mini-Casino License Awarded in York County
    The owner of Hollywood Casino won an auction for the right to build the first mini-casino in Pennsylvania. The new gaming hall must be built within a 15-mile radius of Yoe, which creates an area that includes 27 municipalities, in whole or in part, that chose not to prohibit the operation of a mini-casino. An additional 42 municipalities within 15 miles of Yoe, some in Lancaster County, chose the state’s “opt-out” option to prohibit mini-casinos. In all, more than 1,000 of Pennsylvania’s 2,575 municipalities chose to opt out.

    Wednesday’s auction started one of the major initiatives of a sweeping gaming expansion passed by lawmakers in October aimed at bringing much-needed revenue to the state — and Penn National offered more money for the license than some onlookers expected. The new law authorizes video gaming terminals in truck stops, an online iLottery, and online gambling along with the mini-casinos, which will each have between 300 and 750 slot machines and up to 30 table games in its first year of operation.

    But the gaming bill was widely criticized for being rushed through, even by lawmakers who voted for it. As Pennsylvania has become the second-biggest gambling state in the country after Nevada, analysts have called gambling revenue a unstable funding source.

    Only four of 11 eligible casinos participated in the auction, the first of 10 scheduled over the next five months by the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board. The auction was conducted through secret ballot; thus, the other bids — and proposed locations — will remain a mystery.

    Penn National’s win effectively extends to the south the competition-free buffer zone that the new law gave to each casino, which Penn National had called inadequate. On Tuesday, it sued the state in federal court in an attempt to bar construction of the new casinos, alleging its business was less protected from mini-casino competition than every other casino in the state.

    “Though the 25-mile buffer zones purport to treat all existing casinos equally, as applied, Hollywood Casino, uniquely situated in the middle of the state, is the only casino likely to face significant cannibalization,” the lawsuit reads.

    Because Hollywood is the only casino in its region, Penn National argued, most of its customers come from outside the 25-mile zone given to each casino. Plus, it said, casinos to the east and west benefit from overlapping zones, “leaving the vast majority of sites for [satellite] casinos in the central portion of Pennsylvania, encircling Hollywood Casino.” (And one casino got a special carve-out.)

    If Penn National wins the case, the mini-casino provision would be struck down and none would be constructed. If not, the company could have a satellite about an hour’s drive from the Hollywood Casino — or at least control the right to have one. It chose a 15-mile radius around the small borough of Yoe, York County, as the zone where it can locate its satellite.

    Yoe itself has opted out of hosting a mini-casino, meaning the satellite won’t be placed in that borough. Even though the town doesn’t want a mini-casino, however, one of its neighbors might. Of the 69 municipalities wholly or partially within the 15-mile radius, 27 of them did not opt out. York is the eighth-largest county in the commonwealth, according to census data.

    Penn National considered several locations before deciding on the area in York County, Schippers said, and had to settle on a bid amount. Its offer was far above the minimum of $7.5 million for a slot machine license but “was the amount we thought our competitors might be willing to spend to come in and to poach our business.”

    The company must fork over the $50.1 million by Friday, but has six months to put together an application including a final location.

    Across Pennsylvania, local governments were split between those wanting to keep casinos out of their communities and others hoping to reap the potential revenue source and tourist draw.

    Forty percent of the state’s municipalities decided to prohibit a satellite casino within their borders. Sixty percent remain in the game, although municipalities within 25 miles of an existing casino are only eligible to host a satellite established by that casino, which led some such municipalities not to bother to opt out.

    Scores of towns in Bucks, Chester, Montgomery and Delaware Counties opted out, including Bensalem, Downingtown, Lower Merion, and Radnor. Philadelphia also voted to nix a mini-casino within its borders, and every municipality in Lancaster County said no.

    The opt-outs are not concentrated in any region but are spread across the state: Every county had at least a couple of municipalities that said no to the casinos. It left more than 1,500 cities, boroughs, townships open for potential mini business.

    The next auction for a license will be Jan. 24.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member treyster's Avatar
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    I'm a free market advocate, if you're going to have casino's (or anything else for that matter), then it should be unrestricted warfare. This idea of monopoly zones isn't good for the consumer whether it's casino's, healthcare, cable TV, etc. Sounds like the PA govt just got $50M for monopoly rights.
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  3. #3
    All these states are starting to rely on degens funding state economy.

  4. #4
    Senior Member zeus's Avatar
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    Dang, $50M! Sounds like Pa. is using this as a way to fund shortfalls in their budget. And Penn National was the first sucker to jump. Wonder how long it takes to recoup that investment in that region? And how many more auctions will there be?

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    Last edited by zeus; 01-11-2018 at 10:01 AM.

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by zeus View Post
    Dang, $50M! Sounds like Pa. is using this as a way to fund shortfalls in their budget. And Penn National was the first sucker to jump. Wonder how long it takes to recoup that investment in that region? And how many more auctions will there be?

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    There are 10 total auctions, with the next one here in a few weeks. I haven't looked at the law but I wonder if Penn National can buy more or if it is one per casino? With a total of 10, there are good odds one will go closer to me. My entire county is blue though on the map, so Puffs will have to do for now haha
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  6. #6
    Senior Member zeus's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CPT View Post
    There are 10 total auctions, with the next one here in a few weeks. I haven't looked at the law but I wonder if Penn National can buy more or if it is one per casino? With a total of 10, there are good odds one will go closer to me. My entire county is blue though on the map, so Puffs will have to do for now haha
    Maybe the next Cosmopolitan in your neighborhood?

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  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by zeus View Post
    Dang, $50M! Sounds like Pa. is using this as a way to fund shortfalls in their budget.

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    Between this and the outrageous turpike tolls (which just went up again this week), PA should be rolling in the dough. Maybe now the politicians can quit bitching about the state employees pension fund (which they conveniently forget they borrowed from to leave it underfunded).

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  8. #8
    Second Mini Casino License Issued...

    Pennsylvania's next casino will be in Westmoreland County

    By Charles Thompson cthompson@pennlive.com
    Stadium Casino LLC, a partnership consisting of the operators of Parx Casino in Bucks County and a Baltimore commercial development firm, has won the rights to build a new casino in Pennsylvania's Westmoreland County.

    The partnership secured its rights with a $40.1 million bid for an area anchored in Greensburg, in a sealed auction process held Wednesday morning at Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board offices in Harrisburg.

    The bid gives Stadium exclusive rights over the next six months to settle on a final site and submit a license application for a casino that could have up to 750 slot machines and 30 table games.

    "We feel there's demand for additional gaming positions in that region, unsatisfied demand at this point, and that we can have a profitable casino there," said Travis Lamb, chief financial officer of Cordish Gaming.

    Cordish is the development firm that already teamed with Parx last year to win a license to build a larger, commercial casino near the stadium complex in Philadelphia.

    Wednesday's auction also proved a winning hand for the Wolf Administration, which has now booked more than $90 million from the first two satellite casino bids authorized as part of the 2017-18 state budget.

    The first bid, awarded on Jan. 10, went for $50.1 million to Penn National Gaming, operators of the Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course in Dauphin Coujnty, for a yet-to-be-determined site near York.

    State officials had initially hoped for something in the range of $100 million from rights to up to 10 casino licenses.

    Today's round of bidding brought four bids, which indicates that they could hit that cumulative fiscal target with the next round of open bidding, set for February 7.
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  9. #9
    3rd License Out:

    The owners of Mount Airy Casino in the Poconos won an auction to open another casino in Pennsylvania.

    Mount Airy bid $21 million Thursday to get a license for one of the state’s new mini-casinos.

    That winning bid isn’t to build a casino here in our area. Instead, Mount Airy’s plan is to build one in New Castle in Lawrence County, near the Pennsylvania/Ohio state line.

    Mount Airy is owned by the family of Lackawanna County businessman Louis DeNaples.
    Where is my mini casino!!




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  10. #10
    Senior Member Penguin's Avatar
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    The new Mt Airy will be about 45 minutes from our house. Anyone have any idea how they are on comps and FP offers? We have a Penn National about 20 minutes from house but they are so stingy that we don't bother going.

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