Brockton Casino Vote
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission last week voted 4-1 against issuing license for a commercial casino at the Brockton fairgrounds. Mass Gaming & Entertainment proposed a 7 million casino 25 miles away from Taunton, where the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe earlier this month broke ground on a billion casino resort.
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- At stake in the May 12 vote is a $650 million development on Route 123 at the Brockton Fairgrounds. The proposal includes a casino, event space, stores, and a hotel with at least 250 rooms.
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The voted ended the yearlong effort by Mass Gaming, a subsidiary of Rush Street Gaming, to qualify for the commercial license for a southeastern zone casino.
Brockton Voters Narrowly Approve Casino Plan. Posted on: May 14, 2015, 02:00h. Last updated on: May 14, 2015, 02:04h.
Mass Gaming’s Joe Baerlein reacted to the vote by saying his company was disappointed and thanked the panel for “thoughtful” deliberation, adding,
“If given the opportunity, we are confident we would have built a great project.”
Mashpee Chairman Cedric Cromwell, whose tribe had threatened to sue the commission if it voted for the commercial casino, thanked the commission for “making a difficult but wise and just decision.” He added, “Historically, our people have been the recipients of a string of broken promises. Today is not one of those days. Today, the gaming commission upheld the Commonwealth’s end of the bargain, paving the way for a fruitful economic partnership.”
Although the vote appears to achieve a certain finality regarding Brockton, it leaves open the door to no casino being built in the southeastern zone due to a court challenge to the Mashpees in federal court by residents of Taunton.
Rush Street Gaming’s Neil Bluhm brought that issue before the commission several weeks ago when he declared, “There’s very little risk to the Commonwealth in issuing us a license. But there will be no jobs, no tax revenue and no economic development if it’s determined they can’t put land into trust. It will be a mess.”
The tribe appears sanguine on the issue, and confident that it will survive the challenge.
The Brockton casino would have had 2,100 slot machines, 124 gaming tables, a 250-room hotel and several restaurants, bars and entertainment options.
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Brockton is an economically strapped community of about 93,000 that could benefit from the 2,000 temporary construction jobs and 1,800 permanent jobs that could result from the casino being based there. According to Neil Bluhm owner of Rush Street Gaming, the parent company for Mass Gaming, “They’re in desperate need of economic development.” Bluhm’s partner in the venture was George Carney, owner of the Brockton Fairgrounds.
For that reason Brockton Mayor Bill Carpenter had urged the commission to approve of the license.
Mass Gaming was the only applicant for the southeastern casino zone license.
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Before the vote seven Bay State legislators wrote the commission asking it to request that the Revenue Division conduct a financial analysis of the effect of allowing the Brockton casino before issuing a license.
Their letter highlighted the elephant in the room, namely that if the Brockton casino was licensed then the $1 billion Mashpee Wampanoag tribe’s First Light Resort and Casino in Taunton would not be obligated to pay any state taxes.
This, and the fact that the tribe not paying taxes to the state was not balanced out by 25 percent taxes from Brockton may have been a major factor in the commission’s decision. The Mashpees’ tribal state gaming compact obligates them to pay the state 17 percent of gaming revenues, but only if the tribe has a monopoly on gaming in the southeastern casino zone, known as Region C. Any competition reduces that percentage to zero.
The seven lawmakers wrote, “The prospect of a tax-free casino operating within the commonwealth was not a rationale for either the Legislature’s decision to expand gaming, nor, we are sure, for the more than 1.2 million Massachusetts voters who supported our decision via referendum at the last election.”
Mass Gaming argued that its report showed that the two casinos, competing together, would generate more revenue for the state than the tribal casino competing alone.
The study was provided by the Innovation Group, which was commissioned by Neil Bluhm, owner of the Rush Street Gaming, the parent company of Mass Gaming & Entertainment.
However, the Mashpee tribe cited its own study, by the Spectrum Group, which found that Massachusetts would lose $28 million annually from the competing casinos.
During its first day of hearings the five-person commission heard one of its own come down on the side of the $28 million annual loss estimate.
Commissioner Enrique Zuniga, quoting from the Spectrum Group’s report, commented, “Their market assessment does not fully appreciate the potential magnitude of the competition.”
Each commissioner had as his or her task to rate different aspects of the project. Zuniga gave Rush Street high ratings on its ability to finance the project, but noted that when the Mashpee casino is factored in, the Brockton’s facility’s viability dropped to only “sufficient.”
Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby had described the Brockton project as a “great disappointment” due to a lack of a way to revitalize the economy of the city.
“The expanded gaming legislation made a high priority that our facilities should be ‘destination resort casinos’ with a deep commitment to associated economic development. This proposal presents a plan for a nice local convenience casino,” said Crosby.
The report projected that the Brockton casino would earn between $200 million and $245 million, considerably less than the $327 million the report commissioned by Mass Gaming projected.
Commissioner Lloyd Macdonald, reviewed building and site design, gave the project a “sufficient” grade. He added, “From the design perspective, it is a solid application, well conceived and well presented,” he said.
However he criticized the project for lack of water conservation plans and its plans to deal with students passing by from a local high school.
The company was also required to explain about a $1.65 million fine that had been imposed on its Illinois casino for hiring a cleaning company with alleged mob connections. The company’s attorney explained that two employees were fired over the incident, the casino replaced its cleaning company and put new internal controls in place.
This prompted the commission’s Investigations and Enforcement Bureau Director Karen Wells to advise the commission to insist on a “particularly strict form of oversight to ensure these types of procedural lapses don’t occur in Massachusetts.”
The Mashpees were delighted with the news.
“That Brockton casino would’ve cannibalized the market and effectively destroyed the commercial gaming landscape and we’re excited that the Mass Gaming Commission made a difficult, but wise and just decision,” said Wampanoag Tribe Chairman Cedric Cromwell.
The commission also reviewed Mass Gaming’s request to defer the $85 million license fee because of the likelihood that the Mashpees will sue if the license is granted. The company said it doesn’t want to have its funds tied up while the litigation is decided.
The commission has the right to license four total casinos, three of which it has already authorized. The possibility of a fifth casino arose when the Mashpees encountered delays in putting their land into Taunton into trust. This led to the commission making the decision to open bidding for the Region C license to commercial developers. Now that the Mashpees have not only put land into trust but coming roaring back with a $1 billion casino backed by the Genting Group, many are calling on the commission to follow the original intent of the 2011 Gaming Expansion law for a lone Indian casino in Region C.
Although the Bureau of Indian Affairs put the Taunton land into trust last year, that decision has been challenged in federal court by several residents of Taunton. Bluhm argues that it would be risky for the state to put all of its eggs in the Taunton basket because of the possibility that the casino could be halted by a federal judge.
Wynn Boston Harbor
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The commission also took up the environmental approval for the $2 billion Wynn Boston Harbor. It endorsed environmental approvals of several state agencies, a scrutiny that one spokesman said was the most that any private project has received in state history.
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The commission attached a clause to the approval that reserves for the commission the power to revisit the issue of traffic concerns at Sullivan Square in Boston’s Charlestown community and require Wynn to pay more for traffic impacts and mitigation.
That would be in addition to the $36 million that the developer is already required to pay. State Attorney General Maura Healey, who has called for the state to require more from Wynn, praised the commission for making Wynn pay “its fair share.”
A spokesman for the AG added, “We also appreciate the commission adopting our recommendation to strengthen the monitoring requirements for determining actual traffic impacts of the casino, and support the commission’s ability to impose additional traffic mitigation as necessary.”
The Wynn project is not yet ready for a groundbreaking because one more lawsuit remains, this one from Somerville Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone, who is separately appealing the Department of Environmental Protection’s approval earlier this year.