Niagara casino
looks to win big
NIAGARA
FALLS, Ontario (AP) - Its front door just 100 yards from the U.S.
border, Casino Niagara opens today amid expectations it will rake
in more money than any Las Vegas gaming hall.
Predictions
of 9,000 new jobs and more visitors to a city already flush with
tourism have Canadian officials crowing about the four-story,
$118 million casino, created out of a flagging shopping mall.
On
the American side of the falls, however, politicians, academics,
clergy and business leaders are wary of their new neighbor. Although
some anticipate beneficial spinoffs, many are bracing for another
blow to a local economy where growth must be detected with a magnifying
glass.
"I
see these casinos as giant, money-sucking machines," said
the Rev. Patrick Warren, a Presbyterian minister and chair of
a grass-roots group called Citizens Concerned About Casinos in
Niagara Falls, N.Y. "Every dollar put in a slot machine is
a dollar not spent at a restaurant or a bowling alley."
There's
little doubt the casino's biggest winner will be its owner, the
Ontario provincial government.
Through
its Ontario Casino Corp., the government will collect a 20-percent
tax on up-front earnings, then take all profits beyond expenses
and the cut given to the Navegante Group, the Las Vegas-based
operating company. Navegante's share will include a percentage
of the games and depend on the number of visitors and total casino
revenue. Dominic Alfieri, president of Ontario Casino Corp., estimates
it will total $4.4 million to $7.4 million the first year.
At
least one official is so confident of Casino Niagara's success
he's made a private wager.
Navegante
president Larry Woolf has told Alfieri that if Casino Niagara
fails to equal the gross revenue produced by any single Las Vegas
casino, he'll give Alfieri his expensive wristwatch.
"I
don't expect to be winning that watch," Alfieri said.
Experts
say Alfieri may be right. If Casino Niagara makes as much as predicted,
about $480 million a year, it will be on the same scale as Las
Vegas resorts such as the MGM Grand Hotel and the Mirage.
Wayne
Thomson, mayor of Canada's Niagara Falls, says the casino is triggering
major economic growth.
Casino
and construction jobs are plentiful, hotels are expanding and
companies are lining up to create new tourist attractions, he
said. With tourism becoming a year-round industry, the number
of visitors may increase from 12 million to as many as 20 million,
he predicted.
"I
can't think of anything else that would have stimulated this kind
of interest, this kind of development, the kind of optimistic
spirit that exists in the city today," Thomson said.
Some
leaders in western New York share Thomson's upbeat outlook. Jo
Fisher, president of the Niagara Falls, N.Y., Visitors and Convention
Bureau, said the casino would prove a major attraction on both
sides of the border. Convention bookings are up to 57 from 41
at this time last year, she noted.
Twenty
miles to the south, however, Buffalo Mayor Anthony Masiello is
more skeptical. He cites Casino Windsor, which Ontario opened
just across from Detroit in 1994. Eighty percent of that casino's
patrons come from the United States.
"A
lot of the money came over the bridge from Detroit to the casino
in Windsor, and a lot of the problems went back over the bridge
to Detroit," Masiello asserted.
Academics
who have studied other casinos say Masiello's fears are well-founded.
Ontario
officials expect two-thirds of Casino Niagara's customers to come
from the United States, many drawn from the 2 million people in
western New York, 1 million within an hour's drive. Most of the
Canadian clientele will come from the corridor between Toronto
and Niagara Falls.
Among
North American casinos, only Nevada's pull in a significant number
of gamblers from outside the region, said Robert Goodman, an industry
expert who wrote an analysis of state-sponsored gambling called
"The Luck Business."
All
other casinos offer what is known as "convenience gambling,"
a chance to bet within a day's drive of home, said Goodman, an
urban planning professor at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass.
Such
gambling hurts local entertainment outlets such as theaters and
sports arenas. It's also more likely to contribute to compulsive
gambling, a social ill that costs taxpayers $14,400 per addict,
he said.
Canadian
optimism and American fears are neatly summed up on a new T-shirt
offered at a duty free shop across the street from Casino Niagara.
The
shirt reads, "Life is simple. Eat. Sleep. Gamble." It
is decorated with dice, cards and dollar bills. The bills are
American.
12-09-96
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