GOVERNOR PATRICK ADMITS CASINO BILL DEFEAT LIKELY
21 March 2008
Blames "House leadership" for negativity regarding
possible Massachusetts land casinos
Gov. Deval Patrick conceded after hearings in Boston
this week that his plan to build three resort-style
casinos in Massachusetts is heading for likely defeat in
the Legislature, blaming "undue pressure from House
leadership."
But Patrick, in his second year as governor, indicated
he isn't giving up on the idea, saying he's still
looking for ways to make the bill stronger.
"I have no illusions about the plans in the House for
this legislation," he said Tuesday at a packed
legislative hearing. "I'm simply asking that an open
debate begin, rather than end, today."
The hearing could determine the fate of Patrick's bill
for the current legislative session. Patrick says
casinos would generate new jobs and revenue. Critics
warn the proposal exaggerates the economic benefits and
would bring increased crime and even worsen the
foreclosure crisis if gambling addicts spend their
mortgage payments on slot machines.
If the committee releases the bill with a recommendation
that lawmakers reject it, it could come up for a vote as
early as Thursday. House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi has
pressed lawmakers to kill the bill, saying casinos would
"absolutely cause human damage on a grand scale."
Patrick has said the casinos would create tens of
thousands of construction jobs and 20 000 full-time
permanent jobs and bring in $200 million in fees per
license plus an estimated $400 million a year in new
revenues.
"Casinos in Massachusetts will be neither a cure-all for
all of our fiscal needs nor an end of civilization as we
know it," he said to an overflowing crowd of mostly
casino supporters in Gardner Auditorium.
Earlier in the day, DiMasi told a Greater Boston Chamber
of Commerce breakfast he could not support the
governor's plan because it would ultimately harm
residents. "We will absolutely and no question have
increased bankruptcies, foreclosures, divorce, broken
families, increased property crimes, domestic violence
and on and on and on," DiMasi said. "The cost of
cleaning up the human devastation brought by casino
gambling is too great."
DiMasi said he has seen strong public opposition to
Patrick's plan, but those voices have not been heard as
prominently as advocates.
"After six months of debate on this bill, I believe the
evidence is not there, the case has not been made and
time is running out," DiMasi said. "Right now, my answer
is no."
A long list of supporters and opponents signed up with
the state's Joint Committee on Economic Development to
testify during the public hearing, which began at 10
a.m. and stretched into the afternoon. They included
clergy members, environmentalists, online poker players
and dozens of union backers.
Committee co-chairman Rep. Daniel Bosley, one of the
fiercest critics of casino gambling, warned that
allowing three casinos could open up a Pandora's Box of
trouble. He pointed to the state Lottery - which began
with a single daily number and grew into dozens of
scratch tickets, Megabucks, Mega Millions and Keno - and
said the state could quickly become just as addicted to
casino money.
"The Lottery should be a cautionary tale," said the
North Adams Democrat. "We love the revenues, but we hate
how we get them."
Rep. Sarah Peake, D-Provincetown warned that the pull of
the casinos could end up hurting some of the state's
traditional tourist attractions, particularly in her
Cape Cod district. "It will be good for tourism around
the resort casinos, but it will be bad for other parts
of the state," said Peake, who also owns a bed and
breakfast.
Before the hearing, hundreds of casino supporters
rallied on the Boston Common to urge lawmakers to
support Patrick's plan. Many of the union members at the
rally wore hard hats and carried signs saying "Casinos
equal 20,000 jobs for Massachusetts and I need one of
them."
Robert Haynes, Massachusetts president of the AFL-CIO
union, urged his members to attend the hearing and push
their state lawmakers to back Patrick's proposal. "I
want to know which legislator is going to deny you a
job, who's going to pay your mortgage when you can't
pay, who's going to leave 20,000 workers in an
unemployment line," Haynes said.
Online Casino News courtesy of
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