בית פורומים חדשות אנש אין בילדער

קאסינאס אין די קעטסקילס

שלום אורח. באפשרותך להתחבר או להירשם
הצג 15 הודעות בעמוד הוסף לדף האישי  דווח למנהל שלח לחבר
נשלח ב-28/3/2004 20:21 לינק ישיר 
קאסינאס אין די קעטסקילס



Casino at Kutscher's could receive final approves by year's end

The first Native American casino to be approved in the Catskills could get its final okays before the end of the year. That is the project of Chuck Miller, the project manager for Caesars Entertainment, which will build the $600 million Mohawk Mountain Casino and Resort for the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe.


Miller: "...blend in
with what exists"

Caesars has progressed over the last four years with well over 65 milestones it accomplished.

Sullivan County legislature Casino Gaming Committee Chairman Jonathan Rouis was impressed after being brief on the progress yesterday. ''I was surprised because I never put all the pieces together, all of the little things and approvals,'' he said. ''To see it all put together and how far and how many things they've done, that part was impressive,'' he said.


The current main building at Kutcher's,
one of the few large resorts still
operating in Sullivan County
The casino-resort will include a hotel, casino, a multitude of restaurants, retail shopping and event location.

Miller said the St. Regis Mohawks want the facilities to have a combination feel for the natural conditions of the Catskills and their own heritage. ''The entire tribe is very sensitive to make sure that they don't do anything less than blend in with what exists,'' he said.

Sixty-six acres of the project will be set aside in trust by the tribe and an additional 118 acres will remain on the local Town of Thompson tax rolls. Much of that land will be used for a parking garage.

הטקסט שלך כאן


תוקן על ידי - ekstein - 28/03/2004 20:21:18



דווח על תוכן פוגעני

מנותק
נשלח ב-28/3/2004 20:24 לינק ישיר 

Comments Being
Accepted on Casino
By Nathan Mayberg
MONTICELLO — Just because 1,800 video lottery terminals are coming to the Monticello Raceway does not mean that Empire Resorts is giving up on a casino adjacent to the 46-year-old complex.
Empire Resorts, which operates the Monticello Raceway, has submitted an environmental impact statement to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which, if approved, would allow the Cayuga Nation to obtain property next to the raceway for a casino operated by Empire Resorts. The casino would still require final approval from the state.
In the report, which is available at the Village of Monticello Clerk's office as well as the Crawford Library, Catskill Development LLC (now a part of Empire) lists its projections for economic and environmental impacts.
Since it is a draft statement, written comments from the public are being accepted through April 2 and will be incorporated into the final statement. Such comments can be sent to Franklin Keel, Director of the Eastern Regional Office of the BIA, 711 Stewarts Ferry Pike, Nashville, TN 37214.
In the beginning of the statement, the company points out that 7.5 percent of the U.S. population lives within 100 miles of the raceway's casino site. Las Vegas, it reads, would need a 350-mile radius to equal the same population.
Furthermore, it says that potential competing casinos such as Foxwoods, Atlantic City and Mohegan Sun do not have the ease of access which the raceway does.
However, the document projects that the casino's daily outtake per video lottery machine (3,000 machines) will be $168 less per day than Mohegan Sun and $35 less per day than Foxwoods. The estimated daily win per table (200 tables) for the casino is $2,350, less than both Las Vegas and Mohegan Sun.
The operating statement estimates total revenue from table games to be $171,550,000 in the first year. Video lottery terminals are expected to return $350,400,000. Food and beverage would bring back $64,350,000.
Based upon their operating statement, the developers would pay $5 million in local taxes during the first year.
That would rise to $5,975,000 in the seventh year, according to the document. New York State would get the lion's share with 25 percent of the VLT revenue, or $672,776,000 over seven years.
The total development is estimated to cost $505 million. The casino would be 214,000 square feet, with a 2,500-car parking garage and a 2,300-car surface parking lot. The construction work alone on the project would create an estimated 2,650 jobs.
The casino itself is expected to employ 3,485 full-time workers. They estimate those jobs will add up to $93 million in the first year. The average annual wage would be $30,700 plus tips.
The casino would also feature a 41,000-square-foot bingo parlor and 12,000-square-foot poker room. A 150-foot skywalk would connect the casino to the raceway.
Empire Resorts projects 6.1 million visitors annually. Peak weekend attendance would be 33,000 per day. Peak weekday attendance would be 20,000.
The Cayuga Nation has the option of purchasing a 1/3 interest in the raceway building.
They also have the option of renewing their contract with Empire Resorts for the operation of the casino after seven years – or they could run it themselves.
The Cayugas and Empire have still not worked out a revenue-sharing deal.
Any such deal would have to be approved by the Indian Gaming Commission, according to Charlie Degliomini, vice president of corporate communications for Empire Resorts.


הטקסט שלך כאן



דדווח על תוכן פוגעני

מנותק
   
בית > פורומים > אקטואליה וחדשות > חדשות אנש אין בילדער > קאסינאס אין די קעטסקילס
מנהל לחץ כאן לנעילת האשכול
הוסף לעמוד האישי  דווח למנהל שלח לחבר

bholext