New York voters bet big Tuesday on casino gambling as an economic
energy shot, agreeing to let seven Las Vegas-style gaming palaces be built
around the state, including eventually in New York City.
In a measure that became a referendum on the job-creating
potential and social price of gambling, a constitutional amendment allowing the
casinos was approved 57 percent to 43 percent, with 60 percent of the vote
counted.
The vote was a major win for Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who proposed
casinos as a way to aid the long-distressed upstate economy. The first four
casinos would be built upstate, at sites to be chosen by developers. A New York
City casino would be built in seven years and possibly more could be built in
the suburbs, although some casino operators say the law could allow that
sooner.
But while Cuomo hailed the measure as a way to generate jobs
and tax revenue — his administration even reworded the ballot language to
emphasize those disputed benefits — critics from progressive good-government
groups to the state Conservative Party and the state’s Roman Catholic bishops
warned that the governor’s projections were inflated and the social cost to
families and communities would be profound.
The Democratic governor secured broad support among
organizations that would get a piece of the gambling revenue, including businesses
hoping for spinoff effects and unions that would benefit from construction and
more school aid. Cuomo framed the referendum not as a question on gambling, but
as a way to capture what he said is $1.2 billion a year in current gambling
revenue that New Yorkers now spend at casinos elsewhere, including Connecticut,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Canada.
“We are putting New York state in a position to have those
dollars spent here in our communities, which will benefit our local economies
and tourism industries, as well as support education and property tax relief,”
Cuomo said.
Cuomo’s budget office says the state would take in $430
million in new casino revenue, with $238 million for education, in a repeat of
the strategy that approved lottery games. The rest would go to communities near
casinos to compensate for public safety and social costs and for tax reduction.
The issue will now go to Cuomo’s Gaming Commission, which
will work with proposals from casino operators. They will choose locations for
what are planned to be resort destinations with hotels and convention space.
One would be in the Southern Tier near Binghamton, two in the Catskills and
Mid-Hudson Valley region, and another in the Saratoga Springs-Albany area.
Tuesday’s referendum hit New Yorkers just as public
sentiment started to favor casinos after years of being split over the issue.
An October Siena College poll found the Cuomo
administration’s rosy rewording of the referendum — to promise jobs, tax relief
and school aid — worked. The rewrite pushed support to 55 percent.
The state Board of Elections also took the unusual step of
moving the referendum from last position to the top of the ballot, a more
advantageous spot for constitutional questions put to voters.
An organized and well-funded campaign helped secure the
vote. Cuomo had provided guarantees of exclusive gambling territory to Indian
tribes that operate five casinos under federal law and other agreements to
sideline operators of video slot machine centers at race tracks.
That sidelined the big money that was expected to counter
supporters’ TV ad blitz. One pro-casino, statewide spot financed by the NY Jobs
Now Committee featured a hard-hatted everyman, with a script saying the
proposal “would start to bring that money back to New York and create over
10,000 good-paying new jobs in New York state.”
Critics criticized the referendum’s unusually rosy, one-side
view of casinos.
In an analysis called “A Sucker’s Bet,” the nonpartisan
Empire Center for Public Policy found that even using Cuomo’s numbers, the
benefit of casinos would be minimal. The center’s E.J. McMahon says the
measure, at best, would improve upstate private-sector employment by about 0.4
of 1 percent and boost state school aid by just 1 percent.
State Conservative Party Chairman Michael Long called the
casino effort “the biggest hoax ever perpetrated on the taxpayers of the state
of New York,” while The New York Times called the rewording “advocacy, pure and
simple.”
Brooklyn lawyer Eric Snyder unsuccessfully challenged the
working in court. The state Board of Elections won on a technicality that
Snyder didn’t file his lawsuit by the Aug. 19 deadline, although the state
didn’t post the rewritten wording until Aug. 21. Powerful Republican Sen. John
DeFrancisco is pushing a bill to prohibit rewording.
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