By
Patrick Crowley
The Cincinnati Enquirer
At River Downs,
gamblers place bets on simulcast racing with pari-mutuel
clerks. (Patrick Reddy photo) | ZOOM
| |
By
this time next year, horse-racing tracks in Anderson Township
and Warren County could be full-scale "racinos," with video
slot machine gambling flanking live and simulcast betting on
the horses.
Tuesday night, Ohio legislators hammered out a Republican
budget proposal that could ask voters to choose between paying
an extra 1-cent on the dollar sales tax - or legalizing video
slots at tracks.
The proposal, which could be passed by the House today,
approves a temporary increase in the state sales tax and puts
racetrack casino gambling on the November ballot.
"The campaign will be either/or," said Rep. Jim Trakas of
Independence, the fifth-ranked Republican in the House.
"People will understand their alternative is higher taxes or
allowing people who gamble to pay for it."
As Ohio grapples with the worst budget crisis in more than
50 years, legalized gambling may have its best chance ever to
pass this year.
An unprecedented group of factors has created a strange
alliance of big gambling, little horse tracks and strapped
social services groups pushing for an issue that Ohio
lawmakers have battled to a standoff for years.
Ohio faces a $4 billion to $5 billion budget deficit over
the next two years and is nearly surrounded by three states
that allow casino gambling.
Powerful forces sense an opening.
Big gaming money, owners of sagging horse tracks, social
service groups desperate to avoid big program cuts, and
gambling opponents including religious groups are all in the
fight. But, after today's House vote, it may be up to the
voters in the November general election to decide whether Ohio
wants to take the up to $900 million a year that video slots
could generate.
Big gaming money pours in
According to Ohio Citizen Action, a nonpartisan
political watchdog group, Ohio candidates and political
parties have received more than $1 million from the gambling
industry and others pushing gaming.
Big money is flowing in from out of state and into the
hands of the best lobbyists in the business. Las Vegas casino
developer Stephen Wynncontributed $49,000 from 1999 to 2001 to
the Ohio House Republican Campaign Committee.
The chairman of Wynn Resorts, Wynn is developing the $1.85
billion Le Reve casino and resort in Las Vegas and previously
developed six major casinos in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and
Mississippi, including The Mirage and Bellagio.
Another Las Vegas gaming mogul, Stanley Fulton, gave
$500,000 to the GOP. Fulton is the former chairman of Anchor
Gaming, a maker of gaming machines and systems, and the owner
of Sunland Park Racetrack and Casino, a New Mexico racino.
MTR Gaming Group, the publicly traded operator of the
Mountaineer Race Track & Gaming Resort in Chester, W.Va.,
is merging with Scioto Downs south of Columbus, one of the
tracks pushing for racinos in Ohio.
Wynn, Fulton and MTR all refused comment for this article.
But, in a Christmas Eve press release announcing the
merger, MTR president and CEO Edson Arneault said the purchase
of Scioto Downs and the planned construction of a horse track
in Erie, Pa., "would hedge our market position in the event of
enhanced gaming legislation in either state."
Horse tracks seek salvation
The owners of Ohio's seven horse-racing tracks,
including River Downs in Anderson Township and Lebanon Raceway
in Warren County, are poised to add casinos. Four racinos
already operate in West Virginia. Backers here say seven
racinos in Ohio could bring in $500 million to $900 million a
year.
Six states in all have racinos, and other states -
including Pennsylvania, New York and Kentucky - are
considering them.
Horse interests also gave heavily to legislative
re-election funds all over Ohio: The Horsemen's Benevolent
& Protective Association gave $152,550. The Ohio Harness
Horsemen's Association gave $111,650. Northland Park, a horse
track near Cleveland privately owned by the Milstein family of
Cleveland, gave $47,568.
To make their case in Columbus, the tracks have formed an
association and hired a lobbyist, Anderson Township's Scott
Borgemenke, a former state GOP operative who ran the powerful
Cincinnati Business Committee and once served as top policy
advisor to Gov. Bob Taft.
"This is the first time a coalition of tracks and horsemen
have come together, working with one voice and with one
message," Borgemenke said. "We'll have to wait for some kind
of (gambling) bill to move, but we believe as there is more
talk about budget cuts or tax increases people are going to
start looking at alternate revenue sources."
"I think I've heard from every major lobbying firm around
town," said Ohio Senate President Doug White, R-Manchester.
"All the lobbyists are getting turned loose. (The pro-gaming
forces) are getting the best horses lined up and will have a
very strong approach to our members. It will be a very intense
discussion."
Teachers to flower lovers
For the first time, open supporters of gaming
may include college presidents, doctors, teachers, social
workers and the arts community. These groups are feeling the
direct effect of cuts due to the budget crunch.
"Everybody that's involved with the budget is now getting
involved," said Sen. Lou Blessing, R-Colerain Township, a
longtime Statehouse advocate of expanded gambling.
"Universities, schools, Medicaid people - anybody involved
with funding is pulling their hair out why we are not doing
something about this (budget) problem.
"Everybody involved in the budget is now getting involved."
"This is lobbying 2003," said Turfway Park president Bob
Elliston, adding the $2 billion Kentucky horse-racing industry
would be back pushing its own racino bill again next year in
that state. "You create some grassroots momentum amongst a
variety of groups and constituencies that could benefit from a
bill that brings new money into the state."
The Republican plan discussed Monday would give Ohio local
governments back the $1.3 billion in budget funds originally
slated for a cut.
These are cuts that caused statewide outcry, including
Cincinnati Mayor Charlie Luken's stated concern last week that
the city would have to close Krohn Conservatory and many
libraries.
"With a projected deficit of $4 billion to $5 billion, I
don't see how we can do the next operating budget for (2004
and 2005) without seriously considering gambling," said Sen.
Mark Mallory, D-Cincinnati. "Because we are either going to
have huge cuts in services or massive tax increases, so I
think it would be to everybody's benefit to really look at"
allowing racetracks to offer video lottery terminals.
Governor opposed
The measure put forward for a House vote today
must still go to the Senate, which can revise it.
And, the current Republican proposal must still be passed
by Taft, who opposes gambling.
But even Taft, who has promised to veto legislation
legalizing gambling, predicts Ohio's voters would ultimately
decide the issue.
"I remain opposed to (gambling). It's not the responsible
way to balance the budget," Taft said during a March 5 news
conference announcing a $140 million funding cut to Ohio's
public schools.
"It's bad social policy ... (but) it will definitely go to
the ballot."
Taft and others opposed to gambling must certainly find
solace in the issue's history on the ballot. It lost in 1990
and again in 1996. The last defeat was not even close.
An initiative that would have allowed casinos in four urban
areas, including Cincinnati, was defeated by more than 1
million votes and failed to win in any of Ohio's 88 counties.
"There are going to be (several) plays to legalize some
form of gambling, and we are going to fight them all," said
David Zanotti, president of the Ohio Roundtable in Columbus, a
conservative public policy group.
Religious groups are also opposed.
"We will oppose gambling whatever form it is in," said Tom
Smith, director of public policy for the Ohio Council of
Churches, which represents more than 6,000 congregations
across the state that have nearly 2.5 million members.
"It's very clear the citizens of Ohio are against
casino-style gambling," said the Rev. John Edgar of the Ohio
Methodist Conference, which led the opposition to casinos in
1996. "It's a waste of money and energy to put it back on the
ballot. I'm confident we would win even if those who want to
expand gambling spent millions on a campaign."
Issue to the ballot?
Despite the gathering "perfect storm" of
factors, not everyone in Columbus is convinced legalized
gambling can win in the Statehouse.
"A lot of people think (video terminals) are the solution
to our budget problems," said Sen. Leigh Herington, D-Ravenna.
"I think it is unlikely it is going to happen ... because I
don't think there is enough support for it."
But many lawmakers say it's a matter of pragmatism - and
simple economic geography.
"Gambling is an option we need to put back on the table,"
said Rep. Bill Seitz, R-Green Township. "If I step one foot
out of my district I'll be in Indiana and I'll be run over by
the volume of automobiles traveling to Lawrenceburg and points
west to those casinos.
"That is money leaving Ohio that does not come back to
Ohio."
E-mail pcrowley@enquirer.com
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