"No decision has yet been made since there is still a state of emergency, a state evacuation order and a curfew in place," Tony Rodio, president of the CANJ - which represents the dozen Atlantic City casinos - said Tuesday after a 3:30 p.m. conference call among casino executives and the head of the state Division of Gaming Enforcement.
"Damage to the casino properties was nothing major. You had minor things and debris," said Rodio, who is also chief executive officer of the Tropicana Casino Resort. "Atlantic City, all things considered, fared fairly well when put in context of the communities that were really hit that are north and south of us."
Rodio said even the piece of the Boardwalk that was completely toppled was "near the Inlet area and nowhere near the casinos." "Our bigger concern is the infrastructure damage in and around the casinos that will make it hard on customers going in and out," he said.
Rodio cited water-filled access roads and poles and signage that were down, among other things, that will impede travel in and out of the casinos. "Emergency crews are out assessing the damage," said Rodio, "so we're trying to keep the number of vehicles on the roads to a minimum so they can do their job."
Joe Lupo, executive vice president of operations for the Borgata, said the Borgata suffered minimal damage, albeit a few broken windows. "We are ready to reopen as soon as we get the word," Lupo said. "The key will be getting all of our employees back to work. It will be a process."
Governor Christie ordered the suspension of all gaming activity in Atlantic City by 3 p.m. last Sunday and ordered all 12 casinos to close by 4 p.m. that day. The major arteries leading to the seaside resort - the Atlantic City Expressway and the Garden State Parkway, were closed Sunday. Both were reopened Tuesday afternoon.
Rodio estimated earlier that the financial hit to the 12 Shore casinos - already reeling from gambling competition from Pennsylvania and other nearby states - would be about us$ 5 million collectively per day they were closed. But he seemed to back away from making any financial predictions on Tuesday.