Bill introduced to ease requirements

Atlantic City to go more boutique

(US).- New Jersey’s lawmakers have introduced bill S366 which would rework a 2011 law for boutique casinos that are smaller and less costly. The new law would allow these to have 200 hotel rooms and reside in existing buildings.
2014-12-11
Reading time 1:18 min
(US).- New Jersey’s lawmakers have introduced bill S366 which would rework a 2011 law for boutique casinos that are smaller and less costly. The new law would allow these to have 200 hotel rooms and reside in existing buildings.

The new bill is sponsored by state Senate President Stephen Sweeney, who last week introduced a series of measures designed to help stabilize tax bills for the city’s eight surviving casinos and help Atlantic City pay down its municipal debt.

A prior bill required projects to eventually expand to 500 hotel rooms and be in a newly constructed building.

New Jersey isn’t giving up on its effort to attract new, smaller casinos to Atlantic City. The state Legislature plans to water down the requirements of a 2011 law designed to attract developers willing to build up to two new, smaller and less costly casinos with as few as 200 hotel rooms.

A bill to be debated Thursday by a state Senate committee would remove the requirements that they be new construction and that one of the projects eventually expands to 500 rooms. The new bill would let casinos be established in existing buildings.

No one has built a new casinos since Governor Chris Christie signed the bill in January 2011. Florida’s Seminole Indians, through their Hard Rock International franchise, proposed one but pulled out soon afterward.

Four of Atlantic City’s 12 casinos have closed this year; a fifth, Trump Taj Mahal, is scheduled to join them on Dec. 20. So far, 8,000 casino workers have lost their jobs in 2014.

The boutique casino plan was seen as a way to entice developers into the market at a much lower price than the US$ 1.5 billion to US$ 2 billion the city’s higher-end casinos cost to build. Revel, which closed in September less than two years opening its doors, cost US$ 2.4 billion and never turned a profit.

The most successful of the city’s 11 casinos have 2,000 rooms or more.

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