Search
Close this search box.

Search Results for: monticello raceway casino

Empire Resorts Closing Casino in Monticello, New York

Officials say the casino operations at New York’s Monticello Casino and Raceway will soon close, but the raceway will remain open. According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Tuesday, Empire Resorts Inc. will close its electronic gaming operations at the track around April 23. The Times Herald Record reports about 40 employees will remain at the harness racing track, while the racino’s 160 other employees can take jobs at the nearby Resorts World Catskills casino. Employees will also be offered severance packages. The company says the goal for the closure is to avoid cannibalizing revenues from Resorts World Catskills and to improve overall earnings. Empire Resorts has been averaging losses of $10 million per month since opening the new casino last February. (AP)

Read More »

Catskills Hang Hopes Of Revival On New Casino

Residents of this faded corner of the New York’s Catskills Mountains fist-pumped, cheered and hugged as they closed in on landing a casino. Finally. The recommendation to license a casino in the heart of the once-bustling “Borscht Belt” resort region will test the premise that blackjack and craps can breathe new life in an old summer haven known in its heyday for families, mostly Jewish, arriving packed in station wagons to enjoy fast-talking comedians and other entertainment, a la “Dirty Dancing.” New York’s Gaming Facility Location Board on Wednesday chose a site here in Sullivan County as well ones in Schenectady and Seneca counties. Each of the three upstate New York areas was chosen in part because they are economically distressed. But the win was especially sweet in this lake-rich region northwest of New York City, where big hotels and bungalows fell into decline decades ago. “This means rebirth. This means new life,” said Randy Resnick. “Basically, it’s our shot. This is our time.” Resnick, a high-profile local casino advocate, invited dozens to watch the board’s decision on a large-screen TV at his Bernie’s Holiday Restaurant in Thompson. They gave a reserved cheer at the news that no competing casino licenses would be issued in neighboring Orange County, which is closer to New York City, and let loose when the board said they would choose the Montreign Resort Casino to be built in Thompson on the grounds of the old Concord hotel. “I’ve been waiting to hear those words for a long, long time,” said Steve Levine, a 60-year-old resident who remembers the glory days. The $630 million project will come with an 18-story hotel, meeting spaces and an indoor waterpark. Its developer, Empire Resorts, operates through a subsidiary, the nearby Monticello Casino & Raceway. Also chosen Wednesday: — The Rivers Casino & Resort at Mohawk Harbor in the city of Schenectady will be part of a larger redevelopment effort at a formerly blighted riverfront site. The $300 million development will include a hotel, a high-end steakhouse and more than 1,100 slot machines. — Lago Resort & Casino, a $425 million project in the Finger Lakes town of Tyre in Seneca County, will include 2,000 slot machines. It was the largest contender in the Finger Lakes-Southern Tier region. Board Chairman Kevin Law noted that the Orange County projects faced environmental and financial uncertainties and would have taken revenue from other gambling facilities. “We did take a look at what was happening in the entire industry,” he said. “At the end of the day we had to do what made financial sense.” Casinos are established in neighboring Connecticut, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and two more have been approved in Massachusetts, along with a slots parlor. With so much regional competition, some fear the Catskills struck a jackpot with a lot of coins scooped out already. Keith Foley, an analyst and senior vice president for Moody’s Investors Service, said even though the Monticello area has a history in tourism, market saturation is a concern now. “Are all of the sudden people going to just say, ‘Oh wow, we can go to Monticello!’? I don’t know,” he said. “I wouldn’t suggest it’s not going to be successful to some degree, but it’s definitely not as certain as it was in the old days

Read More »

Sullivan County: Monticello Sees Casino As A Good Bet

Developers of a proposed Catskills casino say they have received a resolution of support from local lawmakers. Monticello Raceway Management Inc. made the announcement Wednesday, days after state regulators said bidders for the four upstate casino licenses must submit a resolution approved by the local legislative body indicating its support. The Monticello group wants to build a $750 million casino resort where the old Concord Hotel once stood, about 90 miles northwest of New York City. Developers say the Town of Thompson Board voted in favor of supporting the application Tuesday night. Casino applications need to be in by June 30 and selections are due in the fall. Voters statewide approved a New York constitutional amendment in November to allow Las Vegas-style casinos beyond Indian land. (AP)

Read More »

Developers To Detail Proposal For Catskills Casino

Developers who hope to build a $750 million casino resort on the site of an old Catskills hotel say the project would create thousands of jobs. Kansas City, Mo.-based EPR Properties and the operators of the Monticello Casino and Raceway on Thursday are unveiling details of their plans for the site of the old Concord Hotel, which is in Sullivan County about 90 miles northwest of New York City. They will be among the applicants for one of four casino licenses state regulators will grant this year in upstate New York. Voters in November passed a state constitutional amendment allowing the expansion of Las Vegas-style casinos beyond Indian-owned land. Developers claim that the resort will employ 2,200 full- and part-time workers. They’ll call the hotel Adelaar, which is the Dutch word for eagle. (AP)

Read More »

Sullivan County Rally To Get Out The Vote For Casino Gaming

A large turnout of Sullivan County residents, public officials, business leaders and union labor conducted the first effort to educate New York residents about the upcoming vote on the November ballot to legalize casino gaming. Three areas of the state, including the Catskills, would vie for four casinos with one region getting two and the others, one each. The “Get Out the Vote” rally held Wednesday night at The Sullivan Hotel in Rock Hill heard from Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther (D, Forestburgh), who said the issue has been on the burner for some four decades. Casinos with electronic games are currently allowed and Monticello Raceway includes that kind of gaming. The owners plan to build a new harness racetrack, casino and resort along with their partner – EPR Properties – at the former Concord Hotel site in nearby Kiamesha Lake. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Ellenville: Borscht Belt Hopes For Casino At Old Hotel

Casino dreams in this corner of the Catskills focus on an empty hotel that had its heyday when families came here in station wagons for shuffleboard, swimming, swanky lounge singers and all-you-can-eat meals. A proposal to spend at least $400 million on a destination resort with gambling, golf, a long water slide and more at the old Nevele resort 70 miles north of New York City is supported by people in this bucolic but struggling area who feel it could recapture some of the tourist traffic from the Borscht Belt era. But in gambling terms, the Nevele proposal is a bit like anteing up before the dealer picks up the deck. New Yorkers will not vote on whether to expand casino gambling for at least five months and it’s still not clear where casinos would go if voters approve expansion. The early maneuverings in the Catskills show the complexities in figuring out where to place casinos and how some areas look to gambling as an economic savior. “It’s time for the Nevele to come back and put us on the map again,” said Armando Rodriguez, owner of Arod’s Barber Shop in Ellenville, a hardscrabble village near the old resort. The 110-year-old Nevele was one of the big hotels of the Catskills region with swimming, skiing, a big room for comedians and crooners, and—most distinctively—a 9-story round tower of rooms. President Lyndon B. Johnson stayed there one night for a hospital dedication. It closed in 2009 after accumulating about $21 million in debt. The sprawling complex sits empty today with moss growing in the ski lodge and bits of the ceiling sprinkling the carpet in LBJ’s old suite. An investment group bought the resort from receivership last year for about $2 million. Their plans are big—a 450-room hotel and casino complex with enough amenities to make it a destination resort. Nevele Investors’ Michael Treanor recently stood atop the tower to point out the buildings that would be knocked down and which defining features—like the tower and the “Mad Men”-era lobby—would be saved. “We want people to walk in and say, ‘Hey, this is the Nevele!” he said during the tour. But it’s conditional: Treanor said it can happen only if casino gambling is approved and they are in the first wave of licenses granted in the Catskills region. New York voters could consider an amendment to the state constitution as early as November that would allow Las Vegas-style casinos beyond tribal land. But also crucial is how Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo and state lawmakers decide to expand gambling. Cuomo wants to start with three casinos upstate, with one possible in the Catskills region. He is negotiating with Senate Republicans who have proposed that three of five upstate casinos be located in the region but only one in the first year. Treanor said neither proposal would work for the Nevele. Like many people in Albany and the Catskills, Treanor believes the regional favorite for a casino is the old Concord Hotel about 20 miles west, near Monticello. Veteran developers there have received local approvals for a large destination resort that would incorporate Empire Resorts’ nearby Monticello Casino and Raceway’s track and video slots. Concord developers would not respond to calls seeking comment, but they have assured local officials they will build regardless

Read More »

Monticello Raceway Throws The Dice On Catskills Expansion

The Department of Interior’s rejection late last week of a controversial proposal for a megacasino in the Catskill Mountains outside New York was a big setback for the Wisconsin Indian tribe hoping to develop it. But it was good news for a racetrack owner in the area that has been quietly planning a major expansion. Empire Resorts Inc., which owns and operates the Monticello Casino & Raceway about 90 miles from New York, is asking state legislators for help in financing a $400 million upgrade of its existing harness-racing facility. Under the phased plan, disclosed last week in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Empire ultimately would add three hotels, two restaurants and a spa, renovate its existing gambling area and add a room to show simulcast races. The company added slots and other electronic gambling machines in 2004 but has long wanted to develop table gambling as well. Empire’s move to capitalize on the misfortune of the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans is the latest twist in the decades-long saga of Indian tribes and others trying to develop casino gambling in the Catskills, a region seeking to rebuild its faded reputation as a prime summer-getaway destination for New Yorkers. The competition has involved international intrigue, numerous Indian tribes and government agencies, and byzantine changes in alliances. But the Catskills area has had little to show for the alliances and deals that were announced and fell apart. Meanwhile, gambling choices expanded for the New York City market in Connecticut, Atlantic City, N.J., and Pennsylvania. Most recently, Malaysia’s Genting Bhd. began construction of the first legal slots in New York City at the Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens. (Source: WSJ)

Read More »

Tribe’s Plan For Catskill Casino, Backed By Paterson, Faces Rejection In Washington

A proposed Native American casino on 333 acres in the Catskills is likely to be rejected by federal authorities next week, only three months after Gov. David A. Paterson approved the $560 million project in the waning days of his administration. The former governor signed agreements with the Stockbridge-Munsees, a tribe based in Wisconsin with roots in New York, in November to permit a Las Vegas-style casino near Monticello, about 90 miles from New York City, and to settle the tribe’s land claim to 23,000 acres in upstate Madison County. The casino seemed to be on a fast track. Having negotiated with the Interior and Justice Departments for more than a year before signing the deals, the tribe expected to get the necessary federal approvals this month. But in January, according to the tribe, federal officials suddenly expressed misgivings about the viability of the tribe’s land claim and the ability of the Interior Department to approve it without Congressional action, as the tribe wanted. In a Jan. 31 letter to the department, a lawyer for the tribe acknowledged that department officials had told him it was “highly unlikely” the officials would change their views. The Interior Department has done “an about-face,” said Kimberly Vele, president of the Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohicans. If the agreements are rejected, Ms. Vele said, the tribe will resume its fight for the land in Madison County. “We’ll go back to fighting it out in the court system, which is an unfortunate consequence,” she said. “I’m confident that the tribe has a very good case.” Nedra Darling, a spokeswoman for the department’s Bureau of Indian Affairs, said only, “The Department of the Interior is in the process of reviewing the compact.” The department must approve or disapprove the agreements by Feb. 18. Under federal law, the agreements would effectively be approved if the department took no action by then. But recently, the department has been reluctant to approve casinos far from a tribe’s home base. Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, and local officials have supported the casino project, which they say would create jobs and bring visitors to an economically depressed area. But the project has come under fierce criticism from some legislators and rival gambling operators, who have thousands of electronic slot machines at nine racetracks in the state. The Oneida tribe, which operates the Turning Stone casino near Syracuse, also objected to allowing what it called an out-of-state tribe to set up a casino in New York. Last week, some owners of the slot parlors at the tracks, known as racinos, filed a lawsuit in State Supreme Court in Albany aimed at blocking the Stockbridge-Munsees from building the casino. At the moment when the state is facing a $10 billion deficit and thousands of layoffs, the racinos assert that a Stockbridge-Munsee casino would result in the loss of 1,000 jobs at racinos and of $400 million a year in slot revenue that now flows to the state. They say the Catskill casino, with slot machines as well as roulette, blackjack and poker tables, would almost certainly wipe out the nearby racino at Monticello Raceway and lure customers from the Yonkers, Saratoga and soon-to-open Aqueduct racinos. Officials at the racinos, particularly Yonkers and Aqueduct, are also worried about the possibility that

Read More »

Now Closer Than Ever To A Sullivan County Casino

Monticello, NY – It has taken decades to get this far, and there are still no guarantees that a casino will go up in Sullivan County.  But, key supporters, including Gov. David Paterson, U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer, and Rep. Maurice Hinchey, who gathered Monday for the signing of an historic compact with the Stockbridge Munsees, all had one assessment. “It is the closest we’ve come,” said Schumer. The senator noted there are key components of what is in place this time that add up to what he called “a novel solution.” “Put together by all the parties and led by the governor, that allows this casino to gain federal approval without overturning past precedent.” The last deal thought to be ‘close’ was scuttled by Bush era Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne.  That won’t be an obstacle, now, said Schumer.  He, and Hinchey, both pledged to lean hard on the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior, and current Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, to let this happen. Congressional approval is not needed, proclaimed Schumer.   Earlier Monday, in the Tribal Council offices in Madison County, Paterson and Stockbridge-Munsee Community, Band of Mohicans, Tribal Chief Kimberly Vele, signed an agreement settling land claim, dating back two centuries. Later, in Monticello, both signed the compact that Vele said is a huge step toward a long-standing goal. “We need all of you to make sure that Washington knows that our settlement will lead to the economic revitalization of the Catskills, will provide thousands of jobs in Sullivan County and millions of dollars in revenue to the state and local government.” The estimate is 3,000 construction jobs and 4,000 permanent jobs. That latter number, presumably, would include casino employees, and people who find work in related businesses dependent on the casino. Several construction industry representatives were in the packed Sullivan County Legislative Chambers for the signing. Schumer and Paterson addressed concerns raised by Monticello Casino and Raceway.  Paterson noted that that long-time facility recently announced its own $100 million enhancement. “We will now help them with their expansion in this difficult period, such that they will be able to flourish as well.” Schumer noted that Monticello is a different type of operation, and that competition could in the end help both.  Sullivan County, he said, would become an attractive desination capturing some of the patronage now going to Atlantic City, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. Sullivan County officials are generally onboard with the prospect for a casino, but, not everyone is pleased.  Dick Riseling, activist and co-founder of the Sullivan Alliance for Sustainable Development, believes a casino is far less a certainty than supporters suggest. “We have a very significant chance to fight it.  We’re going to stop it.  I don’t think for a minute this is going to happen.  I think there are … I’m certain there are tens of thousands of people in Sullivan County who are not going to let this happen.” Riseling contends there are an unheard 60 to 70 percent of Sullivan County residents who want no part of a casino. Clearly not the sentiment in the room Monday.  The biggest cheers went to long-time casino cheerleader, Town of Thompson Supervisor Tony Cellini, who referenced Monticello High School’s first football season in 75 years … noting it was a successful season. “To carry

Read More »

Monticello: Empire Resorts Ends Deal With Concord Hotel

Monticello, NY – Empire Resorts, the company that owns Monticello Casino and Raceway, has termined its agreement to develop a casino and racetracy at the site of the former Concord Hotel in nearby Kiamesha Lake. Westchester developer Louis Cappelli leveled the former hotel building and had plans to build a new resort and entertainment destination on the site. Empire Resorts continues to seek federal approval to build a full casino on 29 acres of property it owns adjacent to its Monticello facility and continues to pursue agreements with Native American tribes. Despite increrased competition from the video lottery terminal operation at Yonkers Raceway and two casinos in nearby Pennsylvania, the latest financial filing by the company is encouraging. Empire Resorts reported its net revenues increased approximately $1.6 million — five percent — for the six months ended June 30, 2010 compared to the same period last year. Revenue from video gaming increased by about $1.3 million. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

State Senate Takes First Step Toward Legalizing Full Casinos in Sullivan County

The State Senate has passed legislation allowing full gaming casinos in Sullivan County. Two would be authorized for development there. This is but step one. The Assembly must also approve the bill and that house has not even introduced a companion at this point. If it were to pass in that house, it must face a state constitutional amendment, which means a second consecutive state legislature would have to approve it before it would go to a vote of state residents. People within Sullivan would then have to weigh in on it with their approval, for casinos to move forward. Senator John Bonacic, in whose district Sullivan County lies, voted for the bill, but noted there are many more hurdles that must be jumped before any casinos would be built. As it stands now, Monticello Casino and Raceway has only video lottery machines and any changes for a full casino, at the moment, rests with the US Department of the Interior, which would have to reverse a Bush administration order disallowing off-reservation Native American casinos. The newly approved Senate bill would allow casinos also in Saratoga, Tioga and Vernon Downs. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Mohawk Tribe Votes Against Pursuing Catskills Casino

Monticello, NY – If Empire Resorts wants to continue its efforts to develop a Native American casino at Monticello Gaming and Raceway, it will have to find a new partner. The St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Saturday conducted a vote of its community members and the majority turned thumbs down on continuing with the off-reservation gaming project. The vote among its members was 178 “no” and 140 “yes”. The next step for the tribe would have been to seek the reversal of the so-called Kempthorne Policy, which, under the Bush Administration, prohibited the St. Regis Tribe from building an off-reservation casino in Sullivan County. Sullivan County Partnership President Timothy McCausland Monday said while he is disappointed that the tribe has decided not to pursue the project, he can respect their process. “I hope that the folks at the track can identify another partner that can come forward and become part of the tremendous support that the county, the Town of Thompson and us here at the Partnership have for casino gaming,” he said. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Monticello ‘Gambling Dream’ Fighting Long Odds

Five years ago Tuesday, the racino at Monticello Raceway opened with as much flair as the rainbow-colored fountains that flowed in the track’s Borscht Belt heyday. The throngs who ran to the beeping slot machines represented 40 years of Catskill gambling dreams come true, said supporters. The racino was the first step towards the full-fledged savior, a casino. The protestors standing outside said the place that touts itself as “a little Vegas in your backyard” would be the first step on Sullivan County’s road to ruin. It would clog roads and tempt problem gamblers. Today, Monticello Gaming & Raceway is neither savior nor devil. It’s a business fighting for survival. Its daily take per slot is the lowest of New York’s eight racinos — the second-lowest of all 42 casinos and racinos in the Northeast, according to the most recent Gaming Industry Observer’s East Coast Slot Report. Attendance continues to plummet, down 11 percent from last year. It owes creditors $72 million, with $65 million due by the end of next month. It does not have the money. “We do not presently have a source of repayment … and our operations will not provide sufficient cash flow to repay these obligations,” says its most recent government filing. It is, however, actively seeking solutions, including new financing. The factors that were supposed to guarantee the racino’s success in 2004 — proximity to the metropolitan area and the Poconos — are now cited as reasons for its decline, with the Yonkers racino and Poconos casinos taking huge chunks of the Monticello market. Five years after it opened, the racino at Monticello Raceway — under new management this month — is at a crossroads. It’s gambling on a couple of shots in the arm to survive: A new racino, Entertainment City at the old Concord resort, owned by its parent company, Empire Resorts. Video table games, to be installed at all New York racinos, including Yonkers and a future racino at Aqueduct. At stake isn’t just Sullivan’s decades-long gambling dream. The racino employs some 300 workers in a county with one of the state’s highest unemployment rates. It also pays some $1.7 million per year to three municipalities: Monticello, the Town of Thompson and Sullivan County. “It’s just extremely important to us all,” says Thompson Supervisor Tony Cellini. (Source: Times Herald Record)

Read More »

Concord Casino Bill Headed to Governor’s Desk

[MidHudsonNews reports:] The NY State Assembly late Tuesday afternoon gave final legislative approval to a financial package that will pave the way for the resort that will rise out of the ashes of the old Concord Hotel in Kiamesha Lake. The Senate passed the measure sponsored by John Bonacic on Monday and on Tuesday, the Assembly carried Aileen Gunther’s bill. She talked of the many benefits of the involved when the resort, hotel, conference center, harness racetrack and racino are built. “The contribution to education form the VLTs will be at least double and 2,000 new jobs will be created,” she said. “This is a great day for the people of Sullivan County and the Mid-Hudson region.” The partnership group plans to invest $1 billion into the facilities, which will include moving Monticello Gaming and Raceway to the new site. “After 10 years of failure and frustration the champagne cork has finally popped for the Catskills,” said Charles Degliomini, Empire Resorts’ vice president. “After everyone has had a few sips, it’s time to build.” Governor Paterson has promised to sign the incentive bill, which will provide for the group to retain 75 percent of the profits from the video slot machines, up from the current 50 percent.

Read More »

Monticello Raceway Announces Move To Concord Hotel site

Empire Resorts, the company that owns Monticello Gaming and Raceway, and Concord Associates today announced plans to move the gaming and racing facility to a 160-acre tract at the site of the old Concord Hotel in the Town of Thompson. Construction on the $700 million, 1.5 million-square foot facility is expected to begin later this year with a grand opening in 2010. Under the agreement, the parties said they will develop a “world-class gaming and entertainment facility,” which will include a 100,000 square foot gaming area, convention center, hotel, golf, retail stores, restaurants and family entertainment. The gaming floor will be built within the hotel and a 5/8th mile harness racetrack will be developed next to that. Officials of this new venture emphasize that engaging in this deal does not mean Empire Resorts is withdrawing from its plans to build a Native American casino at the present racetrack site with their partner St. Regis Mohawk Tribe. In fact, Empire Resorts’ CEO David Hanlon said they have offered the Tribe the opportunity to invest one-third of Empire’s contribution to the new project. “This could be their first commercial opportunity outside their of their own reservation while waiting for the next year or two until the Kempthorne final decision is reversed by a court,” said Charles Degliomini, Empire vice president. “This is a win across the board for Empire’s shareholders and Sullivan County’s residents,” said Hanlon. “The local economy will get the boost it needs in terms of jobs and this project is expected to enhance the value of the company for our shareholders, who will finally be rewarded for their patience in waiting for the day when we can build a world-class resort and gaming complex in the Catskills.” Concord Associates’ Managing Member Louis Cappelli said the “ambitious project will create thousands of union jobs for the region and the Catskills.” He said the project will create “thousands of jobs throughout the entire upstate economy and bring the former Concord Hotel back to its glory as one of the region’s truly great convention, destination and resort hotels.” (Source: MidHudsonNews.com)

Read More »

Monticello: Mohawks Says Empire Is Abandoning Casino Plans

Empire Resorts, the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe’s Sullivan County casino development partner has notified the Tribe of its intention to abandon the Mohawk’s Catskills casino project at Monticello Raceway – MidHudsonNews reports.The Tribe received a letter from Empire on February 5, 2008 informing the Tribe of their intentions to “shut down” their Monticello Development office and to immediately cease funding of necessary pre-development expenses associated with the Mohawk project. Empire has previously communicated its intent to enter into a joint venture with a competing gaming interest to move the raceway and VLT operations to a different location a few miles from the existing Monticello Racetrack. The St. Regis Mohawk Tribal Council has determined that Empire’s notice constitutes an express breach of its gaming agreements with the Tribe and is committed to aggressively pursuing any and all appropriate legal remedies to protect the interests of the Tribe. On January 5 YWN reported (HERE) that the federal government had rejected plans for two casinos in the Catskill Mountains, saying that the reservations of the two tribes that submitted the plans were too far from where the casinos would be built, in Monticello and in the town of Thompson. The decision was a major setback in the 30-year effort to bring gambling to Sullivan County. One of the proposed casinos, at Monticello Raceway, received the support of Gov. Eliot Spitzer and was expected to attract six million visitors a year, generate 3,000 jobs and provide the state with an estimated $100 million a year. But the plans faced intense opposition……… (Source: MidHudsonNews.com)

Read More »

Sullivan County Casino Plans Denied By Feds

The federal government rejected plans for two casinos in the Catskill Mountains on Friday, saying that the reservations of the two tribes that submitted the plans were too far from where the casinos would be built, in Monticello and in the town of Thompson. The decision was a major setback in the 30-year effort to bring gambling to Sullivan County. One of the proposed casinos, at Monticello Raceway, received the support of Gov. Eliot Spitzer and was expected to attract six million visitors a year, generate 3,000 jobs and provide the state with an estimated $100 million a year. But the plans faced intense opposition from the NRDC and other environmental groups, and required the final approval of Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne. Mr. Kempthorne, who has long opposed Indian casinos on nonreservation land, said in his letters that the casinos would be too far away to offer jobs to tribal residents and that forcing residents to relocate would hurt the reservations. In a statement released Friday night, the NRDC called the decision a major victory and said the casinos would have burdened the Catskills with pollution, traffic congestion and sprawl. Representative Maurice Hinchey, D-NY who has strongly supported the proposed casinos, said proponents of the plans would not give up. “It is clear that the next opportunity for these proposed casinos to move forward and be objectively evaluated will be under a new administration by a different secretary of the interior, who under current law has the final determination in this matter at this time,” he said in a statement. (Source: NY Times)

Read More »

Spitzer Calls On Congress To Push Monticello Casino Decision

The Times Herald Record reports: Gov. Eliot Spitzer is calling for a congressional oversight hearing to force Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne to explain why he has not acted on the St. Regis Mohawk casino in Monticello. (Click HERE for original story.) “The Secretary has had all of the information he needs to reach a decision for months; yet, he continues to let the application languish,” Spitzer wrote in a Sept. 17 letter to Rep. Nick J. Rahall II, chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee. In February, Spitzer OK’d the casino at Monticello Gaming & Raceway. The Mohawks previously cleared the other major hurdle when the Interior Department approved the environmental piece. Kempthorne still must agree to take the land into trust for the proposed $600 million casino. He has put about two dozen other tribes with pending applications for off-reservation casinos, including the Mohawks, on notice that final approval is not guaranteed.

Read More »

Monticello Casino At A Standstill

It’s been five months since NY Govorner Elliott Spitzer gave his approval to build a casino in Monticello, and the project is exactly where it was five months ago. It seemed that everything was ready to go, but still no word from Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne on whether he’ll approve the St. Regis Mohawk casino at Monticello Gaming & Raceway. According to the Times Herald Record, the Bureau of Indian Affairs completed its review more than a month ago. “Governor Spitzer has spoken on several occasions to Secretary Kempthorne, and he’ll continue to press the secretary for his approval,” Spitzer’s spokeswoman, Christine Pritchard, said. “The conversations were substantive in nature, including the governor’s explanation as to why the casino would benefit both the tribe and New York state.” Kempthorne is touring Guam and other American possessions in the Pacific. Spitzer is planning another call when Kempthorne returns this week. “The Tribe has remained confident and optimistic “¦,” the Mohawks said in a statement yesterday. “We are hopeful approval is in fact imminent.”

Read More »

Monticello: Court action stalls casino approval

In a move that will delay any final decision to approve the proposed Monticello Raceway casino, the U.S. government agreed this week that a decision must first be reached on the adequacy of the Interior Department’s assessment of the $500 million casino’s environmental impact on surrounding communities before the department would be allowed to take the land into trust.

Read More »

Monticello Casino one step closer

According to the The Times Herald Record Gov. Eliot Spitzer is close to approving a $600-million Monticello casino, his spokeswoman said. “We are optimistic that there will be something in a number of days,” she said of the governor taking a historic step of approving the St. Regis Mohawk casino at Monticello Gaming and Raceway.

Read More »

Sullivan County: Empire Resorts Wins Thompson Planning Board Approval

The $600 million destination resort project planned by EPR Properties and Empire Resorts Wednesday night won the unanimous approval of the Thompson Town Planning Board. Town Supervisor Anthony Cellini said afterwards that the approval is “monumental,” given the statewide casino gaming referendum to come before the general public in November. “They will have to come in with building plans and things of that nature, but they can start their land clearing,” Cellini said. “It has been a two year process. Between their professional team and the Town of Thompson’s professional team and planning board, they have worked very well together to bring this to fruition.” This project will include hotels, conferencing facilities, a water park, harness racing and gaming. Empire Resorts currently operates Monticello Casino and Raceway nearby and the plans are to build a new racetrack at the former Concord Hotel site. They are also hoping to win approval for a full-scale gaming facility there. Adjacent to this project site in Kiamesha Lake is land owned by developer Louis Cappelli, who is also vying for a gaming facility. Cellini said they are also shovel ready like the EPR-Empire Resorts site. He also said he would not count out the Stockbridge Munsee Indian Tribe proposal, also in the Town of Thompson. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Cuomo’s Gaming Plan To Affect Ulster, Sullivan Counties

“On the face of it, looks like it might preclude two of the three licenses from being issued to the Catskills,” said Nevele Investors LLC CEO Michael Treanor. Plans to transform Ellenville’s rundown Nevele Hotel into a casino resort destination is now facing some serious competition as a result of Governor Andrew Cuomo’s latest plan to regionalize the state, placing Ulster and Sullivan counties under the same umbrella and ultimately bidding directly against each other. “To put us in competition, so now we have to try to claim that we should get the one casino that the governor has designated to the area as opposed to Sullivan County is really unfair,” said Ellenville Mayor Jeffrey Kaplan. Sullivan County is the home of the Monticello Casino and Raceway, a multi-million dollar gaming firm, which is now vying for the same full casino license as Ulster County’s Nevele project. But all those involved say they feel two full Class 3 facilities in the Catskill Region would be better than one. Many are now hoping for some flexibility with the regional boundaries such that the two counties can both be considered for a license. In the meantime, Treanor remains confident things with work in his favor. “Competition is a good thing,” said Treanor. “We believe we’ll get this license for this region and that will leave us with a full gaming license and Monticello would still have slots and still have a casino.” Adding he’ll continue to move his project forward, complete approvals and be ready to train 1,700 direct employees come November. “We want to keep pushing. We want this Nevele project for our area. We want Ulster County to be considered. We think we deserve it,” said Wawarsing Supervisor Scott Carlsen. (Source: YNN)

Read More »

Schumer: Decision On Off-Reservation Gaming In New York Is Near

A decision on the future of Native American casino gaming in the Catskills could be known in the coming weeks. Senator Charles Schumer got the word from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. If the blanket ban set by former Secretary Dirk Kempthorne is overturned or modified, the senator is also urging the Interior Department to evaluate the applications that have already been submitted instead of forcing interested parties to go through a reapplication process. The Stockbridge-Munsee seeks to build a casino in the Town of Thompson and the St. Regis Mohawks sought to build one at Monticello Raceway. In January 2008, Kempthorne denied their applications along with 21 other off-reservation land-into-trust applications. “After over a year of hard work, a decision on whether to overturn the flawed Kempthorne precedent is tantalizingly close,” said Schumer. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Empire Resorts Says It May Not Be Able To Pay Off Its Debt

Monticello, NY – The company that owns and operates Monticello Gaming and Raceway Friday announced its net revenues fell $1.3 million, or eight percent, in the first quarter of 2009 as compared to the same period in 20008. But, in a first quarter filing, it said it may not be able to meet its financial obligations. Empire Resorts’ credit facility with the Bank of Scotland requires repayment of approximately $7.15 million on May 29, 2009. The holders of its Senior Convertible Notes ($65 million principal balance due) have the right to demand repayment of the principal amount due on July 31, 2009. “We do not presently have a source of repayment for this credit facility or for these notes and our operations will not provide sufficient cash flow to repay these obligations,” the company said. On April 21, 2009, the company received a letter from Bank of Scotland in which Bank of Scotland stated that it had received information that one or more defaults or events of default exist within the credit agreement with Bank of Scotland and that although the parties will engage in good faith discussions to address the situations that resulted in such defaults or events of default, Bank of Scotland reserves its rights and remedies under the credit agreement. On April 15, 2009, the company received a letter from Plainfield, a holder of $22.5 million in principal amount of the company’s senior secured convertible notes, pursuant to which Plainfield stated that, among other things, it is a member of an ad hoc group of holders of the company’s senior secured convertible notes and that each of the members of the ad hoc group intends to exercise its put right in accordance with the terms of the indenture. Revenue from racing operations at Monticello Gaming and Raceway was unchanged; revenue from video gaming operations fell by about $1 million, or seven percent, and food, beverage and other revenue decreased by approximately $68,000, or seven percent. The company said their video gaming operations continue to be adversely affected by the competing VGM facility at Yonkers Raceway and slot machine facilities in Pennsylvania. Monticello’s daily visits decreased about 11 percent and the daily win per unit fell from $91.51 for the three months ended March 31, 2008 to $85.41 for the three months ended March 31, 2009, or seven percent. That happend as casinos nearby in Pennsylvania reported double-digit increases in revenues for the same period. Racing costs decreased by approximately $122,000, or seven percent, to about $1.6 million for the three months ended March 31, 2009. “We have been able to reduce some operating expenses at our facility while our revenues derived from sources other than live racing at our facility remained comparable to the corresponding quarter in the prior year,” the company said it its first quarter report. (Source: MidHudsonNews)

Read More »

Concord Project Secures Initial Financing

MidHudsonNews reports: The proposed Concord Resort and hotel in Kiamesha Lake took a major step forward with the announcement Wednesday that it has secured $225 million in financing for the project from Entertainment Properties Trust, a Kansas City-based real estate investment trust. Cappelli Enterprises has invested $100 million, completing the equity of $300 million required under state legislation that will open the door for state incentives. The entire project will cost $1 billion; the initial $255 million was facilitated by the Sullivan County Industrial Development Agency through tax incentives it approved. Plans for Concord Entertainment City Resort include a 750 room hotel, 300,000 square feet of casino, ballrooms, meeting rooms, retail, entertainment and other commercial uses; the relocation of Monticello Raceway to be re-branded as concord Downs; the development of a 125 room hotel and spa; reconstruction of existing golf courses including “the Monster” to be branded by the likes of a world-renowned golf course designer like Jack Nicklaus and others. Negotiations are underway with Great Wolf Lodge to bring a themed hotel and indoor water park to the resort. Actual construction could begin shortly. Thompson Town Supervisor Anthony Cellini said foundation building permits are expected to be issued in the next few days with concrete work for the new facilities to begin almost immediately. (MidHudsonNews.com)

Read More »

Kiamisha, NY: Concord Hotel Project Wins Community Support

Concord Redevelopment Project supporters showed up at the Thompson Town Hall in droves Tuesday to demonstrate to Sullivan County Industrial Development Agency board members the project’s worth, and to encourage them to approve all tax incentives sought by developers Cappelli Enterprises, Inc, and Empire Resorts, Inc. Some 200 residents, business owners, local officials, and construction workers from the Concord site, showed at the public hearing, one held just days before a decision will be made as to which tax incentives will be given to Cappelli. Concord Raceway Empire Corporation and Concord Associates are asking the Sullivan County IDA for nearly $85 million in tax abatement’s following the multi-phase Concord project, which includes a new Monticello Gaming & Raceway operation, a 1500-room hotel and conference center, and renovations to its existing golf courses. The total proposed cost of the project surpasses the $1 billion mark, and is expected by many to bring thousands of jobs to the area, and help stabilize the county workforce and economy. Pattern for Progress President Jonathan Drapkin spoke in favor of the project. “Derelict and faded resorts are this county’s Brownfields,” explained Pattern for Progress President Jonathan Drapkin.  “The footprint of this project is not hundreds of pristine acres, but rather a sad reminder of a bygone era.”  Drapkin added that is project will “breathe new life into the county.” Vice President of Planning and Marketing at Orange Regional Medical Center Rosemary Frado also praised the project for economic reasons.  She noted the county’s current unemployment rate is the highest in the state at over six percent, and that there is a direct connection between that and health. “Without jobs, there is no healthcare, and without healthcare, people put off accessing healthcare until there is an emergency situation or until it evolves into a more serious chronic condition.” Several business owners, including Gary Schmidt of Schmidt Wholesalers in Monticello, praised also praised the venture.  “People need rooms, a place to stay in the county so that they’re money stays in Sullivan County.  This project will give us direct rooms onsite.  This project will give us the growth we need to let Sullivan County shine again, like in the old days, but only better.  Let’s get this project done.” The Sullivan County IDA board will be voting on the tax abatement application Thursday evening. (Source: MidHudsonNews.com)

Read More »

Paterson Announces Agreement with Legislature to Help Revitalize Catskill Region

NYS Governor David A. Paterson today announced an agreement with the Legislature that will pave the way for the development of a major resort and VLT gaming facility in the Catskill Region at the current site of the Monticello Gaming and Raceway. The program bill will lower the tax rate on VLT revenue in return for a one billion dollar investment, a commitment to increase education funding and the creation of 2,000 permanent jobs. The investment will be made by Empire Resorts, Inc., which recently acquired from Concord Associates LP, a development group managed by Westchester developer Louis R. Cappelli, the Concord and Grossinger’s Resort Hotels and golf courses. This new Monticello project must be completed by January 31, 2011, and includes plans for the construction of a hotel, convention center, new racino, retail space and a parking garage. Additionally, at least one eighteen-hole golf course will be redeveloped. “There was a time when the Catskills were the pre-eminent vacation destination on the entire East Coast. The beauty and majesty of the region has not changed, and this deal will help return the Catskills to their former glory a destination spot,” said Governor Paterson. “This agreement is a big win for Monticello, Sullivan County, and all of New York State. Government and the private sector have worked together to structure a deal that will at least double the amount of money for education that the State expected to generate from the Monticello Racetrack and to create 2,000 permanent new jobs.” The new VLT facility will provide a minimum of $38 million annually for education; twice the amount currently expected to be generated by Monticello Gaming and Raceway in the absence of this upgrade. The amount of VLT profit the operator will be allowed to retain will be tied to the number of jobs created and maintained. Governor Paterson called the deal a major breakthrough for the Catskill region, which has suffered economically in recent years, and specifically thanked Senator John Bonacic and Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther for their efforts on the project, and for introducing the bills in their respective houses. Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno said: “This agreement is a positive step toward the creation of 2,000 new, good-paying jobs for Catskill Region workers and their families. By creating a world class casino that will be a tourist destination for visitors from all around, we will provide a lift to the local economy and ensure greater resources for education for students all across this State. I commend the Governor for his leadership, and thank Senator Bonacic for all he has done to advocate for this important project.” Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said: “Today’s agreement reflects the type of smart, effective economic development strategy that the Assembly Majority has advocated for years. By taking advantage of the strength of Sullivan County as a widely recognized tourist destination, a casino and resort project such as this brings us closer to successfully revitalizing our communities – particularly upstate. The Catskill resorts have always been more than a community of grand hotels, they are a part of the fabric of New York. It has been an absolute pleasure to work with Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther, a leading advocate for Sullivan County and my Assembly Majority colleagues in working for economic development and job creation

Read More »

Mega-Resort With Gambling Planned In Catskills

YWN has been following the developments regarding the possibility of gambling casinos coming to Sullivan County very closely. (Click HERE to see all articles on this topic). The following are excerpts of an Associated Press article just hitting the wires: As work crews smash apart the Concord Hotel developer Louis Cappelli surveys the rubble and sees a new shot at glory for the Catskills. Over the rumble of demolition, Cappelli talks about a $1 billion resort here with gambling, golf, shopping, a spa, a water park and horse racing. He sees Vegas, the Hamptons without the traffic, something that will finally lift this old tourist haven northwest of New York City from its long torpor. People here began dreaming about casinos in the Catskills soon after station wagons full of families stopped coming decades ago. But they could never land one. But Cappelli, a big-thinking developer sometimes called “the Donald Trump of Westchester,” said the gambling will help attract tourists from the metropolitan area and revive the Catskills. Locals officials — used to gambling deals that never come through — have embraced the deal forwarded by Cappelli and track owner Empire Resorts. But there is still a catch: the deal depends on financial help from Albany — and there is no firm commitment from the Capitol as the legislative session winds down this month. The Concord, with some 1,200 rooms, was a Catskills mainstay in the days when the area was packed with summer tourists, many of them Jewish families up from New York City. Tourism declined by the ’70s with the rise of cheap air fares and air conditioning. Locals looked to casinos to fill the void, but were unable to amend the state constitution to legalize them. But the casino pursuit played out like a long game of three-card monte: The winning card never came up. The death blow to local Indian casinos came this year when federal officials rejected two proposals here because they would be hundreds of miles away from tribal lands. The new Catskills gambling plan involves Monticello Raceway, a shopworn harness track three miles down the road from the Concord. The raceway — once a would-be casino site — is among the eight New York harness tracks given permission several years ago to install video lottery terminals. The flashy machines look and act like video slot machines. But payouts are controlled centrally by New York’s lottery, making them legal video lottery terminals, or VLTs. The Legislature is due to end its annual session June 23. Cappelli said he needs an agreement among Gov. David Paterson, the Assembly and the Senate before then. It’s not clear if that will happen. Democrat Gunther and the local state Sen. John Bonacic, a Republican, both support the project and are in the majority of their respective houses. A spokesman for Paterson said the administration is evaluating the proposal and is committed to helping the Catskills. (Click HERE to be redirected to the CBS2 HD website and read the complete story)

Read More »

Popular Posts