House
Angers Gaming Companies
The House voted Wednesday to
offer tax breaks as incentives for hurricane-battered
businesses to rebuild in the Gulf states, except
for casinos and other recreation that critics
said did not merit federal help.
The
measure could set back gulf reconstruction efforts
by Las Vegas-based gaming corporations such
as MGM Mirage and Boyd Gaming Corp. and smaller
companies whose casinos were damaged or destroyed
by Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita this
summer.
The
gaming industry was disappointed by the exclusion.
"The
commercial casino industry should be treated
like any other legal business working to rebuild
along the hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast, especially
since our industry is the economic engine of
the region," said Frank J. Fahrenkopf Jr.,
president and chief executive of the industry's
main lobbying group, the American Gaming Association.
Almost
two dozen Gulf Coast casinos were destroyed,
damaged or temporarily closed by Hurricane Katrina
on Aug. 29 and Hurricane Rita on Sept. 24. In
Mississippi, Hurricane Katrina displaced 17,000
casino workers in wiping out 13 casinos in Biloxi,
Gulfport and Bay St. Louis.
"We
don't want special benefits; we just want to
be treated like any other business," said
Harrah's Entertainment Senior Vice President
Jan Jones.
Harrah's
had employed 9,400 workers in four Gulf Coast
casinos. Three casinos in Biloxi, Gulfport and
Lake Charles, La., were destroyed by the hurricanes
and Harrah's New Orleans, Louisiana's largest
casino, is closed indefinitely.
"For
an employer of our size and the single most
important driver of tourism in the Gulf Coast,
we only want to be treated fairly," Jones
said about the Gulf Coast gaming industry.
Boyd
Gaming Corp., lost revenues from the Treasure
Chest casino in New Orleans for seven weeks
after flooding devastated the city. Company
spokesman Rob Stillwell said the casino should
receive the same benefits as other businesses
in the areas affected by the hurricanes.
"There
is no reason why a business down the street
should benefit, and we can't," Stillwell
said.
MGM
Mirage is rebuilding the Beau Rivage, Mississippi's
largest casino-hotel, and expects to reopen
the business, which employed 3,100, in the next
12 to 16 months.
"This
is just very unfair to the men and women of
the casino industry," said MGM Mirage spokesman
Alan Feldman. "All it does is delay the
process and keeps prolonging the uncertainty."
Many
Gulf residents and businesses have said they
are looking toward the gaming industry to help
the region's tourism base recover, he said.
"Any
reasonable person can see how unfair it is to
cut the casinos out of the tax relief package,"
Feldman said. "It was just a vindictive
and punitive move on the part of Frank Wolf."
Wolf,
a Republican representative from Virginia and
a critic of the gaming industry, sought the
exemption in a bill to help hurricane victims.
He gathered support for the proposal from several
dozen other lawmakers.
The
bill creates a Gulf Opportunity Zone within
hurricane-blasted counties in Louisiana, Alabama
and Mississippi and offers increased tax credits
and depreciation bonuses for qualifying businesses
that try to rebuild.
The
bill exempts private or commercial golf courses,
country clubs, massage parlors, hot tub and
suntan parlors, liquor stores and racetracks
or other facilities "used for gambling."
The
Gulf bill passed 415-4. The lawmakers who voted
against it were Nevada Republicans Jim Gibbons
and Jon Porter and Nevada Democrat Shelley Berkley,
and Frank LoBiondo of New Jersey, a Republican
who represents Atlantic City.
The
Senate has passed tax legislation that qualifies
the gaming industry for hurricane recovery aid,
and the issue is expected to be decided in conference
committee.
"We
have been winked at not to worry, that this
would be taken care of," Berkley said,
meaning the House provision would be killed
in conference.
The
Bush administration has signaled it opposes
the restrictions, and Mississippi senators and
others including Harry Reid, D-Nev., were urging
they be dropped.
Sen.
Trent Lott, R-Miss., urged Republican leaders
"to reject calls from some to discriminate
against legal businesses in the Gulf region
and pass this bill."
He
added, "Mississippians living in tents
and temporary housing are waiting for the jobs
and opportunities this bill will create."
Gibbons
said, "It is regrettable that some in Congress
are willing to put the hardship of one displaced
individual who may work for a refinery or a
grocery store over another individual who happens
to work in the gaming industry."
Berkley
said Republican leaders agreed to insert Wolf's
restrictions into the hurricane bill to win
his support for more comprehensive tax break
legislation the House is expected to debate
later this week.
"I
am outraged the Republican leadership caved
in," she said.
Industry
supporters have said casinos have employed close
to 50,000 people and paid more than $760 million
in taxes to Louisiana and Mississippi.
But
Wolf argued the industry's vitality was a reason
it should not be given aid.
He
said casinos and recreation businesses such
as liquor stores and golf courses often have
been excluded from qualifying for federal development
benefits.
"How
can we stand up at a town meeting with our constituents
and explain providing tax breaks to rebuild
massage parlors, liquor stores and record profit-making
casinos?"
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