Casino
Tax Breaks Decried
Virginia congressman
and longtime casino foe Frank Wolf sent a letter
to President Bush criticizing the administration's
plan to offer tax incentives to casino operators
on the Gulf Coast.
But the casino industry's top Washington
lobbyist is firing back, saying casinos should
be treated like "any other business."
Rep. Shelley Berkley also criticized Wolf's
effort to carve casino companies out of any
incentives the federal government may provide
to speed up rebuilding Southern Mississippi.
The tax incentives would be created as part
of a so-called Gulf Opportunity Zone that would
encourage all businesses to rebuild Mississippi's
Gulf Coast, ravaged in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina.
"This special interest incentive would
be a disgrace," Wolf (R-Va.) said in his
letter. "With budget deficits growing to
historic levels, we need to make sure tax dollars
are going to those who truly need the government's
help ... We trust you will do the right thing
and make sure federal resources go to the poor,
the needy and the vulnerable and not the gambling
interests who already have insurance to cover
catastrophic events like hurricanes."
Wolf cited a recent article in the Washington
Post estimating that MGM Mirage's tax break
under the plan could be as high as $50 million
on uninsured damages of $100 million. In Mississippi,
casinos haven't received tax breaks or other
special economic incentives in the past. The
casinos haven't needed such enticements and
are ready to rebuild again without them, Wolf
said.
Frank Fahrenkopf, chief executive of the American
Gaming Association, said it's true that casinos
haven't received special breaks in the past.
Other businesses besides casinos also haven't
been recipients of tax incentives, he said.
But no type of businesses has been excluded
from federal legislation designed to help a
region recover from a catastrophe, he said.
Other large industries, such as oil and defense
businesses, also shouldn't be left out, he said.
For example, New York hasn't excluded any types
of businesses from the economic development
zone it created in the wake of the 9-11 attacks,
Fahrenkopf said.
Casinos in the Gulf employed more than 15,000
workers, more than any other industry in the
Gulfport-Biloxi region.
"We are the engine of the economy there,"
Fahrenkopf said. "If the goal of creating
an economic opportunity zone is to get businesses
running and people back to work, it's counterintuitive
that they are not going to include the largest
employer."
Casinos wouldn't receive any tax incentives
for payments already covered by insurance, he
said.
"There is going to be a gap between what's
covered by insurance and what's not," he
said.
Congress should not punish casino companies
by leaving them out of potential tax-breaks
for businesses recovering in the Gulf Coast,
Berkley said today.
"Congress must not withhold incentives
to rebuild from any employer that provides good
jobs and tax revenue, if we want to revive the
economy of this region," Berkley said on
the House floor. "Contrary to the biased
view of some, the gaming industry must be treated
as fairly and equally as any other business
when Congress develops legislation to help the
Gulf Coast region rebuild."
Wolf's letter was co-signed by Reps. Christopher
Shays (R-Conn.), Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.),
Joseph Pitts (R-Pa.), Walter Jones (R-N.C.),
Lee Terry (R-Neb.), Tom Osborne (R-Neb.), Bob
Inglis (R-S.C.), John Hostettler (R-Ind.) and
Dave Weldon (R-Fla.).
Wolf, who is morally opposed to gambling, has
led congressional opposition to casino expansion
for at least the past decade.
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