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Vancouver council unanimously rejects $500-million casino expansion
Vancouver council unanimously rejects $500-million casino expansion
Public pressure trumps casino expansion: Mayor Gregor Robertson also called for a moratorium on "any and all applications to expand gambling"
VANCOUVER - Nearly 20 years ago, developer David Podmore watched as a proposal for a “Las Vegas-style” casino his company and Mirage Resorts wanted to build on Vancouver’s waterfront was rejected by the province in the face of major public opposition.
On Tuesday, Podmore, now chairman of the B.C. Pavilion Corp., watched again as his next — and likely last — attempt to bring a major casino to the city went down in flames amid a similar upwelling of public anger.
But this time, the unanimous rejection of the proposed $500-million Paragon Gaming expansion at BC Place spiked all immediate plans for a gambling mecca in the city.
Mayor Gregor Robertson, leading the charge out of the gate during debate, engineered a moratorium on all future gambling facilities until a long, long list of demands is met. And he made it clear the city neither needs nor cares about the vast sums of money dropped into slot machines or on blackjack tables.
“Enabling the largest casino in Western Canada in our downtown doesn’t fit with Vancouver’s global brand as the world’s most livable city, the Green Capital, and hotbed for innovation, from clean and digital technology to resource management,” Robertson said.
This is what it came down to in a city full of sidewalk cafés and bike lanes, of beehives on the roof of city hall and the Vancouver Convention Centre, and where the aroma of the best B.C. bud wafts across the beaches on a sunny day.
Council members want sustainable development and entrepreneurial spirit here, but don’t believe those things can be found in a 1,500-slot machine casino that would, to their minds, divert money from the local economy and produce little in the way of tangible goods.
And council made it clear that the B.C. Lottery Corp. and the province had themselves to blame for the rejection, citing their failure to properly consult with the public and their lack of “internationally recognized best practices” for dealing with a wide range of negative gambling issues.
Robertson said that if they want to come back to council again, they’ll have to first address all those issues, from the prevention of problem gambling and protection against organized crime to adequate treatment for gambling addicts.
Podmore, who became the frontman for the province, the B.C. Lottery Corp. and Paragon Gaming in their hopes to break the no-casino jinx, was disappointed by the unanimous rejection. So too was BCLC president Michael Graydon, whose Crown corporation has been on a campaign to dramatically expand gambling in B.C. and who had wanted to crack the Vancouver market with a major destination casino.
About the only one who appeared not to be surprised was Scott Menke, the president of Las Vegas-based Paragon. “Well, that’s development,” he said simply. |
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