Current Issue: Artvoice v7n47, week of Thursday November 20 » back issues
Casino Chronicles |
Shutting it Downby Bruce Jackson |
|
|
Muddy holes and rusting steel: the compact’s legacy
On Wednesday, August 27, representatives of the Seneca Gaming Corporation announced that they were halting their $130 million casino hotel expansion project in Salamanca and their $333 million casino/hotel/entertainment construction project in downtown Buffalo.
Their press release blamed “various factors, including challenging economic and capital market conditions, greater demands on the company’s available cash, and increased competition and construction costs.”
According to a Buffalo News story filed the same day by Mike Beebe, “Philip J. Pantano, a Seneca Gaming spokesman…said the decision had been in the works for several weeks, since the company’s last SEC filing indicated the gambling industry was hitting a stagnant period.”
It is doubtful that the SGC’s reading of its own August 14 SEC filing was what moved them to stop construction on the two gambling sites 13 days later. If the information in that report had been the sole basis of the decision, the decision would have been made before the SEC document was even filed.
The August 27 press release did not mention the successful citizens’ lawsuit opposing the casino in US District Court or the comments in the Moody Investors’ Service June 30 credit report about the financial dangers of an unfavorable result for the Seneca gambling operation in that lawsuit. Neither did their August 14 press release on their Third Quarter 2008 Financial Results, which pointed instead to their 11 percent increase in net revenues.
Their failure to mention the lawsuit is like a coroner saying that a man with artery disease and a bullet between his eyes died from a coronary. It is distantly possible that the arteries shut him down before the slug did, but not likely. All those financial conditions listed by the SGC in their August 27 press release surely informed their decision, but it is unlikely that they alone accounted for or precipitated the shutdown of the two construction projects.
The process leading up to this decision may well have been in the works for several weeks, as Philip J. Pantano said, but that doesn’t mean the lawsuit wasn’t part of it. It means only that (1) Pantano wasn’t talking about it, and (2) they couldn’t know what choice they would have to make until the lawsuit was decided and, as soon as it was, the last step took less than a day.
What the judge said
Judge William M. Skretny had ruled on August 26 on the motion from casino opponents asking him to order the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) to close the Buffalo operation down in accordance with his July 8 ruling in a case known as CAGEC II. That ruling held that the NIGC ordinance that gambling could take place on that site was improper, hence the Senecas’ current slot machine operation in the blue metal shed and gambling in the big casino under construction were both illegal.
The judge also ruled on countermotions from the US Department of Justice (which by law defends government agencies and officials in lawsuits) arguing (1) that the judge should drop the whole matter because NIGC operated outside control of the judiciary, and (2) that because the Bureau of Indian Affairs had changed its internal rules about what makes land gambling-eligible before his July 8 ruling (the defendants had known about this but kept it secret from the judge), the judge should send the whole matter back to NIGC, thereby giving the Senecas what he termed a “fourth bite of the apple.”
Judge Skretny would have none of the Justice Department’s sophistry. He rejected all their motions in all regards and he told NIGC that it had to start following its own rules about illegal casinos. There seems to be no way gambling can presently take place legally on the Senecas’ Buffalo property.
The Seneca response
Seneca spokesmen first said that the case would be submitted for expedited appeal. That means, presumably, the Justice Department will ask the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City to throw out Judge Skretny’s July 8 ruling that the casino is illegal.
I haven’t found any legal scholars and experts with knowledge of that court in general and Judge Skretny’s July 8 ruling in particular who think the Second Circuit will overrule him on this. It’s possible, they say, but not likely.
Nonetheless, the Senecas’ August 27 shutdown announcement came as a surprise. Even people (like me) who thought they wouldn’t prevail in court even if they went all the way expected them to tough it out to the end. One attorney who has been involved with them in other litigation for years said, “These guys don’t back off. They’d rather take a big loss at the end than back off.”
They haven’t really backed off yet; they’ve just stopped going forward. The blue steel slot machine shed is still going 8 a.m. to 4 a.m., seven days a week. Construction is on hold, they say, not abandoned, and, they say, it could be restarted at any moment if the financial situation brightens sufficiently.
But will it? Their most recent financial reports claim an increase in gambling revenues, putting them ahead of much of the casino industry, which has lately seen major drops in much of the country. Perhaps they project a future decline that would make it difficult for them to keep up the payments on the loans they need to complete those two projects. And perhaps they can no longer get or afford the interest on the huge loans they need to carry those projects out.
Moody’s mood
Just like credit card companies, the investors who sink millions into projects like this rent their money at various rates, in large part determined by their sense of the amount of risk in renting that money to any specific borrower. Sure things get easy loans and low rates; risky things have to look hard for loans and pay high rates; very risky things may not get loans at all, no matter how much they’re willing to pay.
The most recent evaluation of the SGC’s credit worthiness from Moody’s Investors Service, which is dated June 30, 2008, is gloomy but not disastrous. The report gives SGC a rating of Ba2, which in their hierarchy is an investment that has speculative elements which are subject to substantial credit risk.
The report notes several problems. The Senecas’ Allegeny operation is threatened by a new Pennsylvania “racino,” which is expected to siphon off some of its non-local clientele. Moody wonders if the Senecas are subject to the US bankruptcy code, which means creditors might not have anyone to sue or anything to take possession of in case of default. Collateral doesn’t mean much if you can’t grab it in case of default. Moody is also concerned about (but didn’t, for some reason factor into its rating), the “negative implications linked to SGC’s high management turnover.” Does the departure of so many senior executives suggest serious problems in the corporate structure that haven’t yet gone public but which potential investors should worry about?
One of the Seneca casinos’ positive points from Moody’s point of view is that unlike all the New York and Pennsylvania racetrack slot operations and the Ontario casinos, the Seneca casinos permit smoking. It’s another sector entirely that bears the cost of lung, mouth and throat cancer.
SGC has, on occasion, had a Moody’s Ba2 rating before and it has managed to borrow money. What is different this time—perhaps fatally different—are three factors not included in the June 30 evaluation that Moody’s says could drive that rating down to places rational investors do not like to go.
One is the possibility of “a material decline in operating results linked to competition or the weak economy.” That is a factor the SGC acknowledged in its press release. Another, which they also acknowledged, is “the weakening of liquidity,” which could be affected by a wide variety of things, ranging from rising construction costs to reduced numbers of out-of-town gamblers because of the increasing cost of transportation.
The third unincluded factor Moody says could drive the Ba2 down, and perhaps the most significant, is one the press release did not acknowledge: “a litigation outcome with adverse credit implications,” which is a pretty good characterization of the August 26 Skretny decision. The SGC is now in the position of fighting not for an outcome in district court but a reversal in the Second Circuit, a much more difficult hurdle given the quality of Skretny’s legal research and the reluctance of appellate courts to overturn district courts in matters like this. If they are not successful, the “adverse credit implications” will be fatal for the Buffalo operation and catastrophic for any corporate financial plan that has the Buffalo operation as a key part.
That section of the Moody’s report might as well have been printed in Day-Glo. Little wonder that the SGC decided to pull the plug on current construction a day after their lawyers told them what the judge had said.
Paladino’s irony
There’s a curious irony to all of this that centers around the maneuverings of Buffalo developer Carl Paladino.
Last November, Paladino told me that well before Governor George Pataki’s 2002 gambling compact with the Senecas, he met with Buffalo Mayor Anthony Masiello, Buffalo Corporation Counsel Michael Risman, and Seneca Nation of Indians President Cyrus Schindler to discuss a Buffalo casino run by the Senecas. At that meeting, Paladino said, “We had firm, solid commitments from them that a casino would be a stand-alone, without any competition to our hospitality industry. Those were solid commitments.” Paladino said he and Masiello discussed the Buffalo casino agreement with Pataki before the compact was finalized, but the stand-alone, noncompetitive language never made it into the compact. Schindler’s successors as head of the Seneca gambling operation, said Paladino, “abrogated and denied the representations and promises that had been made by Schindler.”
The Senecas had obviously decided there was no reason to share the profits or control with a developer like Paladino, or with anyone else, so they came up with a comprehensive project of their own that would include everything a gambler might need or want: casino, hotel, restaurants, shops, bars, whatever. They’ve got a full-service operation like that in Niagara Falls and they were planning on building one in Buffalo. There would be no need for a gambler to exit the property or use any services provided by anyone else. It would be entirely Seneca, and entirely off the state and city tax rolls, which means they could run those business at a terrific cost advantage over any nearby non-Seneca competitor.
Paladino counted on City Hall to protect his interests. He says he told the Senecas, “You’re just gonna have to do it, fellas, or we’re gonna put a toll booth up, we’re not going to hook you up to our sewer, we’re not going to hook you up to our water.”
The Senecas had a response to that, too: They decided to locate their casino not in downtown Buffalo, but rather in Cheektowaga, near the airport and near a Thruway entrance. That, they probably figured, would bring in more non-local business anyway.
“We sued to bring them back to Buffalo where they belonged,” Paladino told me, “where the promises were made. And we expected then that [the Brown] administration was going to negotiate a compact along the lines of what we had agreed to. And they didn’t do it.”
(The full conversation, “Dancing with Paladino,” appears in the November 9, 2006 issue of Artvoice. It is online at http://artvoice.com/issues/v5n45/dancing_with_paladino)
Paladino’s Cheektowaga lawsuit was successful. The Senecas had to set up their operation in Buffalo after all. And when they set about doing it, Mayor Byron Brown, as Paladino says, did nothing to protect Paladino or anybody else.
It was the forced move of the casino back to Buffalo that led to the involvement of the Margaret L. Wendt Foundation. Some plaintiffs in the lawsuit objected to gambling anywhere in Erie County, and some objected to gambling anywhere at all. But others—and the Wendt trustees—were involved in the lawsuit only because they were certain that a casino in downtown Buffalo would do massive, irreversible harm to the city. The involvement of those plaintiffs and the Margaret L. Wendt Foundation has always been specific to this downtown casino project.
Many individuals and some organizations contributed to the legal bills, but most of the money, by far, came from Wendt. In April 2006, billionaire Tom Golisano gave a press conference announcing his objection to a casino, and he later took out ads in the Buffalo News opposing it. The ads were feckless and were never coordinated with any of the other anti-casino efforts. Golisano never contributed anything to the escalating costs of the lawsuit—now well over $1 million dollars, with the first appeal yet to be filed.
Without the funding from Wendt, it is highly unlikely that casino opponents could ever have raised enough money to see this litigation to the present point, let alone be able to say to the gambling interests, “If you want to appeal, go ahead and appeal. We’ll be there.” It was only because the trustees of the Margaret L. Wendt Foundation decided that their assignment—using Mrs. Wendt’s money for the benefit of Buffalo and its citizens—had a defensive as well as a constructive component that the citizens’ lawsuit wasn’t outspent into legal oblivion long ago. Had it not been for Carl Paladino’s lawsuit forcing the Senecas to give up their Cheektowaga plan and set up shop in downtown Buffalo instead, the Margaret L. Wendt Foundation would never have become involved.
So Carl Paladino, who says he was there before the beginning of casino gambling in Buffalo, and who erroneously believed he had a private sweetheart handshake deal that would send all the casino’s hotel, food, and liquor business where he thought it should go, may be the person more responsible than any other for the Buffalo casino’s demise. Had this series of events transpired in an old-time movie, this would be the place Barry Fitzgerald puts his hands together, rolls his eyes skyward, and intones in his fine, thick brogue, “The Lord works in strange ways.”
A lot of bad options
The Senecas could shut down the current operation, go home, and never visit it again. Abandoning nine acres of steel pilings, girders and mud on non-federal property is not a federal offense. It might be a state offense but neither the city nor the state can sue or prosecute the Senecas over property maintenance in state court. Neither can they seize the property and use it for the public good or sell it at auction, as they could an abandoned house not in Indian country that is a neighborhood eyesore or rat warren or firetrap. And they can’t force the Senecas to restore it to its pristine state.
The Senecas could use the site for nongambling commercial use. They could, for example, finish the shell and put out a call for bids saying they’ll tune the interior to fit the needs of a lessee. Developers do that all the time. But will business people enter a long-term lease with a capricious landlord whose priorities can change with each tribal election and who cannot be sued in state courts? Will they agree to have disputes settled in tribal court? Will they talk to Carl Paladino about the long-term dangers of handshake deals under such circumstances?
They could put up the fancy hotel and theater without a casino. But who’s going to lend them money for that? If they do put up such an establishment using profits from their other two casinos, could they make enough money to make the investment worth their while? That is, does it make sense for them to lend money to themselves for such a project? Their present hotel and food operations in Niagara Falls operate at a huge loss: They use them to attract customers who will gamble. Would they be satisfied with an operation that wasn’t underwritten by slot machines and crap tables?
Such an operation would present a new problem for the city more troublesome than the eyesore: What happens to Buffalo’s theaters and hotels when they try to compete with a operator who enjoys a 20 percent or more advantage because it doesn’t have to pay state and local taxes, can’t be sued in state court, and isn’t subject to state environmental and workplace laws?
Perhaps they could build a huge gas station and smoke shop. The land, Judge Skretny said, is Indian country, so presumably they can do anything on it they do on the rest of their property—except gamble. Buffalo may have one more reason for hoping that Albany doesn’t fold in its current tax war with the smoke shops the way it folded in all the others.
Other than some kind of cultural center, which isn’t likely to go up there, or SGC corporate headquarters, which SGC would be unlikely to need without the third casino, the only non-awful outcome for Buffalo might be if the Senecas sold the nine acres outright, so it came out of Indian country, putting the land back in the community and on the tax rolls. Maybe some smart developer could get an equally smart architect to repurpose the construction work done thus far.
But would the Senecas give up sovereignty after they’ve gone through all this legal maneuvering and expense to get it? It costs them almost nothing to let those steel girders and pilings rust, and who knows, the federal laws about casinos might suddenly loosen up or there will be a court decision somewhere that clears away all the impediments, and they’d be able to come back and scrape off the rust and chase away the rats and pick up where they left off. Not likely, but the August 26 shutdown wasn’t likely either. Gambling is about things that are likely and things that are not likely.
Masiello’s skeleton, Brown’s mudholes
Right now, there seem to be no good resolutions of this mess that began in Buffalo in a private deal cut in Tony Masiello’s office before the horrors of September 11, that took shape in Albany in the financial panic immediately following it, and was kept going long after the city should have stood up for its own interest because Tony Masiello’s successor, Byron Brown, would have signed on to anything that let him take credit for patronage jobs, in spite of their long-term cost to the city.
The mourners will shed tears for the lost jobs. Let them. But don’t fall for it: Those jobs are chimerical. The construction jobs are transitory, and once completed this project would give the city’s economy such a deep wound that other projects of greater cumulative magnitude would not happen. Likewise the promised 1,000 or 1,300 or 1,500 casino and hotel jobs (the number keeps changing, depending which SGC spokesman is bragging about bringing them to town or bemoaning their loss): Many of them are part-time, tip-based, and they come at the cost of twice as many better-paying and mostly full-time jobs in the taxpaying part of the economy.
Because of the citizens’ lawsuit, the city has been, for now, saved from its politicians’ worst instincts. The casino construction is on hold and the NIGC has been told to stop stonewalling and do its job. But this is no time to get complacent. The steel skeleton and the muddy holes remain. And so do the politicians.
This is the 49th in a series of articles about attempts to establish gambling operations in northwestern New York that Bruce Jackson has written for Artvoice and other publications since June 2001. From 2006 to July 2007 he was vice president of Citizens for Better Buffalo. He is SUNY Distinguished Professor and Samuel P. Capen Professor of American Culture at UB; he has been adjunct professor in UB’s Law School, Department of Sociology, and Department of Media Study. With Diane Christian, he directs the weekly Buffalo Film Seminars at the Market Arcade Theater.
Reader Comments
WNYMind 04 Sep 2008, 00:03
I have to admit, this is one of Bruce Jackson's most informative articles
about the casino topic. It's packed with history, villians (i.e.
Palodino),and lots of hoopla. One thing is very revealing. Moody's took one look at the mess in Buffalo and lowered bond ratings. There is no denying Jackson's analysis of Moody's. But he leaves some of the story untold. For instance, Moody's response shows how Wendt's legal actions have implications far beyond this project for the city. Any investor should know that Buffalo is a bad place for business, and that it entails massive risk. Moody's sees this and the Seneca bond rating dropped. Of course, that lesson applies to the city and region as a whole. The ripple effect of the Wendt lawsuit is that it has suppressed investment and bond ratings regionally. So, WallStreet has got the message, and it will now cost business more to invest in WNY (i.e. higher interest rates, etc....). Yes, Buffalo is dead and Wendt pulled the trigger. Thanks for making it so clear Bruce. I am glad we agree on one thing. This is the classic example of cutting of ones nose to spite the face. I congratulate you on supplying us with a blueprint for crushing growth and hope in Buffalo. It will be fun to turn around and use your blueprint to shut down the Wendt Foundation's pet projects in the future. I also have to remind you of the other costs of crushing hope in Buffalo. With the loss of another 1000+ jobs, I am not surprised that young people are shooting up the streets and joining gangs. The blood is on Wendt's hands for that one too. It is one thing to kill the economy, but to contribute to killing the inocent is another issues. There is a special place in hell for people like the Wendt trustees and the anti-casino crowd who cut off their noses to spite their faces. It must be nice to play with other's lives. The luxury of financial security. Jackson has a comfortable salary at UB, the Wendt trustees get a nice check for 2 hours of work per week. Now they play their fiddles while the rubble of the dead Buffalo turns to dust (asbestos dust). Enjoy your victory, it's all downhill from here for your kind.
WNYMind 04 Sep 2008, 00:08
PS: Bruce, Wendt trustees, Rose, and company, dress warm for the afterlife.
John Q Blogger 04 Sep 2008, 01:43
There is an old adage. "Don't put all your eggs in one basket." In regards
to Buffalo's future don't count it's demise just yet based on the fall of
a native American gambling casino. The last eight years of selling out of Buffalo and American working people has been through corporate war for oil, encouagement of large credit card debt, rellocation of U.S. jobs to Red China, replacement of encouagement to save with gambling delusions, fraud and deception in elections and information; and record profits for oil companies and record high loss of wages and benefits for those who dont have nine homes. Proposals to base the revivial of Buffalo on a casino is like Alaska Governor Palan saying we can become energy independent on drilling gone wild, nuclear Three Mile Islands, and hypothetical clean, cleaner, and most clean coal. Masiello bringing casino gambling to Buffalo the current, third poorest city in the U.S. is comparabe to Palan approving as Governor of Alaska the airplane hunting of wolves. I wish to point out that Masiello led the young Republican Club while at Canisius College. Now he is a lobbyist and not the President of the US. W Bush did a great eight year job on this city and country. He will be viewed as the worst President by historians. Masiello came close to going down as one of the worst Mayors in Buffalo because of this casino nonsense. We currently are going to see the sentencing of lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Let's not weep or knash our teeth for corrupt lobbyists or the attempt to wide spread more casino gambling into Buffalo. We are all very aware of what bringing crack into urban areas did? What do you think would have happened if casino gambling was brought into an area that needs hundreds of thousands of jobs and has children getting gunned down in the street? The roll of the dice for improvement, in the greater welfare of this community has always been the snake oil scam gone lunny. Today I watched Buffalo School Superintendent Williams on television speak to the point that students should show more respect for how they dress and not wear their pants to the point of falling off. The baggy below the butt pants reminds me of the cache of casino gambling promoted like weapons of mass destruction. Perhaps if we had more wisdom the Buffalo Public Schools would impose a universal dress code and the elected officials in this area would impose economic development based on substance instead of gambling casinos. Slacker development is the demise of the city. The group of citizens who went to federal court to fight against gambling casino-fa-ca-tion of this community have provided the best chance for this city to become the better community it is capable of becoming. P.S. WNYMind you lose all credibility when you make real or veiled threats on a public forum.
Lloyd A. Marshall, Jr. 04 Sep 2008, 06:23
No, JQB: WNYMind's cred is UNSULLIED!
Francesca Ella 04 Sep 2008, 09:08
Bruce Jackson's article is excellent. Comments from WNYMind show the individual to be out of their mind. That writer should NOT use a login reflective of a larger community when that individual clearly does not represent opinions or interests of the larger community. Casino gambling would not have added any benefits to the Buffalo community. Statistics have shown again and again the detrimental outcome of casinos. These facts have been stated and restated in local news coverage to date. Cheers to all those who helped to bring down this looming 'grim reaper' to city solvency! Though I know many who agree with my thoughts, I will not attempt to speak for an entire community (as did the naive and foolish WNYMind). As for myself and family, we are thrilled with this shut down. We hope the Wendt Foundation stays involved for the long haul, assuring no after-life for the Seneca plan.
WNYMind 04 Sep 2008, 12:48
Jackson shows how all these little actions build up to kill a city. Instead
of working with the Seneca to address any concerns Wendt had about the
small fringe group of gamblers who may need intervention (maybe .0001%) for
problem gambling, the decided to ring alarm bells and file lawsuits. An old
tactic that has crippled business development for years in Buffalo. Now Moody's has chimed in. Lower bond ratings for risky Buffalo. It is a real crush to economic development. This is in a state and county that already has state appointed boards to beg Wall Street for cash for development. And, the bond ratings for the region are still suffering from past stupidity. The Wendt groups kamakazi attack on the casino is the straw that finally broke Buffalo. It is internationally known as an intense anti-business climate. Not an easily corrected situation. It would take several mega projects with no bumps in the road (an impossible task in Buffalo). So, now it is a fight locally to get Wendt to fork the cash over to the poor and to block every cultural project they attempt to fund. Easy enough, just file lawsuits, demand environmental studies, and lobby politicials to cut the rich off in the city once and for all. Welcome to the new reality. This will be a lesson to Wendt and company on not pissing where you drink.
JAM 04 Sep 2008, 16:37
"Instead of working with the Seneca to address any concerns..." Well, that is kind of the point isn't it? The senecas don't have to work with anyone outside of the federal government. They don't have to work with the mayor, paladino, the county exec., etc. If we want a casino that will benefit the host community, it needs to be owned, or at least be accountable to, some local government. Niagara Falls, Ontario has succeeded with gambling operations because their casinos are owned by the province, who then reaps and disburses ALL the profits. If the proponents of a casino are so convinced that it is a good idea for Buffalo, then why not work as hard as the anti-casino folk and lobby to change the New York constitution? Then the state can run a casino, instead of an unaccountable foreign entity. Or is it easier to complain about the go-getters in this community that actually DO something?
Frank B Buffalo NY 04 Sep 2008, 16:49
The news that the Buffalo casino has to close “was music to my ears.”
For the first time since I turned 23, I am going to go out after dinner and
have a drink to celebrate this memorial event. Afterwards, I am going to order a couple of T-shirts and hats from catalogfavorites.com that have “I Didn’t Come Here To Lose” inscribed on them and give them to a couple of people I know that lost they’re money in the Buffalo casino. They are on welfare now getting food stamps; we are paying they’re rents, gas, electric and other bills. Thank you Seneca casino for doing this to us hardworking taxpayers. What goes around comes around. Just think, if the City of Buffalo receives 1.5 percent of the $708,302 the state received from the Buffalo casino, the city will get a whopping $10,624.53. Hardly a bargain when you consider the city sold the downtown land to the Senecas worth around $2 million to them for less than $667,000. What great leaders we have in our city, county and state. They really know what is best for us. And former governor Pataki who put the screws to us in behind closed door meetings wants to get back into politics. Maybe I’ll send a T-shirt and cap as a keepsake to Seneca President Maurice A. John Sr., Mayor Brown, and WNYMind if he’ll provide us with his real name and address. None of them were able to discourage us in our beliefs that a casino would be harmful to our city.
Lloyd A. Marshall, Jr. 04 Sep 2008, 17:13
Maybe Joel Rose should provide his home/biz addresses so we can protest
against his heavy-handed, high-and-mighty actions. Protest on the street
in front of these places. Nah... on the sidewalk. Then again... the
walkway leading to the front door. Oh what the heck... barge right through
the door and into the lobby/living room and REALLY raise hell!
WNYMind 04 Sep 2008, 17:54
Why keep blogging on this. You and your gang were able to kill the deal and
economy with your attacks. Suggesting that the state have casinos instead
and continually attacking the Seneca for being Native Americans, etc.... We
all understand that an undercurrent of this has always been race for your
gang. Now, you harassed the Seneca and killed the city. Go dig a hole and
jump in it.
Rich K 06 Sep 2008, 13:22
Thank you Bruce Jackson for having the guts to point to "most" of the
people that would have reaped some type of a profit from Casino Gambling in
downtown Buffalo, NY. Your article was fearless, articulate and well
presented. I don't understand why people don't learn from the past. Has the NY State educational system improved because of the lottery and daily numbers? May I suggest that you tour some of Buffalo's inner city schools and tell me how beneficial the lottery has been to education in NY State If any of you naysayers that think the casino is a big improvement for Buffalo are really interested in improving their city, why don't you volunteer to do some work in the inner city--one person at a time. Now, thats a real novel idea!
WNYMind 07 Sep 2008, 11:25
The issue of the lottery has been hashed over on this blog several times. I
believe that the lottery simply ends up reducing local taxes and replacing
that money with the lottery. You can see exactly how much that ammounts to
on the state lottery website (www.nylottery.org). Statewide, the lottery offset property taxes for schools by $2.6 billion this year. In Erie County it amounted to over $171 million this year and over $2.1 billion since the lottery was adopted in 1976. Granted, it is only about 5% of total education spending, but without the lottery local, and under the current system of funding schools, local property taxes would be raised to make up for that revenue. So, in short, that's what the lottery brings. It lowers your property taxes. If people want to get rid of the lottery, then do it. The Wendt Foundation seems to be obligated to fight that battle (unless the casino fiasco was really just about targeting Native Americans, which I believe it was). So, this is a great opportunity to quiet us truth tellers. Ending the lottery would also open the door to really reform how schools are funded in NY. We could reform how the budgets are voted on, and make it possible to realy vote against the wasteful budgets the school boards cram down the public throat. But, we all know that the status quo would fight this. We know the Wendt Foundation won't stand up to the status quo, since it is its biggest defender.
Joseph Hayden 09 Sep 2008, 15:36
Bruce Jackson's bio at the bottom says it all: "From 2006 to July 2007 he
was vice president of Citizens for Better Buffalo." In his own words,
Jackson gleefully reveals the real reason behind the demise of the Seneca's
casino: White Greed. Paladino - who comes straight out of central casting as a greedy, paternalistic 21st century Indian agent, by the way - is portrayed as merely another white, money-grubbing, carpetbagging prick who is still so pissed that he couldn't leech off the Seneca for his piece of the pie that he has become hell-bent on making the entire crumbling disaster of a city suffer. Rather than an objective piece of journalism - which this is not - it is merely another rehashed piece of propaganda by the opposition. In all honesty, Mr. Jackson has a vested financial interest in ensuring the failure of the Seneca, so his posturing as an "expert" is rather disingenous and hypocritical, at best. Racist and greedy, at worst. As an American Indian, I hope the Seneca leave that eff-ing steel frame right where it is - don't sell it, don't develop it - leave it be. Let it stand as a monument to the stupidity and racism of a city incapable of bringing itself back from the dead. Idiots.
WNYMind 10 Sep 2008, 00:27
Joseph Hayden is 100% correct. Unfortunately, the Wendt and Jackson people
have manipulated the system in order to continue a tradition of racist
attacks on Native Americans and other minority groups. It is a great idea to leave the steel frame there as a reminder. But here is a better use for the structure. The Seneca should turn the site into a museum of tollerance focusing on all of the ways that racism has impacted Native Americans in WNY and the US since Columbus. Organize it all as a nonprofit and create a foundation the expose groups like the Wendt Foundation for crushing the poor.
Seneca who won't give up. 10 Sep 2008, 16:50
great ideas fellas. I will mention it to some people I know.
Francesca Ella
10 Sep 2008, 17:41
Why is it that in Buffalo, whenever a logical argument is presented, one in
which the opponents cannot find solid rational comeback, the desperate
opponents immediately find some way to cry "RACISM!" Yes, I recall the Buffalo Public School employee who failed to file important paperwork by deadline, thereby losing an unmentionable amount of money for the city schools. In a non-public job, she'd be out on her ass within minutes, but in the public job, she was left to linger longer in the position, while unthinking others picketed City Hall singing 'We Shall Overcome". Yes, I recall all the other such stories. Pathetic. The last few posts stink of the same mental poison: detract from the real issue by redirect to supposed racism. Get real! Get back to the real issues: (1) Buffalo population does NOT want the casino. (2) The Seneca proposal does not benefit the city, nor it's businesses, nor it's residents. The Seneca proposal ONLY benefits Seneca's. (3) Casino gambling does not draw large crowds to unexotic destinations. We don't have wonderful weather to escape to. We don't have an extraordinary metro system that allows distance traveling to many major sites. We don't have gorgeous beaches and seashores. Our museums and architecture are not enough to bring big spenders to WNY. They'd rather go to Vegas. This already shows in the Niagara Falls casino, which is not raking in the profits it expected. Surveys show that casinos in these types of cities merely draw from the local population. Buffalo is already listed as the 3rd poorest city in the country. Is the goal to be #1? http://www.wgrz.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=60244&catid=13 http://publicbroadcasting.net/wned/news.newsmain?action=article&ARTICLE_ID= 1139020§ionID=1 Leave a Comment:
|
|
Issue Navigation> Issue Index > v7n36: Fall Guide (9/4/08) > Shutting it Down This Week's Issue • Artvoice Daily • Events Calendar • Classifieds |
Artvoice Blog Headlines
Who Goes Where When Hillary Goes to State?posted November 19, 12:04 pm on Artvoice DailyCity Hall News has flow_chart that tracks who might replace who, from Hillary’s Senate seat on down (click to expand or follow the link—it’s an awkward shape): |
It’s Robert Rich Sr. All High Stadiumposted November 14, 5:05 pm on Artvoice DailyThese new signs properly label the structure. We’ve been reading recent stories in the Buffalo News about sportswriter Tom Borrelli’s terrible fall last week at the old All High Stadium. He’s currently battling life-threatening injuries... (more) |
CWM Fined for Violationsposted November 14, 2:41 pm on Artvoice DailyThis week Chemical Waste Management was fined $175,000 by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for violating its permits and the state’s hazardous waste laws. I don’t have much to say about that, except it doesn’t seem to me like too much money... (more) |
Musical Chairsposted November 14, 12:51 pm on Artvoice DailyThe AP reports that Hillary Clinton met with Barack Obama in Chicago yesterday, adding fuel to speculation that she might be Obama’s choice for secretary of state. If that happens, it has long been rumored that Brian Higgins would be appointed to her Senate seat... (more) |
Paint the Townposted November 14, 11:06 am on Artvoice DailyLate last night, at the tail end of one of the few weeks in the past year in which we did not publish anything snarky about anybody, someone threw two gallons of paint on our front doors. Seems a waste; we hadn’t even earned it. Nonetheless, we were cleaning up all morning... (more) |
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 1:58 pm on Artvoice DailyAV videographer Matt Quinn tours Old Editions, an often overlooked treasure at the corner of Oak and Huron Streets downtown: show enclosure (video/x-flv; 21.29 MB) |
This Is Not Today’s Newsposted November 12, 9:37 am on Artvoice DailyBut it would be nice if it were. Via the Data Stream, by way of Jon Winet. |
This Just In…posted November 11, 3:28 pm on Artvoice DailyAlways in the vanguard, researchers of the University at Buffalo’s Center of Human Capital have reached a bold conclusion, according to a statement disseminated this afternoon: Although no official determination has been made about whether New York State or the U... (more) |
Silver Lining: Edwards Remains a Good Guyposted November 11, 11:17 am on Artvoice DailyMarshawn Lynch Amid the anguished finger-pointing, plaintive wailing and resigned head-shaking sweeping the region following the Buffalo Bills’ third straight defeat, Season Ticket would like to apportion a minute sliver of credit. Quarterback Trent Edwards, by most quantitative and qualitative standards, failed miserably at New England on Sunday (not coincidentally, this was also his third consecutive regressive outing)... (more) |
Mazzariello’s Ristorante & Martini Barposted November 7, 4:30 pm on Chew on ThisPhoto taken by Rose Mattrey From Antipasti to Primi to Secondi, Mazzariello’s (114 Bloomfield Ave, Lancaster, 206.0561) has conquered the map of Italian cooking. Your palate will be exposed to an array of spices, herbs, and ingredients indigenous to Northern & Southern Italy... (more) |
Post Election Bits & Bytesposted November 7, 12:02 am on Tech VoiceElection ‘08 is now in the history books - so I figured it’s time to take a look backward, and a look forward at some relevant headlines. Hacking Democracy First, we’ll take a look at one of the best kept secrets of the campaign season, from both sides, care of a Newsweek article published just today... (more) |
BNMC Open Meeting Tonightposted November 6, 1:19 pm on Artvoice DailyTonight at 6pm in the auditorium of the downtown library, everyone is invited to attend a public hearing on the Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus—North End Projects. Among the projects planned are a 300,000 square foot Medical Office Building to be owned and operated by Ciminelli Development Company, Inc... (more) |
That Pigeon Won’t Flyposted November 6, 10:05 am on Artvoice DailySteve Pigeon Here’s another example, this one two years old, of the way Steve Pigeon’s political committees are alleged to steer money to candidates illegally. On September 15, 2006, the Pigeon-controlled PAC Citizens for Fiscal Integrity paid “RUR Strategy Group” $9,000 in consulting fees, according to CFI’s campaign finance disclosure forms... (more) |
SeaBar’s Social Calendarposted November 5, 12:44 pm on Chew on ThisSeaBar will host live jazz and sushi nights starting Friday, November 21st at 8 p.m. (5235 Main Street, Wmsvl, 204.5283). A Cave Springs Riesling Tasting Event will take place at SeaBar’s suburban location on Wednesday, November 9th at 7 p.m... (more) |
Artvoice TV: Latest Additions » more on AVTV
Dr. Riyaz Hassanali: The effect Smoking has on your Skinposted November 21, 4:50 pm on channel Local Interest
|
Twilightposted November 19, 1:09 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
The Boy in the Striped Pajamasposted November 19, 1:06 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Avi Takes Artvoice Shopping for the holidays @ Lexington food Co-opposted November 19, 11:52 am on channel Food
|
TRAIN DAY! @ the Buffalo Historical Societyposted November 17, 3:07 pm on channel Local Interest
|
Mass Appeal: Elmwood Fashion Eventposted November 15, 10:19 pm on channel Events
|
Buffalo Contemporay Danceposted November 15, 6:43 pm on channel Events
|
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 11:42 am on channel Local Interest
|
Off Stage: Conversations with Anthony Chaseposted November 12, 4:50 pm on channel Theater
|
Happy Go Luckyposted November 12, 2:08 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Quantum of Solaceposted November 12, 2:01 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Flash Party at Essex St.posted November 9, 10:59 am on channel Events
|
Lakeview Effect at Nietzsche'sposted November 8, 4:54 pm on channel Music
|
Flatbed at Allen St. Hardwareposted November 8, 2:28 pm on channel Music
|
Obama's Nightposted November 6, 3:13 pm on channel Politics
|







Subscribe