People Against a Casino Town
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Indian casinos - and 'the paint on the pig'

 
Indian Casinos and 'the Paint on the Pig'
Opinion by Arnold Buchman
January 26, 2004
Oregonian Newspaper, Portland, Oregon

A casino tribe tempts Portland with visions of economic windfalls if only it will permit an Indian gambling facility. Portland has the ability to say no . Much of the country, awakening to the downside realities of casino gambling, is doing just that. Last year, gambling expansion was defeated 42 times in 45 attempts. That was a strong backlash to the spread of gambling in a year when states were suffering their worst fiscal crisis in a decade.       

In Portland, where the downtown economy is looking for a boost, the enticement is stadium funding or a convention hotel. In the small town of Florence, where people are looking for jobs, the tribe-Las Vegas developer team is pitching the expanded employment a casino supposedly brings. Stadium or jobs, these people are sugar-coating their gambling projects with illusory promises. It's called "painting the pig." But, when people understand the downsides of a casino operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week, in a small town or an urban neighborhood, the paint wears thin. Domination of the local economy, undermining of the quality of life and destabilization of the community's ability to manage its growth and development show through. Especially in a small town, equating gambling expansion to employment expansion simply is Loony Tunes logic. Even in the unlikely event a casino brings a net increase in McJobs with their questionable benefits, they are outweighed by the serious community costs associated with casinos whether it's the disadvantage suffered by local businesses competing with tax-free casino enterprises, job contraction resulting from those disadvantages, real estate coming off the tax roles, land use unregulated by zoning and use restrictions, uncompensated municipal service burdens, higher social services costs, domestic violence, child abuse, suicide, homelessness and so on.

It is tobacco logic, the same argument that says the potential benefits of increased cigarette tax revenues outweigh the added health care costs that increased cigarette sales would bring. Like cigarette taxes, the burden imposed by a casino undermines the community's health at the same time it is taking away from the pool of disposable dollars that can be spent elsewhere in the community. These are not dollars that are new to the community. Study after study establishes the vast majority of people gambling at non-destination casinos are working families and senior citizens who live within 50 miles. Last month, in the State of Maine, the business community, the medical community, the state 's district attorneys and attorney general, the statewide media, the environmental community, the religious community and a dozen other constituencies all joined in opposing an Indian gambling casino.

The people of Maine voted almost 2-to-1 to defeat an enabling referendum despite being outspent 2-to-1 by the tribe's Las Vegas backers. Folks in Maine could see through the paint on the pig. If our elected officials could see through the political contributions generated by the casino tribes, they might stop kowtowing to these Las Vegas-based "sovereignties" and act instead to responsibly mitigate the legitimate concerns of sovereign Oregonians.



Arnold Buchman of Florence represents a community group (People Against a Casino Town, PACT) opposing development of a casino there by the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians.


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