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NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label Twin River. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twin River. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2009

Greyhounds: videos too painful to watch

The videos of greyhounds hitting walls and dying for entertainment that has been outlawed by a statewide referendum are too painful to watch.

Massachusetts voters have spoken and it's time to respect their vote and protect the dogs.














Fourteen Greyhounds Suffer Broken Legs at Mass. Tracks in June, Most in Nearly Two Years





by Carey Theil



When voters overwhelmingly approved Question 3 last November, most citizens probably thought that the cruelty of dog racing would end right away. But nearly a year after the election, greyhounds are still suffering serious injuries at racetracks in our state. According to records that GREY2K USA just received from the State Racing Commission, fourteen greyhounds suffered broken legs at Massachusetts racetracks in June, the most in a single month in nearly two years. In total, sixteen greyhound injuries were reported for the month.



Carey Theil :: Fourteen Greyhounds Suffer Broken Legs at Mass. Tracks in June, Most in Nearly Two Years

For those of us who believe that dog racing is
cruel and inhumane, our strong preference would have been to end dog racing immediately. However, we wrote the Greyhound Protection Act as a 14-month phase out period to give track workers an opportunity to make a successful transition. This was a responsible approach, and we do not regret that decision. However, these latest injuries highlight the fact that the 14-month phase out was not a small compromise on our part. It is a compromise that literally has a real cost.



Nearly 900 greyhounds have now been injured in our state since 2002. The vast majority of these injuries involved broken legs, and other reported injuries include paralysis, death from cardiac arrest and head trauma. But these reports are not just statistics. They also tell the story of greyhounds that suffered and died at tracks in our state.



Dogs like Lazy K Jarvis, who died after running into a wall at Raynham Park on December 5, 2008 and suffering paralysis. Or Talsta, a three-year-old white and black greyhound who died after suffering cardiac arrest after a race at Raynham Park on January 19, 2009. Both of these dogs died after voters approved the Greyhound Protection Act, but unfortunately the new humane law was not able to help them. This fall, when some lawmakers inevitably call for the will of the voters on Question 3 to be undermined, we must remind them of these dogs.



Dog track workers have already been given a 14-month delay.





On January 1, the dogs will finally receive the consideration they deserve.





Greyhound Racing supporters offered this --



... commercial breeders and race organizers are looking for new locales, Coleman said, particularly overseas destinations lacking animal welfare regulations.



A Dogged Fight makes a good case!

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Twin River Bankruptcy: Greyhound Racing Dead

According to the Providence Journal --
.
The owners of the Twin River slot parlor intend to ask a federal bankruptcy judge to break their contract with the kennel owners who provide dogs for the greyhound races at the Lincoln gambling venue.
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Lawyers for BLB Investors LLC, the track’s owner, were working on their legal filing late into Saturday night — as greyhounds raced around the track for perhaps the last time this year.


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.... live dog racing attracts very few spectators, and the limited numbers that do attend races at Twin River do not spend [nearly enough] on food and beverage or [on video lottery terminals] to offset the actual costs of operating the racetrack,” the legal draft states.
.

SATURDAY AFTERNOON, on potentially the last day of racing,
.
about a hundred or so people,
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mostly men,
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spread themselves out among the tables and carrel-like tiers in the air-conditioned grandstand.
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According to Clyde Barrow's own report presented to Senator Spilka's Casino Love Fest, Massachusetts resident are contributing --
.
Twin River/Newport Grand $210.8M [million]
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Mr. Barrow's report projects a steadily increasing rate of "MASSACHUSETTS MONEY GOING OUT OF STATE" even as evidence indicates declining revenues.
.
It sure is a quandary!
.






From the archives --
Watch the Numbers!
Job Creation: Minimum Wage Jobs?
RI Greyhounds Gone Saturday, Aug 8
Low Paying Jobs With "Racinos" or The Mad Hatter's Tea Party
Unintended Consequences
Questioning figures?
Casino Gambling, Question #3 & Clyde Barrows
EXCERPT --
LAST LEGS comments --If the greyhound track were a sick patient, its prognosis would be grim.Overall revenues for the track have fallen all but one year since 1998, amounting to a 25 percent drop by 2007.
Meanwhile, records show the amount bet on live dog racing has plummeted by 61 percent over a decade, and it has made up a smaller percentage of the handle, or total amount bet, each year.

“It’s not doing as well as it once did, but that’s only because we haven’t allowed them to compete,” said state Sen. Marc R. Pacheco, D-Taunton.
State gambling expert the Rev. Richard McGowan, a Boston College business professor, predicted dog racing would likely be on the outs, even if Question 3 fails.“There’s a little bit of irony here,” McGowan said. “Even if they lose this vote ... there could very easily be no dog track because nobody is making any money off (them).”
Mega Barf Bark Time for Question #3
Move On!
Here We Go Again!
Time For A Natural Death
Reform? Where is it?
Vote YES on 3
A Dead Industry!
YES on Question 3
An Invitation to Corruption?
Just the facts, ma'am
The Racino Job Mythos
Twin Rivers Suspends Racing

Watch the Numbers!

Rhode Island's Greyhound Racing has been widely reported --

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Supporters of the dog racing bill say it's necessary to save
.
225 jobs
.
-- including pari-mutuel clerks, bartenders and security workers.....
.
.
This is what was reported in RI Greyhounds Gone Saturday, Aug 8 ----
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Twin River has handed out layoff notices to
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9 full-time employees
.
and
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18 part-time workers
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in anticipation of Saturday’s scheduled suspension of dog racing at the Lincoln track.

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That's 27 Twin River's employees. Where are the others? It certainly seems as if supporters overstate jobs.
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The article further comments on the decline in other states --
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New Hampshire's two remaining greyhound tracks won state permission last month to end live racing after waning interest from bettors.
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About 30 tracks remain nationwide, down from a peak of about 55 in the early 1990s...

And this explains attempts to preserve greyhound racing in Massachusetts, after a statewide referendum banned it effective December 31, 2009 (no one says it better than Ms. Thiel) --

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

RI Greyhounds Gone Saturday, Aug 8

Greyhound racing is scheduled to end this week in Rhode Island and the Providence Journal reports --

Twin River has handed out layoff notices to 9 full-time employees and 18 part-time workers in anticipation of Saturday’s scheduled suspension of dog racing at the Lincoln track.

“At this point in time we are taking the necessary steps to prepare for the end of racing on Saturday,” Twin River spokeswoman Patti Doyle said Monday. “This is it. This is the totality of jobs lost as a result of that suspension.”
.
This sounds suspiciously like the employment figures are overstated and the Governor was correct.
Remember --

...Twin River operator UTGR Inc., a BLB subsidiary, filed for federal bankruptcy protection....



This certainly makes it sound like racing has become a business being subsidized by others --
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Park executives have blamed at least a portion of those financial problems on an agreement with the dog owners that requires them to pay a $9-million annual subsidy to the owners, despite estimates that racing only nets the facility $1.75 million per year.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

The Abramoff Net

In case you were wondering who Todd Boulanger was, Unheard No More explains and includes this curious statement --
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Boulanger is linked with Kevin Ring former legislative director for former Rep. John Doolittle (R-CA). Ring was indicted in September 2008.
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Some names keep popping up in reference to the Mashpee Wampanoag pursuit of Tribal recognition and casino gold, like Jack Abramoff .
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Glenn Marshall’s Bad Plan predated Marshall's guilty plea --
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....Kevin Ring and Michael Smith, still work with the Mashpee. On the hectic morning of [investor] Len Wolman’s visit,.....
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Len Wolman is part owner of Twin River, a Rhode Island slot parlor and dog track that has filed for bankruptcy to rid itself of dog racing, increase operating hours to 24/7 over the strong opposition of the host community and reduce the percentage of slot revenue paid to the state. A plausible argument might be made that his participation in the Mashpee Wampanoag deal was intended to prevent competition since it was previously done in Rhode Island to prevent Harrah's from conducting gambling, as well as England.
.
.

The Mashpee have also benefited from the largesse of Michigan real estate developer Herb Strather, who bankrolled the $1.76 million purchase of the 125-acre spread in Middleborough where the casino will be built.
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...in the mid-1990s Strather...led the push to bring casino gambling to Detroit in the form of the MotorCity Casino, only to suddenly back away from the project shortly before it opened in 1999 after state gaming regulators noted concerns about his past real estate dealings. (The Michigan Gaming Control Board never made public any findings on Strather, but apparently raised enough worry to convince him he wouldn’t qualify for the gaming license he would need to stay on as an investor in the venture.)
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Massachusetts Attorney General Coakley argued for the need to create the appropriate legal framework before consideration is given to expanded gambling.
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Remember, this is the state in which Dianne Wilkerson stuffed a cash bribe in her bra to spend at Foxwoods Casino.

.



.


The article concludes with the following statement --
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Would you expect anything less with casinos involved?


Other articles --
The Abramoff Net

The Gambling Man

Campaign Contributions

An Invitation to Corruption?

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Gridlock!

The Brockton Enterprise reported that traffic was at a standstill because of a car fire in the breakdown lane.



Oh?




Add 50,000 vehicles per day travelling to The World's Largest Middleboro Mega Monster Casino (call it "Resort" if it soothes your conscience) once Kerzner and Wolman absolve themselves of financial risk in Rhode Island and that's going to look like what?


















Road Trip and Divisiveness not Kumbaya don't even begin to present the scope.




Now add to that Gridlock and Smog, the existing Massachusetts Dirty Coal Fired Power Plants, the proposed Brockton Power Plant and already poor air quality hovering over Southeastern Massachusetts,additional traffic to the Raynham Slot Parlor proposed by Senator Pacheco and Rep. Flynn for which no impacts have been included in the legislation.


There are no limitations on hours of operation contained within the bill Senator Pacheco presented. 24/7?




Third World Country anyone?


All to protect what, 100 jobs in Raynham?


Sunday, July 19, 2009

Just the facts, ma'am

Some look on at the Providence Journal reporting and sigh "I told you so."

.

..lobbyists for the mostly out-of-state dog owners and their union backers at the State House won the lawmakers over with arguments — based on a disputed 2003 report — that the elimination of greyhound racing would result in the loss of 225 jobs and of $7.5 million in direct and indirect state revenue, including the millions of dollars in slot play by gamblers lured to the track by the dog races.


.


The state’s own 2004 analysis found that racing “has a no effect on VLT revenues.” Bottom line: Wagering on the dog races has dropped from $37.9 million a decade ago to $13.2 million in 2008, with the owners getting roughly $1.7 million and the state just shy of $1 million after the winners were paid.

.



[Governor Carcieri] also questioned the claimed loss of 225 jobs, noting that state licensing records reflect “fewer than half that number of individuals currently licensed and authorized to work at Twin River in positions related to the live dog races.”

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Residents of the Commonwealth have been marketed, stampeded, overwhelmed, oversold and bombarded with one-sided gambling industry propaganda for nigh on 2 years about the Wonder of It All!

.


.


It's time to gather the facts, assess the costs and make an informed decision.

Truth to Power --

"We believe that once you examine the facts, the revenue and expenses, and give casino/slots a fair examination, they should be opposed because we simply can't afford to subsidize wealthy investors."

Thursday, July 2, 2009

A Dead Industry!


Race tracks are dead!
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Across the country, they're being bailed out with slot machines, those electronic ATM machines that enrich investors.
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In Indiana, first they got slots at tracks (racinos), then they got a state bailout.
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In Here We Go Again!, I wrote --
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Commenting on handicapped access to the track, Carney, owner of the Raynham Dog Track said -
The park has not received one complaint about handicap access, Carney said. “Most of our client base is elderly nowadays, so we have to be able to get them in there,” he said.
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Only in Massachusetts do we not see the handwriting.
Proponents at dead race tracks argue about jobs, failing to heed the Twin River's experience.
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Lincoln voters said NO to 24/7 hours of operation.
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What did they get when Rhode Island confronted the loss of gambling revenues to which the state is addicted? 24/7
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The Brockton Enterprise included this comment --

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If slots were approved, as per Flynn’s bill, the law would allow the machines to be installed after 90 days — pending approval in a town meeting vote.
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Judging from the experience in Rhode Island, no commitment, no assurance and no guarantee matters. The Massachusetts dog tracks will be closed on December 30, 2009. Slot parlors do not require as many employees.
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Those that are employed are primarily low wage workers, with no opportunity for advancement, no transferable skills.


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[Rep. Slots] Flynn has estimated the state would reap $700 million from slots in their first year and $400 million annually thereafter, but since the economy has continued slumping, he has backed off any firm figure.


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Last week, Rhode Island gambling hall and greyhound track Twin River filed for bankruptcy protection.
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The company that owns the “racino” asked the state legislature there to allow it to unload dog racing from its license obligations, calling it a money-loser, but lawmakers rejected the request, the Pawtucket Times reported.

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Regardless of the bravado of the RI legislature, the final outcome of the bankruptcy filing remains to be determined by a federal bankruptcy judge.
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Maybe we should give this some serious thought before we jump into the sinking ship of a dead industry.
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One must wonder if it was simply a misstatement to announce the Hearing for slots bill AT Raynham dog track likely in September -- AT the Raynham Dog Track?

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

RI: Local Choice Flushed

Included in proposals of slot machines and casinos are empty promises that bear watching. How many times have Bay State legislators made promises that vanish?
.
The host community of Twin River in Rhode Island said "No" to 24 hour gambling. As it is, the facility closes at 3 AM.
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To feed Rhode Island's gambling addiction, local choice got flushed.
.

The state allowed the facility to open 24 hours a day on weekends last year, despite objections of town residents in a Lincoln referendum. The governor’s 24/7 plan immediately drew local opposition.

“It will impact the residents of that part of town,’’ said Ronald A. McKenna, president of the Lincoln Town Council. “They already objected to the weekend 24 hours. This will just make their situation worse. But obviously the governor has his mind all made up, and damn be the residents of Lincoln, as long as the state of Rhode Island gets what they want.’’

Of Rhode Island's Gambling Addiction --

“The fact of the matter is, we’re stuck,’’ Mazze said, referring to Rhode Island. “We don’t see other revenue sources coming in, and we’re going to fight hard to protect something that everybody is apparently against.’’ [LINK]


Maybe someone should do the math. $2 Billion in revenue for 441 jobs.