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The Hollywood Slots in Maine’s city of Bangor may have shown success in its operations by garnering consistently high revenues every month, showing a glimmer of hope amidst the gloomy landscape of the casino industry.
The seeming indecision and lack of action by legislators and the government in general when it comes to the issue of expanding gambling facilities in the state of Massachusetts are pushing the citizens to consider putting matters into their own hands.
A losing applicant for a casino license in the state of Philadelphia claimed that it has the right to be involved in the proceedings that relate to the casino project is being spearheaded by Foxwoods Casinos in the same city.
Mississippi’s casino industry has finally something to be happy about despite always being in the worst of disasters—from hurricanes to oil spills.
The use of free shuttle services by integrated resorts in Singapore has been in the news again as accusations by a government agency has cast the two integrated resorts (IR) in a bad light.
After announcing a huge layoff involving 355 casino employees, the president and chief executive officer of tribal casino operator Mohegan Sun, Mitchell Etess, said that the bad news would be stopped, at least in that aspect.
With the amount of news of the gambling industry’s continuing decline, another bad piece of news is set to disappoint Las Vegas pundits.
In Indiana, a new casino battle is brewing—this time between a casino that is just getting its bearings again after an economic slowdown and a casino that is getting itself new owners.
Atlantic City, one dubbed as the Las Vegas of the East Coast, has primarily been fortunate to find a niche during the 1990s and early 2000s in the area’s gambling market because it did not have any competition back then.
One of the leaders of the horseracing industry, Churchill Downs Incorporated, has found another source of revenues.