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Casino complexes in Atlantic City are pulling all stops to attract customers for the holiday season.
After two successive years of disappointing losses brought about by economic woes, 2010 has seen some slight recovery for the casino industry.
Befire the Missouri Gaming Commission could decide on which company to award the State’s 13th casino license, bidders have already faced other challenges.
The recent agreement between the state government, represented by Governor David Paterson, and a Native American tribe, based in Wisconsin, to allow the construction of a casino is generating a lot of supporters, as well as opposition.
Spectators surmise that the recent bill that aims to make drastic changes aimed to improve the tourism industry in Atlantic City is packed with so many proposals that go against the current procedures and operations of the city.
The recent quest of a tribe to have a casino outside their reservation still remains in the balance despite previous efforts to make the goal a reality.
Curators, historians and supporters have been pushing the idea that the SS United States should be a good host for the Philadelphia Focwoods casino that still has yet to materialize four years after their license was awarded.
Despite calls to speed up the process, the state Senate decided to postpone the scheduled voting on two bills that would heavily influence the future of Atlantic City last Monday.
The Gaming Control Board of Pennsylvania warned Foxwoods Casino last week that the reprieve it gave the tribal casino operators in building their Philadelphia casino will be the last.
Among the stipulations found in New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s plan to overhaul the casino industry in the state would be to require casinos to pledge $30 million every year to be used to finance a new nonprofit organization to be called the Atlantic City Alliance.