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Casino Wal-Marts In Portsmouth and Berlin? Not Smart Development.

by: Rep. Jim Splaine

Thu Feb 22, 2007 at 20:54:58 PM EST


It's not the best idea I've heard. 

Berlin State Senator John Gallus is proposing a bill that would allow resort casinos to be built in Berlin and at the Pease International Tradeport.  It is scheduled for a public hearing on March 6th.

I don't think it is going to pass.  At least, it shouldn't.  We're smarter than that, I hope. 

I don't think we're desperate enough either in Portsmouth or Berlin to open the floodgates to gamblers either flying in or driving up for "a few days of fun." 

We can do better.

Nor are we willing to put at risk the future of New Hampshire by relying on expanded gambling as a supposed source of income.

Oh, expanded gambling.  It sounds so good -- such a good deal for the state.  But greater gambling causes many side effects, and eventually doesn't bring much money into the state because the gambling interests put up their tent stakes, take hold in the state, and then rent lobbyists and make campaign contributions to "persuade" lawmakers to lower the state take.

Plus, the corruption we have seen in Connecticut, New Jersey, and Nevada should encourage us to turn thumbs down.  Not good.

Having a casino as a destination site isn't going to help the Berlin economy all that much, and might well put some of the motels and hotels and restaurants in that area out of business.

Gambling casinos are the Wal-Marts of the "entertainment industry" when located in tourist areas.  People go there, sleep there, play there, eat there, spend (as in mostly lose) their money there, and the corporate "profits" are sent out-of-state to the stockholders and corporate bosses.

Plus, local residents who might gamble there only have so much money; if you lose your paycheck playing slots, you won't be visiting your neighborhood restaurant or movie theater quite so often, or perhaps the neighborhood clothing store.  The seduction of a quick buck is hard for some people to resist, and that will put more burden on other local services.

And as for Pease, I think we're doing just fine.  I was one of the seven members of the original Pease Redevelopment Commission in 1990 and 1991 which set into motion a vision for Pease that has paid off in considerable airport-related businesses being located there.  Some 6,000 jobs have been generated, many of them in technical industries and most of those well-paid.  We don't need a couple of hundred low-paid service-type jobs with the resulting additional traffic, crime, and addiction problems resulting. 

For New Hampshire and for our future generations, we can do better than this.

Rep. Jim Splaine :: Casino Wal-Marts In Portsmouth and Berlin? Not Smart Development.
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Marchand is against it (0.00 / 0)
so that's a good step, at least for the one in Portsmouth:

"Pease is a model of success nationally (for) redevelopment of military bases. It continues to thrive with greater and greater percentage of available space being leased and the diversity of businesses on Pease is impressive," he said.

Locating a casino at Pease would prevent other more attractive development. Marchand said he also believes there would be social costs with a casino. These facilities generally offer lower-paying jobs as opposed to the higher paying jobs now at Pease. Also, communities around casinos often suffer an increase in crime, he said.



Race to the bottom (0.00 / 0)
Gambling helps a state financially (if it does that, at all) only insofar as the neighboring states don't adopt it too.

The New Hampshire Sweepstakes lottery was going to be a great moneymaker for the state, 40 years ago. People from all over New England would play. But then other states set up their own.

In business it's called a "barrier to entry." Here there is none. Competition from neighbors will wipe out the profit very quickly.


I used to (0.00 / 0)
drive through downtown Berlin and try to imagine everyone I saw dressed as a cocktail waitress, with a little mini-skirt and fishnets - even the little old French Memeres. 

Berlin's population has been steadily shrinking for the last 20 years. Young people who go to college don't stay, because there isn't anything for them. Many people who live in Berlin drive to Conway for work.

Berlin has a state prison, and is getting a federal prison. There is one motel in Berlin - and it ain't the Ritz. There isn't a decent dinner restaurant in the city. There isn't a book store. Downtown is full of empty storefronts. There's a very high level of alcohol and substance abuse in Berlin. (heroin has really caught on)

Berlin needs resurrection - but to really bring the city back will require making the kind of positive changes that everyone who lives there can feel proud of. Prisons and casinos will not create civic pride. The world's ugliest Wal-Mart (and it is - the new Wal-Mart going up in Berlin looks as if it might be using the same blueprint as the federal prison.) is not going to create civic pride - it will only succeed in closing down a few more small businesses.

I would love to see the tech college expand to being like NHTI in Concord. Build a mill museum. Fix the ski jump, and use it! Get some events going at the Nansen Cross Country ski center. The people who run Berlin have a very small vision. They are accustomed to putting the economic eggs of their city in one basket (papermill) so the idea of doing something similar (prison, casino) might be very popular there.

Senator Gallus is also in real estate. He stands to benefit hugely from any project - just as he has from federal prison project, and quite likely from the ATV park. I'm afraid I don't believe that my state senator has the purest motivations.

NH Kucinich Campaign


I agree with Sue B (0.00 / 0)
Berlin is getting club fed wether it likes it or not.  Berlins been down so long anything looks like up.  I was pretty appalled when they said they were getting another prison.  They don't need a casino.  My cousin lived in Vegas most of her life, drove school bus, became a compulsive gambler who is now a reformed gambler.  Gambling would be the straw that broke the camels back.  People do drive to conway and even wolfeboro for work.  They need something but thier boxing themselves in with these prisons.  Its not exactly what you picture when you think of vacation land.  They need industry. 
Last year when they were jamming a mall down our throat, thanks Harry, someone in the audience asked if any of the construction jobs would go local.  Well konover failed to level with our citizens, they failed to mention they own the construction outfit that would be doing the building.  Seems like a lot of our legislatures are pretty self-serving.  What's that you get 2000 grand a month untill  the building is built, how intresting.

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