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Old Posted Sep 17, 2022, 5:33 PM
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^ Coney Island is at the top of my list, because the approvals for something like this are already there. And it would be open all the time, not just in the warmer months.

I’m not against the railyard proposal, especially if that would finally get that started. And any new casino in New York needs to be new construction, not retrofitted into an existing building. But the opposition to a casino is fiercest in Manhattan.

The real problem is with the limitations on licenses. When you consider 2 of the 3 would likely go to existing operations in Queens and Yonkers, that’s basically one new casino. We should be able to get one in Coney, and another on the west side. No reason why a city like New York should be so limited.



https://www.ny1.com/nyc/manhattan/po...itical-hurdles

Proposed casino at Hudson Yards would face political hurdles


By Bobby Cuza Manhattan
Sep. 16, 2022


Quote:
The proposal to build a casino at the Hudson Yards development on Manhattan’s west side has its advantages.

There’s plenty of room to build it on the currently undeveloped western portion of the site. The developer, chaired by billionaire Stephen Ross, has significant clout.

The hard part could be to win over local elected officials.
Quote:
But bidders must win approval from four of the six members of a community advisory committee. That committee will comprise representatives of the mayor, governor and local elected officials.

With Hudson Yards, that would include Assemblyman Richard Gottfried, who said in an interview Friday, “I don’t think a casino belongs in Manhattan.”

Gottfried is retiring at the end of the year, so any decision-making would likely fall to his successor. But others also have concerns.

In particular, they note Related’s prior commitments on the site.

“We were promised years ago when that project first launched a school, affordable housing, open space,” Hoylman said. “So we’re not willing to relinquish any of that.”


A Related spokesman said those elements would still be included in the development, even if the casino goes forward.
Quote:
Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, who would also have a say on the advisory committee, is keeping an open mind.

“I think being located next to Javits is a potential benefit, in that this could support trade shows at Javits,” he said.


Mayor Eric Adams did not weigh in on the Hudson Yards proposal this week, but a spokesman said, “The gaming commission will decide on where these casinos will be located, but we are hoping two of the three downstate casinos will be placed in New York City.”

The Hudson Yards casino would also have to go through the city’s arduous land-use process — another layer of approvals that would test the political influence of Ross, a major donor to Gov. Kathy Hochul and others.

“This needs to be a process that’s not influenced by political considerations,” Levine said. “This needs to be a process in which we weigh a proposal on the merits.”
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