Posts Tagged casino gambling
Atlantic City & Casinos – From 50th to 1st in Crime in 3 Years
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development on September 25, 2009
September 25, 2009… If you don’t have enough reasons to vote against gambling casinos, Brian Rothenberg, director of ProgressOHIO, has some gems. As the fact that in the first three years of legalized casino gambling in Atlantic City it went from 50th in crime to NO. 1.
Oh, just what Cleveland needs, right?
He also notes that casino licenses in the U. S. typically go for from $300 million to $500 million. Why not, it’s a license to take someone’s money. In Ohio the price tag for a casino monopoly: $50 million.
Cleveland does everything on the cheap, why not this?
He’s got more info on his site here:
http://www.progressohio.org/page/community/post/brianrothenberg/Cqy8
Rock Hall a Heavy Financial Load for Cleveland
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development, Media, People, Politicians on April 9, 2009
Hopefully, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in Cleveland will help put money into the pockets of waitresses, waiters, some downtown businesses and panhandlers.
Millions and millions of public dollars have gone into the mostly private organization and for its mostly private parties for the elite and politicians.
So one hopes that the ordinary guy gets a little something out of it.
We’ve paid an enormous price so Sen. George Voinovich and his buddy Dick Pogue of Jones-Day can get some face time with the rockers.
Most people don’t know that millions of dollars every year from the City of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County go to the Rock and Roll Hall & Museum.
Most people don’t know that property taxes from Tower City – ah, yes that name again – are diverted from the city, county, city libraries – most important to the Cleveland School system – to pay for Rock Hall bonds. To give you an idea of how much money is being diverted every year I checked a few years ago. I found that between 1995 and 1998 more than $3 million of Tower City property taxes were diverted from the Cleveland schools to pay for the Rock Hall. The total diverted was $5 million. Such taxes will be paid until 2015.
The money went to pay $39 million in Port Authority bonds for the Rock Hall.
The Rock Hall started as at an estimated $28 million. It ended up costing a cool $93-million plus. Read the rest of this entry »