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Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

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  • Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

    New chance for casino, race track in Adams

    By ERIN JAMES

    The Evening Sun [Hanover, Penn.]
    July 17, 2008

    David LeVan wants to try again.

    The man whose plan to build a casino near Gettysburg drew national attention and significant local opposition in 2005 and 2006 said Wednesday he has the financial backing he needs to take a second shot at securing a slots license for Adams County.

    LeVan said he intends to do exactly that if a license becomes available - something that seems increasingly likely.

    Investors in Valley View Downs, a proposed Lawrence County casino and horse-racing facility, are struggling to refinance the $455 million project before the state Gaming Control Board finishes its investigation and decides whether to grant them a license.

    If investors in Valley View Downs are forced to withdraw their application, "then I will get very aggressive," LeVan said.

    "I wanted to send a message that if they don't, I can," he said. "There is an alternative out here."

    This time around, LeVan's proposal will include plans for a horse-racing facility and be located somewhere in the southern part of the county - away from the Gettysburg battlefield and near the Maryland line. The project would cost between $400 million and $500 million and secure between $15 million and $20 million for the county and local government in tax revenues, he said.

    LeVan said he has confirmed the support of Silver Point Capital, a Connecticut-based firm that replaced Morgan Stanley as the largest investor in

    LeVan's original proposal to build a slots parlor with 3,000 machines near routes 30 and 15 in Straban Township.

    The plan for Crossroads Gaming Resort and Spa, submitted by LeVan's investment group, Chance Enterprises, was rejected by the state Gaming Control Board in December 2006, a decision board officials said was significantly influenced by vocal opponents of the proposal. Board members also cited doubts that an Adams County casino would draw enough gamblers from the Baltimore and Washington areas.

    Taking those criticisms into consideration, LeVan said Wednesday that he has a new strategy for winning the support of locals and of the Gaming Control Board.

    Because opponents of the original plan argued that locating a casino within a few miles of the battlefield would violate the sanctity of hallowed ground, LeVan said this time he will search for a site of no less than 200 acres that is far from the battlefield, but still within Adams County.

    An ideal site also would be located along the Maryland line and close to a highway in order to attract gamblers from Baltimore and Washington, he said. LeVan, who owns Battlefield Harley-Davidson in Gettysburg, said he has several properties in mind but will wait to see if a license becomes available before pursuing those options.

    In fact, all of LeVan's plans depend on whether the last of the state's slots licenses becomes available again to applicants.

    According to a story that appeared in The Beaver County Times on July 10, attorneys for Indiana-based Centaur Gaming - the only company whose application is currently being considered for the last available license - wrote in documents filed with the gaming board in March that a $995 million loan from Credit Suisse bank for Valley View Downs and other Centaur projects was due to expire on July 15. They wrote in a filing that "the likelihood of obtaining relief from the (bank) is very, very low, and there is no prospect of obtaining financing on the same, or possibly any, terms."

    Last week, the board denied investors' request for a conditional - or temporary - license on the grounds that its investigation is not complete and a suitability hearing has not yet taken place.

    A Centaur spokeswoman told reporters the company is pursuing other financing avenues, and Valley View Downs still could be awarded a license when the investigation is complete, something that probably will not happen before the fall, said gaming board spokesman Richard McGarvey.

    Valley View Downs also holds a license from the state Horse Racing Commission.

    Securing that license is a prerequisite for applying for a Category 1 slots license, which allows the building of a joint casino and horse-racing facility, McGarvey said.

    LeVan would need to secure a horse-racing license before he could pursue a Category 1 slots license. He said he is confident he could get through both processes successfully, though he said competition with "quite a number" of applicants would be likely.

    McGarvey said he could not speculate on what the racing commission would do if Valley View Downs withdrew its application for a slots license, but he said the gaming board would have the option of re-opening the application process or replacing the Category 1 license with a Category 2 license if there are no eligible applicants. A Category 2 license is for a stand-alone casino.

    The gaming board has not been given any indication that Valley View Downs intends to withdraw its application, McGarvey said.

    LeVan said he does not have any firsthand knowledge of the Lawrence County project, "other than what I read in the paper."

    But he wants people statewide to know that Adams County is still a viable option as a location for a casino and horse-racing facility.

    The businessman said he also is interested in gauging community support for the proposal. He said he anticipates a different reaction from residents now that a battlefield location has been taken off the table.

    And now that there are several slots facilities operating in the state, he said, it can be shown that opponents' fears of crime and other ill effects on the community were unfounded.

    LeVan said he would build a "high-end quality" facility aimed at creating an experience for the customer.

    The Gettysburg native said he still is convinced a slots parlor would be a significant financial boon for the county and its residents - and a worthy investment for himself, as well.

    "I haven't let go yet," he said.




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

  • #2
    Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

    To those familiar with the area; how far is this proposed site from the battlefield?
    [B][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=DarkOliveGreen]Jason Albregts[/COLOR][/FONT]
    [FONT=Georgia][COLOR=DarkOliveGreen]The Barleycorn Boys (Retired)[/COLOR][/FONT][/B]
    [FONT="Georgia"][COLOR=DarkOliveGreen][B]Civil War Preservation Trust Member[/B][/COLOR][/FONT]

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

      Fight it.

      I live in Southern California. Here, the Indian’s have set-up casinos all over the place. Every community that they have set up shop in has problems associated with the casinos. All along the Indian’s pledged that they would donate revenue to compensate for the associated traffic, noise, crime, etc. The compensation is never enough or does not get paid.

      The outlining comminutes, that are not part of the compensation package, suffer too. They have to put up with the traffic that comes through their once quaint areas to get to the casinos, and they get very little if anything in return.

      The jobs that are promised are few and lower paid positions. The higher paid jobs go to the friends and associates of the investor/promoter/owners.

      If the casino/race track can be set-up in an area that is remote from any community, with direct access to LARGE freeways, then they could possibly be a consideration. Every county/community can use more revenue. That part is a no-brainer. But please be careful how it is done. Once it’s built, there is no going back.

      Brian Wiswell
      Brian Wiswell

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

        Originally posted by Corporal Jay View Post
        To those familiar with the area; how far is this proposed site from the battlefield?
        The article doesn't give a specific site, but based on the following:

        "LeVan said this time he will search for a site of no less than 200 acres that is far from the battlefield, but still within Adams County.

        An ideal site also would be located along the Maryland line and close to a highway in order to attract gamblers from Baltimore and Washington"

        The only "highway" that runs through southern Adams County would be Rt. 15. Rt. 15 near the MD line is roughly 6-7 miles from the Gettysburg NMP.
        Brian Koenig
        SGLHA
        Hedgesville Blues

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

          Where is Squeaky Frome when you need her?

          Greg Starbuck
          The brave respect the brave. The brave
          Respect the dead; but you -- you draw
          That ancient blade, the ass's jaw,
          And shake it o'er a hero's grave.


          Herman Melville

          http://www.historicsandusky.org

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

            We did it once. We can do it again.
            Drew

            "God knows, as many posts as go up on this site everyday, there's plenty of folks who know how to type. Put those keyboards to work on a real issue that's tied to the history that we love and obsess over so much." F.B.

            "...mow hay, cut wood, prepare great food, drink schwitzel, knit, sew, spin wool, rock out to a good pinch of snuff and somehow still find time to go fly a kite." N.B.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

              Hanover Shoe Farms is approximately twelve miles southeast from Gettysburg, not really in close proximity to the battlefield.


              Hanover Shoe Farms part of 'racino' equation? LeVan thinks so

              By ERIN JAMES

              The Evening Sun [Hanover, Penn.]
              July 19, 2008

              The last time David LeVan tried to build a casino in Adams County, horse racing was not part of the equation.

              But if he gets a second shot at obtaining a gaming license, the Gettysburg businessman said he already knows the local horse experts who would make the perfect partners in a joint casino and horse-racing proposal - a venture some call a "racino."

              The main farm of Hanover Shoe Farms - a world-renowned breeder of standardbred horses - is located on Route 194 between Hanover and Littlestown in southern Adams County, the region where LeVan said he would build a gaming and racing venue if a license to do so became available.

              And since LeVan views southern Adams County as an ideal spot for a gaming and racing facility, he said the proximity of Hanover Shoe Farms to the potential site is just too perfect of a coincidence.

              "It's another thing to me that makes Adams County the right place for this," said LeVan, who has been trying to bring a casino to the area since 2005.

              Three years ago, LeVan unveiled his plan for a 3,000-machine slots parlor near routes 30 and 15 in Straban Township, but the state's Gaming Control Board rejected the proposal in December 2006.

              On Wednesday, LeVan announced that he has the financial backing of Indiana-based firm Silver Point Capital to make a bid for the state's last open Category 1 slots license if the pending application of another company is withdrawn or rejected. A Category 1 license can be awarded to an applicant who has already obtained a harness-racing license from the state Horse Racing Commission and has plans to build a joint casino and horse-racing facility.

              The financial instability of Centaur Gaming's proposed Valley View Downs in Lawrence County has some speculating on the future of the project.

              That uncertainty resonated with LeVan, who made the announcement in an effort to let people statewide know there is an alternative in Adams County.

              LeVan stressed Hanover Shoe Farms is not currently involved in his latest plan for an Adams County casino, and he could not say in what capacity he would like the breeder to be involved if plans for a casino and horse-racing facility were to move forward.

              But it would not make sense not to include them, he said.

              Repeated calls to Hanover Shoe Farms President and CEO Jim Simpson were not returned. A receptionist said no one else was available to comment.

              Whether Hanover Shoe Farms executives would be interested in LeVan's latest proposal is unclear, but it would not be the first time the breeder has been involved in efforts to bring a casino and racing track to the area.

              It also would not be the first time it has worked with LeVan to do so.

              LeVan made what he called a "confession" Wednesday.

              He said he was in fact involved with a group of investors - which LeVan said included Hanover Shoe Farms - who were exploring the option of applying for a harness-racing license from the state Horse Racing Commission in July 2007. A state Supreme Court ruling had opened the door to the possibility the final harness license would be available to bidders statewide.

              At the time, LeVan's name had been cited as part of the local group, though the businessman never confirmed it himself.

              Those plans fell through, however, when the Gaming Control Board decided not to open the process to new applicants.

              But LeVan said the chance gave him an opportunity to work with Hanover Shoe Farms.

              "We maintained a good relationship," LeVan said.

              Soon after the gaming board made its decision not to open the bidding process to new applicants, Simpson said the local proposal had only been "conceptual."

              But he was in favor of it.

              "Would I like a racetrack in our neighborhood? Absolutely, but it's just not in the cards," Simpson said last year.




              Eric
              Eric J. Mink
              Co. A, 4th Va Inf
              Stonewall Brigade

              Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Gettysburg Casino -- Round Two?

                LeVan: Lessons learned, let's try again

                By ERIN JAMES

                The Evening Sun [Hanover, Penn.]
                July 20, 2008

                David LeVan did a lot of skiing in January 2007.

                In the mountains of Wyoming, the Gettysburg businessman was recovering from his defeated proposal to build a casino in Adams County.

                LeVan had decided not to appeal the Gaming Control Board's December 2006 decision, and his name practically disappeared from the headlines.

                But he never stopped thinking about the casino.

                LeVan thrust himself back into the limelight Wednesday with an announcement that he has the financial backing of an Indiana-based firm to try again if the opportunity arises.

                He knows it is a long shot, one that he has absolutely no control over.

                If the last available slots license goes to a casino project proposed in western Pennsylvania, the Gettysburg businessman would be unable to secure a license unless a new one is created.

                "If they get the gaming license, it's over," LeVan said.

                But if Centaur Gaming fails in its attempt to secure a license for the proposed Valley View Downs casino and horse-racing site, LeVan says he is ready, willing and able to capitalize on the opportunity.

                That opportunity depends on two things - the questionable financial stability of Centaur Gaming and the gaming board's ultimate decision on whether to grant the company the license.

                A Gaming Control Board spokesman said Thursday that the agency's background investigation into Centaur Gaming is far from complete, and a decision is not expected until the fall.

                But earlier his month, the board rejected Centaur's request for a conditional gaming license.

                The company made the request in hopes of maintaining a $995 million loan - part of which was for the Valley View Downs project. The loan expired July 15, and the company said in court documents filed in March that "the likelihood of obtaining relief from the (bank) is very, very low, and there is no prospect of obtaining financing on the same, or possibly any, terms."

                LeVan said Wednesday that he wants to send a message.

                He wants people to know that if he can, he will try again for an Adams County casino.

                And this time, he will do it differently.

                "We certainly learned a lot of lessons," he said.

                GOODBYE, BATTLEFIELD

                When the Gaming Control Board rejected LeVan's casino proposal in 2006, board members cited two main reasons.

                One was a lack of faith in LeVan's claim that he would draw gamblers from the Baltimore and Washington, D.C. area to the Gettysburg casino, which he called Crossroads Gaming Resort and Spa.

                The other was fierce public opposition to the project, which LeVan had wanted to locate near routes 30 and 15 in Straban Township. As the crow flies, the casino would have been 1.25 miles from the closest battlefield point.

                And the proximity to hallowed ground roused strong reactions from local residents and Civil War buffs nationwide.

                A local group named No Casino Gettysburg submitted to the gaming board a 64,000-signature petition from people opposed to the project. Many also testified against the proposal at the board's public hearings.

                LeVan said Wednesday he has no interest in fighting the second round in a losing battle.

                This time, he said he would locate the joint casino and horse-racing venue in the southern part of Adams County, close to the Maryland border, near a highway and on a site of no fewer than 200 acres.

                He is not set on one specific location, but LeVan said he is "aware of a number of sites."

                "I'm confident we could find a site pretty quickly," he said.

                LeVan said he wants a site far enough away from the battlefield that the former opposition's central argument - that a nearby casino would desecrate hallowed ground - becomes irrelevant.

                "Take that off the equation," he said.

                HELLO, HORSE RACING

                In his original proposal, LeVan said he would build a 3,000-machine slots parlor with restaurants and bars, a 225-room luxury hotel, spa and a self-parking garage.

                Horses had nothing to do with it.

                But if he were to make a bid for the last available Category 1 gaming license, LeVan would need to incorporate a horse-racing track into his proposal.

                To be awarded a Category 1 license, an applicant must have already secured a harness license from the state Horse Racing Commission.

                Centaur currently holds the last available harness license, and its application for the final Category 1 license is pending.

                If the project falls through, however, LeVan has no qualms about expanding his original plan for an Adams County casino into one for an Adams County casino and racing track.

                In fact, he said it makes sense with Hanover Shoe Farms - a world-renowned breeder of standardbred horses - so near.

                Hanover Shoe Farms President Jim Simpson did not return phone calls this week. But in 2007, Simpson said he would "absolutely" support the building of a race track in Adams County.

                LeVan said he would need to first apply for the harness license - assuming Centaur gives it up and the Horse Racing Commission reopens the application process - and then go for the gaming license.

                He said Wednesday that he is confident in his ability to get through both processes successfully.

                THE MARYLAND FACTOR

                LeVan still thinks an Adams County casino would be sustained by the population of gamers south of the border, mainly from the Baltimore and Washington areas.

                This time he might be able to prove it.

                In 2006, Crossroads investors had projected that 60 to 65 percent of the casino's customer base would have come from Maryland - where slots gaming is currently illegal.

                The project's proponents testified they did not believe gaming legislation would be passed in Maryland in the near future. And even if it did, they estimated only a 15- to 20-percent decrease in revenue for Crossroads.

                Board members were not happy with that synopsis, and they cited it as one of the main reasons for rejecting the Crossroads proposal.

                But in November, the question of whether to legalize slots in Maryland will be put to the state's voters.

                And when the answer is returned, the future of Maryland gaming no longer will be an unknown.

                "That actually could be analyzed," LeVan said.

                Its proximity to the Baltimore-Washington market is at the heart of why Adams County makes sense as a site for a casino and racing track, he said.

                LeVan said he would expect to lose "some" business from Gettysburg tourists by moving the venue farther from town, but he would make up for it by locating the site closer to the Maryland border.

                "What makes a gaming operation successful ... is the proximity to population," LeVan said.

                Depending on the outcome of the referendum, LeVan said a portion of the gaming board's critique of an Adams County casino could become null and void.

                "I think we can take that away," he said.

                GAUGING REACTION

                LeVan said he asked himself a question before going public with his newest casino proposal this week.

                Could he overcome community opposition this time?

                The casino's proximity to the battlefield, he thought, was what spurred the most criticism of the Crossroads project.

                Take that away, and LeVan decided "we'd get a very different reaction in the community."

                "It really boils down to the local question," he said.

                LeVan said he would conduct a survey to gauge public opinion, something he did for the Crossroads proposal.

                This time he expects more support from locals. Since the 2006 rejection, LeVan said he has heard from those who would like to see him try again.

                "I've actually had a lot of people in the community say, 'Well, gee, don't you think there might be some kind of opportunity?'" he said.

                He said he still believes a casino would benefit the county by adding jobs and tax revenue.

                The project would cost between $400 million and $500 million and secure between $15 million and $20 million for the county and local government in tax revenues, he said.

                LeVan said he was not surprised by the opposition to Crossroads in 2005 and 2006, but he was disappointed in the investors' inability to convince the public that the Straban Township site had little to no historical significance to the battle.

                He will not make that mistake again, LeVan said.

                "What I want to try to get to is, what is the majority opinion?" he said.




                Eric
                Eric J. Mink
                Co. A, 4th Va Inf
                Stonewall Brigade

                Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

                Comment

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