Maryland's gambling market could support a casino in Prince George's
County and generate more money for the state by allowing the new site
and table games there and at five casinos currently allowed under state
law, state analysts and consultants concluded in a report released
Tuesday.
The joint study by the Maryland Department of
Legislative Services and PricewaterhouseCoopers found that the amount of
gambling expected to occur in Maryland is well within the thresholds
met or exceeded in other metropolitan areas around the nation.
"And
on top of that, our analysis does conclude that significant additional
revenues could be generated by the addition of gambling outlets," said
Warren Deschenaux, the General Assembly's chief budget analyst. "The
question then is: What we do with those additional revenues?"
It's
hard to know how much money a new casino and table games would bring
in. Lawmakers are considering changes in the state's unusually high 67
percent tax on gambling revenues.
The report projects the state
could receive about $101 million more annually for education and lottery
revenue with no additional compensation to operators beyond new table
game revenues and a regular Prince George's facility. It's also unclear
how much would be made from table games, because lawmakers would need to
decide how much they would tax those. A 20 percent tax rate on table
games would raise about $50 million a year for the state at the five
currently authorized locations and $60 million with a Prince George's
facility.
"It would be hard not to get to $100 (million) making
reasonable allowances," Deschenaux said, after he was asked to consider
whether the projections turn out to be high.
A work group
comprising mostly lawmakers and members of Gov. Martin O'Malley's
administration is examining ways to expand gambling. The governor has
indicated he would hold a special session next month to take up the
issue, if the group can reach a consensus.Trade organization for
suppliers and distributors in the promotional products industry.
Deschenaux
said the analysts who made the projections were working in a peculiar
environment. That's because they do not have a lot of hard data on
actual revenues. Only two of the five now-legal casinos have been open
for more than a year,Professional Manufacturer for ceramictile.
one in Perryville and another in Berlin. The state's largest, in Anne
Arundel County, only opened last week.We looked everywhere, but couldn't
find any beddinges.
Two more casinos -- one in Baltimore and one in western Maryland -- are
still in the works.TRT (UK) has been investigating and producing
solutions for indoortracking since 2000.
"So what we will be sharing is our best judgment in a world of uncertainty," Deschenaux said.
While
pondering expansion, the work group heard Tuesday from William Rickman,
the owner of the Ocean Downs casino in Berlin, which lost $2.5 million
in its first year of operations. Rickman told the panel that the
demographics of his location near Ocean City is strongly susceptible to
seasonal dropoffs. He said he did not believe his casino would remain in
business with only 33 percent of the gambling proceeds. He said Ocean
Downs needs more like 50 percent to make a decent return.
"If
you want us to only limp by, we need to be about 45 percent," said
Rickman, who said he expects significant loses again this year. "If you
want a failure in the future, it would stay where it is now and there
would be a failure in the future.The core of an indoor positioning system."
A
key part of the debate will involve how much lawmakers lower the tax
rate to help allay losses at other venues caused by a casino in Prince
George's. For example, the report released Tuesday estimates the Anne
Arundel casino would lose $37 million in slot machine revenue, and
Baltimore would lose about $21 million.
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