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ISSUE 3 YES or NO


KennyFKINPowerz

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Well I have not seen anyone post this so I figured i would.

Whats everyones take on Issue 3? Are you for the casinos in Ohio or against them?

I personally think the purposed plan to build one in the arena district would be awesome. Not only will it bring a boost to our local economy but it will create jobs and make the arena district more exciting. And I am tired of driving to Indiana and giving my money to them.

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I'm saying 'No', but not because I'm against casinos. I'm against this particular issue because it (like the others before) specifically calls only certain cities, and contains a 'cash vs. credit' loophole. I will support a casino measure if:

 

1. It allows casinos anywhere in the state. You pay, say, a $100 million builder's fee and a $10 million annual license, and if you want to be a stupid businessman and stick it in Holmes county, more power to you (I hear those Amish are a gold mine just waiting to be tapped!)

 

2. Taxes are charged on gross revenue, not "cash transactions" or "ATM withdrawls" or any other fancy-schmancy rubric. No matter how that dollar gets into your system, whether it's by gambling, food+alcohol sales, or Vegas-style showgirls, it gets taxed at the point of entry.

 

3. The casino operator is responsible for external security and law-enforcement (catching drunks before they drive, keeping the hookers off the streets, etc) through the hiring of off-duty and retired police officers. These folks already know the law and are both local and ready. Internal security (pit bosses, the folks staring at the camera monitors in the security offices, etc) may be brought in from out of state on a temporary basis to train locals. I'm not so stupid as to think someone fresh off the street is able to do this as well as someone with 10 years experience at it. If the transplant wants to move here on a permanent basis rather than a 6mo or 1yr contract, fine by me.

 

Give me a smart casino bill, and I'll vote for it. This one isn't it.

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The Other Paper is claiming that the FOP is only supporting it because a portion of the taxes would be going straight to them. Neat that they are buying the police, not that its new or anything.

 

Beyond that, I need more info before I'll make a decision.

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I heard that in the plan the Casino is paying a 50 million dollar license fee and 33% of the taxes come back to the state. However surrounding states have a 400 and 500 million dollar license fee so the state is getting kind of screwed but it still has its benefits.
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And thats just about the easiest game to deal too. Dont forget to mention they do make tips on top of salary but im sure they have to claim those tips.... maybe.

 

Doing some looking around on google says that most make close to minimum wage then the tips are what help. Every dealer except poker dealers have to throw their tips into a pot and it gets distributed evenly.

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I'm saying 'No', but not because I'm against casinos. I'm against this particular issue because it (like the others before) specifically calls only certain cities, and contains a 'cash vs. credit' loophole. I will support a casino measure if:

 

1. It allows casinos anywhere in the state. You pay, say, a $100 million builder's fee and a $10 million annual license, and if you want to be a stupid businessman and stick it in Holmes county, more power to you (I hear those Amish are a gold mine just waiting to be tapped!)

 

2. Taxes are charged on gross revenue, not "cash transactions" or "ATM withdrawls" or any other fancy-schmancy rubric. No matter how that dollar gets into your system, whether it's by gambling, food+alcohol sales, or Vegas-style showgirls, it gets taxed at the point of entry.

 

3. The casino operator is responsible for external security and law-enforcement (catching drunks before they drive, keeping the hookers off the streets, etc) through the hiring of off-duty and retired police officers. These folks already know the law and are both local and ready. Internal security (pit bosses, the folks staring at the camera monitors in the security offices, etc) may be brought in from out of state on a temporary basis to train locals. I'm not so stupid as to think someone fresh off the street is able to do this as well as someone with 10 years experience at it. If the transplant wants to move here on a permanent basis rather than a 6mo or 1yr contract, fine by me.

 

Give me a smart casino bill, and I'll vote for it. This one isn't it.

 

+1 - You don't change the state constitution to say exactly who and where you build casinos. I have no problem with casinos in Ohio, let people gamlbe here and and keep the money in state. Since we need to change the state constitution to do it, at minimum, the bill should be something to the effect:

 

The state shall allow up to (insert number here) casinos to be licensed in the State of Ohio. Said licenses will be sold to the highest bidder with a minimum annual fee of (insert x million here). Licenses will be renewable by the license holder every (insert years here) and the licensing fee collected annually.

 

After that, turn the state legislature loose to clean up the details. As I understand it, the guy running all the ads against the casino bill last time (because he wasn't included to get a casino), got "written in" to this sweatheart deal, and now, little or no opposition.

 

Let's have casinos - but do it the right way.

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+1 - You don't change the state constitution to say exactly who and where you build casinos. I have no problem with casinos in Ohio, let people gamlbe here and and keep the money in state. Since we need to change the state constitution to do it, at minimum, the bill should be something to the effect:

 

The state shall allow up to (insert number here) casinos to be licensed in the State of Ohio. Said licenses will be sold to the highest bidder with a minimum annual fee of (insert x million here). Licenses will be renewable by the license holder every (insert years here) and the licensing fee collected annually.

 

After that, turn the state legislature loose to clean up the details. As I understand it, the guy running all the ads against the casino bill last time (because he wasn't included to get a casino), got "written in" to this sweatheart deal, and now, little or no opposition.

 

Let's have casinos - but do it the right way.

 

Another +1. The state constitution isn't just some Word document that you can edit.

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The Other Paper is claiming that the FOP is only supporting it because a portion of the taxes would be going straight to them. Neat that they are buying the police, not that its new or anything.

 

Beyond that, I need more info before I'll make a decision.

 

The FOP is full of communists.

 

 

I personally don't mind the casinos, I don't think it's going to be all that they're cracked up to be. Not to mention, one in the Arena district will add to the cluster fuck of parking that already exists there.

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