In casino expansion, revenue a crap shoot

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Gambling critics label casino-funded public programs, like education, as empty promises.

“Funding for education is just a PR move. The actual funding for education in real dollars has gone down in gambling states versus non-gambling states,” Kindt said.

When state economists in Florida released casino revenue estimates in 2004, they said revenues could range anywhere between $200 and $500 million per year. But legislators and pro-gambling groups focused solely on the higher end of the estimates in their promotions. And even the low-end number offered by state economists proved too optimistic.

The single largest annual revenue figure from gambling was $138 million in 2010 – only a third of the projected $500 million.

By the end of the 1980s, only four states had some form of legalized gambling. But the 1990s saw 11 more states bringing casinos to their turf.

In Illinois, legislators promised to use casino revenues for education assistance and to help local governments when gambling was legalized in 1990. State officials said the first 10 casino licenses would be sold for $5 million each, bringing state coffers nearly $50 million in revenue.

Instead, the licenses went for $25,000 a pop to “political insiders,” Kindt said.

In the 2000s, another wave of casino expansion hit the country as seven more states made gambling legal.

Pennsylvania legalized gambling in 2004 with legislators promising that casino expansion would provide major statewide property tax relief. Former Gov. Ed Rendell said casinos would pay the state more than $1 billion in slots revenue annually to offset property taxes.

The numbers tell a different story. Roughly $700 million has been injected into property tax relief each year, even though casino revenues have increased drastically.

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The benefits are also not as widespread as promised, said David Baldinger, president of the Pennsylvania Taxpayers Cyber Coalition. While a few residents have seen up to $400 of tax relief, many have seen none or very little, because of a “complicated state formula” that makes taxes vary greatly from community to community, Baldinger said.

“No, (gambling) hasn’t brought the property tax relief that was promised, not by a long shot. It’s nothing but a smoke screen to pay back gambling interests,” Baldinger said.

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