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Cedar Rapids granted casino license by IRGC
Cedar Rapids granted casino license by IRGC

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cedar Rapids granted casino license by IRGC

ALTOONA, Iowa — Legislation attempts, regulation blocks and now it's construction time for Linn County, Cedar Rapids, and Peninsula Pacific Entertainment. On Thursday morning the members of the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission met to consider plans for the Cedar Crossing Casino & Entertainment Center. Arrested Madison County Treasurer relieved of duties, board appoints interim treasurer In a vote of 4 to 1, the commission approved the $275 million proposal and Linn County can move forward with the construction. The vote comes after some Iowa lawmakers attempted to pass a five-year moratorium to prevent the commission from handing out licenses. 'They did talk about all of the benefits of this project and how they truly outweigh a negative or two. And I couldn't agree more. And I can't say enough about the work of these commissioners and how appreciative we are,' said Cedar Rapids Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell. 'They took all of the worry that it would be a political decision out of it.' There is a groundbreaking planned for Friday, February 7 at 11 a.m. in Cedar Rapids. A day that has been asked by for the voters of Linn County for more than a decade. The casino must be completed by October of 2027 or fines will be given by the IRGC. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Racing and Gaming Commission approves Cedar Rapids casino project
Racing and Gaming Commission approves Cedar Rapids casino project

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Racing and Gaming Commission approves Cedar Rapids casino project

Cedar Rapids Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell speaks with reporters following the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission decision to approve a casino project application in Cedar Rapids. (Photo by Cami Koons/Iowa Capital Dispatch) The Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission voted to approve the application for Cedar Crossing Casino and Entertainment Center on Thursday morning at its February meeting in Altoona. Cedar Rapids Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell celebrated the decision, which she said has been a 'David versus Goliath' situation since the beginning, and 'by God the story ended the same way — let's hear it for David.' 'Honestly, a cataclysmic day for Cedar Rapids and Linn County,' O'Donnell said to reporters. 'Linn County, Cedar Rapids, deserves this.' Project planners intend to break ground on the project Friday. Jonathan Swain, a board member with Peninsula Pacific Entertainment, the developing group behind the project, said he was 'shovel ready' for the project he has spent 12 years planning. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX 'It'll probably take us 18 to 22 months to build the project… so we're going to move very quickly,' Swain said to reporters. The commission voted 4-1 to approve the project, with commissioner Alan Ostergren dissenting. 'They took all of the worry that this would be a political decision, out of it,' O'Donnell said. '(The commission) responded to facts and not fear and I am truly grateful for the outcome.' Earlier in the week, the Iowa Senate stalled a casino moratorium bill that, while not aimed directly at the Cedar Rapids project, would have blocked its approval. The bill, which would have set a five year moratorium on all new casinos, passed the house quickly, but Sen. Ken Rozenboom, R-Oskaloosa, said Senate Republicans would leave those decisions to the gaming and racing commission. Rozenboom told reporters he does not have plans to take the bill up later in the session, citing a lack of support from Senate Republicans and in the interest of getting to other pieces of legislation. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Casino moratorium bill stalls in Iowa Senate committee
Casino moratorium bill stalls in Iowa Senate committee

Yahoo

time05-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Casino moratorium bill stalls in Iowa Senate committee

Cedar Rapids Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell spoke against a proposed casino moratorium in a Senate subcommittee meeting Feb. 4. The measure ultimately failed to advance. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch) A proposed five-year casino moratorium hit a roadblock Tuesday in the Iowa Senate after sailing through the House. Sen. Ken Rozenboom, R-Oskaloosa, said Tuesday there is not sufficient support for the moratorium among Senate Republicans and he chose not to debate the bill at a State Government Committee meeting. House File 144, passed by the Iowa House last week, would set a five-year moratorium on new licenses for casinos in addition to setting new standards for the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission to consider when assessing future license applicants. The commission would be barred from issuing licenses for casinos that are projected to impact the adjusted gross receipts of an existing Iowa casino by more than 10%. The bill would also ban new applications from counties where a casino application was denied for eight years. While a Senate subcommittee advanced the measure, House File 144, at a Tuesday meeting, Rozenboom read a statement at the beginning of the State Government Committee stating his reasoning for not bringing the measure forward. 'I am no fan of gambling and my decision not to advance this legislation should not be considered in support of casino expansion,' Rozenboom said in the statement. 'According to my conversations, this bill did not have enough support from Senate Republicans to advance all the way through the Senate process. In the interest of moving this session forward to other issues of critical importance to Iowans, I have no plans to reconsider the legislation for the remainder of this session.' Rozenboom told reporters after the meeting that the casino moratorium has been a 'difficult' issue, but that 'at the end of the day we do have a regulatory process and a commission that deals with this, and it's not an unusual position for Senate Republicans to simply say, 'well, we have a process in place, let's just follow the process.'' With no moratorium in place, the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission is expected to make a decision Thursday on granting a license for a Cedar Rapids casino. The commission will evaluate the Cedar Crossing Casino and Entertainment Center, the $275 million planned facility in Cedar Rapids which was proposed shortly after the previous moratorium expired June 30, 2024. Cedar Rapids Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell told reporters she was 'really proud that the process has been able to play out,' and is looking forward to bringing the project to the commission for a decision. Though the IRGC denied Cedar Rapids casino licenses in 2014 and 2017, she said she was hopeful the commission would see the benefits the Cedar Crossing project would bring to both Cedar Rapids and to the state. 'Times are different today, I believe, than when we brought a project before the Racing and Gaming Commission,' O'Donnell said. 'The time is right, the data shows that, and our city is in a very different position too. And it's my hope the commission sees this for the economic development opportunity that it is.' At the subcommittee meeting earlier Tuesday, supporters of the moratorium urged lawmakers to pass the measure, saying it was necessary to prevent job and revenue losses at existing casinos — especially the nearby Riverside Casino and Isle Casino Hotel Waterloo. Studies had found that more than half of revenue generated by Cedar Crossing would come from existing revenue currently heading to other Iowa casinos, while also generating $60 million in new total statewide commercial gambling revenue by 2028. Patty Koller, executive director of the Washington County Riverboat Foundation, called Cedar Rapids and supporters of the casino 'bullies.' 'My rural community is being threatened every few years,' she said. 'Our livelihood is threatened. It needs to stop, and only you senators can do it.' O'Donnell disputed the term 'bully' at the subcommittee hearing, saying other casinos and areas were keeping Cedar Rapids from having a fair bid at a casino license. She also said the impact of a Cedar Rapids casino on other state casinos should be viewed in the context of previous concerns about Wild Rose Casino & Hotel Jefferson's potential cannibalization of revenue at Prairie Meadows and other central Iowa casinos. 'Will it compete with nearby casinos?' O'Donnell said. 'Absolutely, it will. And competition makes everybody better, just as we saw (with) doom and gloom scenarios around Wild Rose — 'We're going to take all from the competing casinos' — and Prairie Meadows, lo and behold, saw a revenue burst just a few years later. The idea of Cedar Crossing has already pushed, as we hear, other casinos to be better and do better. Imagine what would happen if these casinos never had to worry about competition.' Though the Senate State Government Committee won't consider the bill, that does not mean it's dead and Thursday's commission action may not be the final word. In an Iowa Press taping Friday, Senate President Amy Sinclair said the 'pressure is less' in the Senate to pass a measure before Racing and Gaming Commission meeting because of the retroactive start date of Jan. 1, 2025 included in the bill. However, Rozenboom told reporters he does not anticipate discussions on a moratorium making a reappearance later in the 2025 session. 'A moratorium — I don't see a path forward for that approach,' Rozenboom. 'Should we consider or reconsider, 'what are those guidelines that the commission needs to consider?' That's a fair question, and in subsequent years, perhaps we'll deal with that. But no, not a moratorium — I don't see any further discussion on that in the foreseeable future.' Regardless of any future movement by the Legislature, the IRGC still plans to meet Thursday. Tina Eick, the IRGC administrator, said 'no changes have been made or are planned to the agenda' outside of a room change. 'The Commission is looking forward to completing this lengthy process,' Eick said in a statement. 'Considering a new casino application is just one small portion of the work the Commission performs. The Commission will also be handling other work as a part of its upcoming meeting including approving contracts and determining administrative fines.'

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