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Downtown/Waterfront Casino

yyzer

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heard a news item on the radio this afternoon, they were saying "Montreal has one, so does Vancouver" could it be time for Toronto?...this is all I could find on google....

Moscoe proposing a casino for Toronto
toronto.ctv.ca

On the same day it was learned that Canadians lost $14.5 billion gambling last year, Toronto announced it was in preliminary talks to bring a casino to the city.

City licensing chair Howard Moscoe wants Toronto to get a piece of the action.

"I'm willing to sit down with the provincial government and work out a plan for a casino for Toronto," Moscoe said Thursday, adding that any arrangement would have to give the city its "fair share of the revenue."

But opening a casino in Canada's largest city is not a simple matter. City hall would first have to get approval for the facility from the provincial government. Then the city would need to have the plan approved by residents through a referendum.

Moscoe says he is in preliminary talks with the province. He adds that a casino could offer a great boost to the local economy. As an example, Casino Niagara pulls in about $500 million a year and employs 3,500 people.

During a three-day summit of gaming industry representatives in Toronto on Thursday, phase one of a study was released.

The economic report, commissioned by the Canadian Gaming Association, found the industry made revenues in excess of $15 billion in 2006. About $700 million was generated through non-gambling activities such as food and drinks.

"More people are employed in the gaming industry than are directly manufacturing automobiles," association CEO Bill Rutswy said.

Profits were pegged at $10.6 billion while provincial governments received about $7.4 billion and $3.2 billion went to charities.
 
i'll only support it if all the profits go to the city of toronto. it must be city operated.
 
Yeah, the province would set it up as a charity casino, then.
 
No more casinos please! This province has enough of them. If people really have to gamble here they can go up to Woodbine Race Track, or hop a bus to CasinoRama or Casino Niagara. Tacky tacky tacky.

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I don't mind Woodbine [Live!] morphing into a Vegas-style megaresort, possibly even including a 'real' casino, but I wouldn't want to see a casino stuck down at the waterfront.
 
Isn't this a desperate measure that decaying NA cities resort to in hopes of bringing more vibrancy and cash to their city centres- err Detroit comes to mind. Surely Toronto doesn't need this, especially on the waterfront. It all sounds very tacky to me.
 
I would support it if it was designed by, say, Daniel Libeskind. :D
 
I would support it if it was designed by, say, Daniel Libeskind. :D

Hmm. You know, given the right starchitect, I could be convinced of just about anything...

We have (two or three) Libeskind(s)*. We need a Nouvel!

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* two or three if the L Tower goes up... and whatever happened to Libeskind's Jewish War Memorial for Earl Bales Park? Anyone heard anything about that lately?

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It's not going to happen. But at any rate I find it funny that people have this moral opposition to casinos. Our baby'z allz grown up and can handle any positive or negative factors that are associated with casino gambling. Casinos are neither the cause of nor solution to all of life's problems. So long as we view casinos and any casino gambling revenues in this light than why not let the people have their fun? It is far more inappropriate to locate casinos in smaller towns like Windsor, Niagara or Orillia where the casino exerts a much larger proportional impact on the community.
 
bring it on provided... 1) city of Toronto gets its fair share of the $$, 2) visually it fits into it's surroundings (waterfront), and 3) it isn't surrounded by a 4000 space car park.
 
What's so 'tacky' about a casino?

From a revenue perspective, a lucrative proposition for the city.
In addition, a casino along the waterfront/portlands area will draw a constant volume of people to the area - would definitely kick start things into high gear in the vicinity.
 
A casino would be good but only if the city reaped the full benefit of it.
 

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