Despite the pandemic, Twin River Worldwide Holdings continues to grow its footprint by seizing opportunities as they arise. And one of its biggest coups so far has been buying Bally’s Atlantic City (l.) for a mere $25 million, as well as casinos in Louisiana, Mississippi and Nevada.
Sweden was one of the countries that did not close down due to Covid-19. But that didn’t mean Swedish businesses didn’t adjust to reality. In a new research study from UNLV, researchers share lessons learned from Casino Cosmopol CEO Per Jaldung (l.).
One of the leading colleges offering Indian studies, San Diego State University has developed a new online degree program that is designed to allow students who don’t necessarily live in Southern California the opportunity to obtain a degree in just two years.
The Oneida Indian Nation takes Covid-19 seriously, and insists their guests do likewise. The nation’s New York casinos (including Turning Stone, l., in Verona) were among the first in the U.S. to make face masks mandatory, and also limit entry by people from states where the virus is on the rise.
With no end in sight to Covid-19, several gaming-related organizations have joined the throng who have cancelled their expos and conventions. Chief among them: the American Gaming Association, which last week announced that G2E in Las Vegas would not take place as scheduled.
It’s clear the U.S. gaming industry will not rebound quickly or easily from the Covid-19 crisis, and that means more casino workers will lose their jobs. The first wave of permanent layoffs is now under way in markets across the country.
Macau’s casinos are expected to declare more than US$1 billion in combined EBITDA losses for the second quarter, equivalent to a decline of 56 percent compared to last year. Investment bank Morgan Stanley is calling it the market’s “worst quarter ever.”
The $17.3 billion mega-merger of Eldorado Resorts and Caesars Entertainment took a big step forward with a unanimous endorsement from the Nevada Gaming Control Board and the state Gaming Commission. Indiana regulators concurred the next day, but with conditions. With only New Jersey left to sign off, the merger looks set to close, as expected, this summer.
The United Keetowah Band of Cherokee Indians and Kialegee Tribal Town have signed 15-year gaming compacts with the state of Oklahoma. UKB Chief Joe Bunch (l.) thanked the administration of Governor Kevin Stitt “for this monumental day and for their leadership efforts in this compact.” The tribes and the third and fourth to agree to a deal with the state.
A California superior court judge has given gaming tribes and racinos 90 days gather enough signatures to qualify a sports betting measure for the ballot. The coalition now has three months to gather more than 1 million supporters. Pechanga spokesman Jacob Meija (l.) says there is great enthusiasm for the measure.
Most of Atlantic City’s nine casinos reopened July 2, welcoming guests for the busy Fourth of July holiday. For the most part, the game plan worked, despite a last minute ban on inside dining from New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, which caused the Borgata to remain closed.
IGT has launched its PeakBarTop unit, which includes high-performing video poker, slots, keno and roulette content, in California and Nevada gaming venues.
With its normal live summer events canceled due to the pandemic, the World Series of Poker is making up for it with the largest event in the history of online poker.
Casinos today depend on technology to such an extent that the human touch and common sense are often overlooked. The recent mistake made by Bellagio and BetMGM over Korean baseball (l.) is a case in point, says veteran casino guy Richard Schuetz.
This week, the GGB is joined by George Papanier, the president and CEO, and Phil Juliano, senior vice president and chief marketing officer for Twin River Management Group, one of the companies that benefited from the merger of Eldorado and Caesars Entertainment by picking up competing resorts for bargain prices.
Yuriko Koike (l.), called Japan's most powerful woman and a possible successor to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has won her second term as Tokyo governor in a landslide decision. It may be up to her if the region pursues one of Japan’s first integrated resorts.
Cambodia’s almost 200 casinos began to reopen last week after getting the OK from Prime Minister Hun Sen (l.). All gaming venues in the country must meet stringent Covid-19 safety measures set forth by the Ministry of Health.
A U.S. District Court judge last week ruled in favor of former workers of Imperial Pacific International, which operates a casino (l.) on the Pacific island of Saipan. Seven workers sued IPI, alleging that it recruited them under false pretenses and subjected them to sub-par working conditions.
Mario Kontomerkos, CEO of Mohegan Gaming & Entertainment, says the company’s Inspire resort, now in development in South Korea, will be important to the U.S. tribal firm’s long-term financial health. Inspire is on track to open in 2022.
According to a new public health survey, problem gambling is up in France, though overall participation in gambling has dropped in the past six years. Just 10 percent of players accounted for more than 82 percent of total bets made, and 1 percent was responsible for almost half.
The Ukrainian parliament, which failed to approve a sweeping draft gaming law earlier this month, will try again on July 14. If passed, the measure would legalize land-based and online casinos, sports betting, slot halls, online poker, totalizator and lotteries.
Holland Casino in the Netherlands reopened all 14 of its facilities on July 1, two months earlier than originally planned. A scheduled September reopening was criticized by the operator and a national gaming trade group.
For nine years, CBC News fought to learn how the British Columbia Lottery Corp. ran afoul of Canada’s money laundering watchdog agency, FINTRAC. BCLC fought disclosure, but in June came clean at last. BC Attorney General David Eby (l.) said it was overdue.
Leisure Acquisition Corp.’s acquisition of Canadian casino company Gateway by has been delayed again. The transaction, which began in December 2019, has been postponed twice.
Following a surge in coronavirus cases, the government of Victoria, Australia has ordered that Melbourne resume its Stage 3 lockdown. The measure dashed hopes that Crown Resorts’ flagship Melbourne casino (l.) would reopen soon.
Commercial and tribal casinos in Michigan may now submit applications for online gaming and sports betting operator licenses. Michigan Gaming Control Board Executive Director Richard Kalm (l.) hopes to see iGaming and sports betting may launch by late 2020.
With emergency rules submitted and public comment duly noted, an online casino could launch in West Virginia before the end of the month, according to Lottery Director John Myers (l.). Both DraftKings and FanDuel are well-positioned to operate the state's first online casino app.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta recently signed legislation to remove the 20 percent excise tax on mobile sportsbook stakes, a levy that prompted operators Sportpesa and Betin to exit the market. One week later, it’s back.
Churchill Downs will partner with GAN on a sportsbook platform and with Kambi on operation of its online sportsbook, which carries the BetAmerica brand. GAN CEO Dermot Smurfit (l.) says the platform would be deployed in several sates.
DraftKings Inc. and Twin River Worldwide Holdings have opened a temporary retail sportsbook at the Mardi Gras Casino in Black Hawk, Colorado. It began accepting wagers on Friday, July 10.
Major League Soccer has embraced sports betting, posting gambling odds on its website, inviting gambling companies to sponsor jerseys and entertaining the idea of sportsbooks inside stadiums.
The Virginia Lottery planned to unveil proposed sports betting regulations July 15, and also set the rules for casinos and sportsbooks. The first bets could be placed by early next year, says Lottery Executive Director Kevin Hall (l.).
Regulators in Pennsylvania say they will revive an effort to auction off 10 licenses for mini-casinos, in an effort to boost state gaming taxes in the wake of the coronavirus shutdown. Two mini-casinos are in the pipeline, including Penn National’s satellite (l.) near Reading.
New York’s commercial gaming industry has been shuttered for more than three months and will remain so after it was excluded from the state’s latest round of statewide reopenings. There’s been no word from Governor Andrew Cuomo (l.) on when the shutdown will end.
Maryland’s six casinos posted revenues of $35 million for June, a measly total compared to $143 million in June 2019. Lawmakers are looking at ways close the gap, including iGaming and sports betting, said Gordon Medenica (l.), head of the Maryland Lottery and Gaming Control Agency.
The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board has temporarily banned smoking on casino floors in keeping with a state directive requiring masks in all indoor venues. The ban was ordered July 1 from Health Department Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine (l.).
Three months of Covid-19 closures caused Ohio's 11 casinos and racinos to lose $487.5 million year-on-year in the first half of 2020. But business has been on the rise since venues began reopening June 18.
The pro-casino organization Keep the Money in Nebraska hopes to get gaming measures on the November ballot, despite past failures. To that end, it’s collected hundreds of thousands of signatures on three petitions.
Churchill Downs Inc. shuttered its Calder Casino in Miami in March and reopened it in mid-June. Now it’s "temporarily suspended" operations again in response to a spike in Covid-19 cases in Florida.
Caesars Entertainment has been tapped to develop a casino in Danville, Virginia if voters approve, but Pacific Peninsula—which owns Colonial Downs—has proposed an OTB facility if that plans falls through. COO Aaron Gomes (l.) says Pacific Peninsula has "the only viable backup.”
An Arkansas pro-casino group has gathered 97,000-plus signatures hoping to get a casino measure on the November ballot. In 2018, voters approved an amendment expanding gambling at Hot Springs and West Memphis racetracks and allowing two new casinos in Jefferson and Pope counties.
Illinois' 10 casinos have reopened with new health protocols and an assurance from the Illinois Gaming Board that it will revoke the license of properties that don’t follow them. Board Administrator Marcus Fruchter (l.) said the measures are vital to prevent a Covid surge—and another shutdown.
Three weeks after reopening, California’s commercial card rooms have closed their doors again, the result of a pandemic surge in the Golden State. Governor Gavin Newsom (l.) said the disease has spread at “an alarming rate.”
Massachusetts’ three casinos are all scheduled to be back in business this week. The first to open was Plainridge Park Casino on July 8; the last will be the MGM Springfield on July 13.
With the nationwide surge in new Covid-19 infections, travel fears are on the rise. That can’t be good for the Las Vegas gaming industry, which is trying to put the pandemic behind it. Governor Steve Sisolak (l.) last week ordered bars to close but allowed restaurants to remain open.
Hundreds of casino workers have signed a petition demanding a smoking ban or designated smoking area at Caesars Southern Indiana. The workers earlier protested that guests did not have to wear masks at the casino; Caesars Entertainment then announced that face coverings are mandatory.
The Navajo Nation Gaming Enterprise has extended the closing of its casinos, including Twin Arrows (l.) near Flagstaff, Arizona, until July 27 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The four properties in New Mexico and Arizona first closed in mid-March.
Gila River Gaming Enterprises Inc. has reopened its three Arizona casinos for the second time. The properties first reopened in mid-May, then closed again on June 18 after a worker died of the coronavirus. Since then, the tribal firm has been beefing up its sanitation protocols.
The coronavirus has put a halt to many things, but hasn’t slowed down the planned grand opening of the Agua Caliente Casino in Cathedral City, California, expected at the end of the year.
Michigan's nine federally recognized tribes have released a study indicating that 38 tribally-owned non-gaming businesses had an economic impact of $288.8 million and created 1,847 jobs in 2019. The results will be used as "a baseline" for growing non-gaming tribal business activity.
Richard Haskins, the longtime president of Station Casinos, was killed last week in a watersports accident while vacationing in Michigan. Haskins was 56.
Sarah Monnett Taylor, executive director of the Hoosier Lottery, has been named president of the Multi-State Lottery Association, the 38-member organization that oversees Powerball.
Allen M. Kerridge has been named CEO of Kewadin Casinos in Michigan. He is a member of the tribe and has served in the role in an interim capacity for the past year.
Scientific Games has announced that industry veteran Clinton Long, formerly sales director for the company’s Asian gaming division, has been promoted to the position of vice president of Asia.
On July 7, Konami Gaming, Inc. announced that its award-winning Synkros casino management system had been selected by Gulfstream Park & Casino in Hallandale Beach, Florida.
Empire Technological Group Ltd. has announced that it has been licensed to operate by the Arkansas Racing Commission, the Choctaw Gaming Commission, the Cherokee Nation Gaming Commission, the Puerto Rico Tourism Company and the California Gambling Control Commission.