home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1990s
/
Time_Almanac_1990s_SoftKey_1994.iso
/
time
/
061091
/
0610270.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
10KB
|
195 lines
<text id=91TT1267>
<title>
June 10, 1991: River Towns Take a Risky Gamble
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
June 10, 1991 Evil
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TRAVEL, Page 76
River Towns Take a Risky Gamble
</hdr><body>
<p>Floating casinos offer fun, nostalgia and America's trendiest new
way to lure tourists, but they may be a bad bet for communities
trying to cash in
</p>
<p>By JILL SMOLOWE--Reported by Ricardo Chavira/Washington and Tom
Curry/Fort Madison
</p>
<p> Mark Twain and Charlie Chaplin look-alikes, trailed by a
freckle-faced Huck Finn, greet passengers as they come up the
gangplank of the Mississippi River's newest paddle-wheeler,
Emerald Lady. A Dixieland band lays down tune after tune, while
a jokester on stilts tosses colorful doubloons. Waitresses with
feathers jutting from their hair sashay through wood-paneled
rooms, offering cocktails. As the riverboat pulls out of Fort
Madison, Iowa, and steams up and down the Mississippi on a
three-hour excursion into the 19th century, it is easy to get
swept up in the hoopla. So easy that one can almost forget what
this anachronistic cruise is really about: money and risk.
</p>
<p> With the launch of the Emerald Lady last month, Fort
Madison became the fourth of Iowa's Mississippi River towns to
take a chance on riverboat gambling as a lure for tourism and
a cure for economic woes. The others launched floating casinos
on April Fools' Day. Now all are praying the joke won't be on
them. Iowa's notion of melding nostalgic river travel with
America's gambling addiction is already stoking competition up
and down the river. Among the potential ventures:
</p>
<p>-- Illinois has approved 10 riverboat gambling licenses,
good for two vessels each. The first boat could cruise from
Alton this summer. Unlike Iowa, where passengers are limited by
law to $200 in losses per cruise, those in Illinois will be
able to place unlimited bets.
</p>
<p>-- Mississippi has also approved unlimited betting on the
water but has yet to issue any operating licenses.
</p>
<p>-- Missouri will put riverboat gambling to a state vote.
As proposed, passengers would have a $500 cap on their daily
losses.
</p>
<p>-- Louisiana's legislature is considering a bill that
would authorize up to 15 paddle-wheel gambling boats. Governor
Buddy Roemer supports the idea.
</p>
<p>-- Indiana, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are also
considering variations on the same risky business for their
rivers.
</p>
<p> Why are so many states willing to wager on something as
chancy as novelty gambling? In a word: desperation. Towns on the
northern reaches of the Mississippi were battered hard in the
Rust Belt shake-out of the early '80s, and the oil bust has left
Louisiana's coffers depleted. Hit again by the current
recession, local governments are eager for any kind of
development that will attract tourists and restore sagging tax
rolls. Legislators are keenly aware that gambling is among the
country's fastest-growing industries--expected to be worth
$278 billion this year alone--and they want a piece of that
action.
</p>
<p> The romantic aura of the mighty Mississippi provides
additional appeal. By harking back to the time of frock-coated
dandies and hoopskirted belles, the modern riverboats evoke
memories of an era at once more daring and less threatening. "A
riverboat is nostalgia, Americana," says John Connelly, owner
of the gaudy President, a 297-ft. five-decker that docks in
Davenport, Iowa. "A gambling casino is something completely
different."
</p>
<p> So far, Iowa's boats, with low betting limits and small
capacities (Emerald Lady can comfortably accommodate only 700
passengers; President, 1,600), pose little threat to Las Vegas
and Atlantic City. But as the new industry expands, it could
change America's recreation and travel patterns, drawing
tourists and gamblers away from the tawdry glitz of traditional
gambling towns. To prevent the seediness and crime that often
accompany casino gambling, Iowa legislators have capped wagers
at $5, and Fort Madison's planning and zoning board is drafting
a new ordinance to ban neon signs. "This is a family affair,"
says Dick Canella, a member of the Iowa Racing and Gaming
Commission.
</p>
<p> But for how long? Though the paddle wheels have barely
started churning, a riverboat race has begun. Illinois is
trumpeting the enticements of unlimited wagering and dismissing
its Iowa competition as penny-ante stuff for beginners. "The
bettor is the loser when you have a limit," says Illinois state
senator Denny Jacobs. "There's no way for him to win back his
money in a four-hour cruise."
</p>
<p> The competitive hype points to a harsh reality: as surely
as a flush beats a straight, some of the riverboat ventures are
destined to fold. "I am concerned about saturation if every
state gets it," admits Bernard Goldstein, owner of Emerald Lady
and Diamond Lady, which docks in Bettendorf, Iowa. Michael
Jones, director of the Illinois state lottery through the
mid-1980s, warns that the potential audience for the novelty
cruises may be smaller than boosters imagine. For one thing, he
notes, lottery players and higher-stakes gamblers are different
animals. While lottery enthusiasts may sample riverboat gambling
once or twice, they are unlikely to be repeat clients.
</p>
<p> Depressed towns like Fort Madison (pop. 11,200), the
original home of the Sheaffer Pen Co., are nevertheless willing
to gamble on their future. The town has already known its share
of heartbreak. In 1976 lightning struck the local J.C. Penney
outlet and burned it down; it was never rebuilt. Through the
1980s, the town's largest employers--Sheaffer and Chevron--staged devastating layoffs. Although citizens liked to boast
that Fort Madison was "a place where you can raise kids," many
drifted away; since 1987 the town's tax base has dwindled 20%.
To attract Goldstein and his $10 million Emerald Lady, Fort
Madison floated a $2.2 million bond issue that financed a
waterside pavilion, a walkway and parking lots. In return, city
fathers expect annual revenues of as much as $300,000--if the
venture succeeds.
</p>
<p> So far, so good. More than 500 workers--mostly
waitresses, croupiers and maintenance staff--were employed for
Emerald Lady's launching, and Fort Madison has benefited from
the 40% rise in tourist information requests statewide. Local
officials trust that their investment will be covered by the
ship's dock fees, a 0.5% tax on gross gambling receipts and a
50 cents charge the town levies on each passenger. "The boat is
breathing new life and enthusiasm into the town," says Father
Robert McAleer of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church. "There's
exuberance over something new."
</p>
<p> Yet there are those who doubt the town will be able to
meet its annual interest payments of $240,000 on the bond and
fear Fort Madison could one day be jilted by the Emerald Lady.
"The fact that Illinois has high-stakes gambling could leave us
high and dry," says John Hansman, a local historian. "The boat
could move to a lucrative market where there isn't a limit on
bets."
</p>
<p> To avert that danger, should Iowa lift its betting limits?
Will the next step for Illinois be casinos on land, as one
Chicago-area mayor has already proposed? Will Iowa then have to
follow suit? Eventually, the competition to provide more forms
of gambling could spawn the very type of blight the floating
casinos were designed to prevent: crime, prostitution and sex
shops.
</p>
<p> The charm of the paddle-wheel ventures also disguises the
fact that they are another major step in the American gambling
addiction. Every state, save Utah and Hawaii, has legalized
lotteries or some other form of betting. Given the myriad
opportunities to blow the rent check on games of chance, do
states want to offer taxpayers further encouragement to
speculate idly rather than invest soundly? "We have a gaming
mentality," argues state senator Jacobs. "We're bringing it out
of the closet and into the public eye, where it can be taxed."
But states are doing more than catering to an existing demand.
"This country has been thrown into a love affair with gambling
because the states are pushing it hard," argues Durand Jacobs,
a psychologist and gambling-industry analyst.
</p>
<p> I. Nelson Rose, a law professor at California's Whittier
College and an expert on gambling law, calls the riverboat fever
"casinos by subterfuge." With betting camouflaged as tourism,
more and more people will join in, only to find that it can have
painful personal and social costs. "Gambling begets gambling,"
he says. Eventually, he predicts, wagering will decline, but
only after it has become so pervasive and so riddled with
corruption that Americans revolt against the trend.
</p>
<p> For citizens of small towns like Fort Madison, there is no
sign of revolt in sight. They are betting that after the
initial excitement dies down, there will still be a demand for
their new wares. And they are wagering that when the tourists
descend, the influx will not grossly alter the character of
their towns. The roll of the dice is enticing. But as any savvy
player at a gaming table knows, the odds in the long run are
never as good as the initial excitement.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>