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- <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>
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