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Casinos Being Looked At As Landfills

Mben

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Time - Milford, Massachusetts at the holidays looks a lot like Bedford Falls, the fictional setting of the classic film It's a Wonderful Life Settled in 1662, the town of 27,000 still has working farms, its own daily newspaper, a baseball diamond behind the American Legion Hall and an annual picnic. On Memorial and Veteran's days, parades run down a Main Street lined with white wooden churches and historic buildings made of red brick and locally quarried pink granite. But its visions of Pottersville, the film's alternate-universe world of greed, strip clubs, pawnshops, and hopelessness that have been on residents' minds this season. Wary of increased crime and traffic and depressed property values, Milford voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposal for a $1 billion, 24-hour casino in November, becoming the sixth Massachusetts community to say no since voters statewide opened the way for three slot parlors or casinos in 2011.  It didn't take long to be convinced that this was not good for a small town, says Steve Trettel, co-chair of the group Casino-Free Milford. If you want to get right down to the root of it, that's really it.  While there's been no slowdown in the pace at which states continue to approve adding or expanding casinos and slot machine parlors, they are starting to run into trouble finding places to put them. In addition to the cities and towns in Massachusetts, which included a neighborhood in Boston, new or expanded gambling venues have been voted down in Portland, Oregon, Newport, Rhode Island and Biddeford, Lewiston, and Washington County, Maine. In early December, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick filed suit to block a native-American tribe from opening a casino on toney Martha's Vineyard. Across the nation, community and business interests are pushing back against the possibility of new casinos. In Central Florida, powerful interests including the Walt Disney Company, intent on preserving the region's reputation as a family destination, have organized to prevent the state legislature from adding casinos there. Even in South Florida, which has been more accepting of gambling, local officials are raising concerns about plans to expand an existing casino operated by a Native American tribe, citing the potential for spillover traffic and crime. A federal application submitted by another Native American tribe to build a casino in the upstate New York town Union Springs is being fought by a coalition that includes the state's senior Senator, Chuck Schumer, on the grounds that it would bring unfair competition for local businesses. Even Massachusetts Governor Patrick, who signed the bill to legalize casinos there, has said that he would vote against one if it were ever proposed for the Berkshires town where he has a second home.<a href="http://nation.time.com/2013/12/23/why-casinos-are-becoming-like-landfills/?iid=sl-main-mostpop2" >FULL STORY</a><a href="http://www.thisweekingambling.com/2013/12/24/why-casinos-are-becoming-like-landfills/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=facebook" >source</a>
 

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