Top News

Letters: Memorial Day events on the Island and more
State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges
Island voters overwhelmingly approve school budget, give newcomer to board most votes
Joe Theinert and Jordon Haerter named to state's Veterans Hall of Fame
Island splits from the North Fork under new county redistricting plan
POLL: How did you vote on the school budget?
School vote on Tuesday: budget, three board seats to be decided
This week in Shelter Island History: from the Reporter's files
Scholars study slavery through Sylvester Manor archives at NYU
Tall Ships: Made from old U-boats, Unicorn runs with all-female crew

Sports

Gym chairs still out of reach, Colligan halfway to fundraising goal

May 12, 2012

Shelter Island JV baseball team is 5-1; coach hopeful for winning season and varsity status next year

April 28, 2012

Island's Olympic sailor finishes second in Hyeres, France World Cup regatta

April 27, 2012

Education

State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges

May 16, 2012

Island voters overwhelmingly approve school budget, give newcomer to board most votes

May 15, 2012

Q&A: Big city girl on exchange from China

May 12, 2012

Business

Eklunds will reopen Chequit this season as sale remains in the works

May 11, 2012

Hospital picks Mills firm's men as honorees for its 2012 golf classic

April 27, 2012

'Bigfoot' baler now assisting farm and marina recycling efforts

April 14, 2012

Community

Perlman alumni concerts are announced

May 13, 2012

Garden Column: Growing your own — starting seeds from scratch

May 13, 2012

Don Young is saving energy in his green dream car

May 13, 2012

Obituaries

Obituary: E.Y. Clark

April 26, 2012

Obituary: Elizabeth Yvonne (E.Y.) Clark

April 23, 2012

Obituary: Harold Olson

April 18, 2012

Real Estate

Town grants Tarlow permit for house larger than code limit

April 10, 2012

Native plants will keep birds and bees in your backyard

March 27, 2012

Dougherty calls for help opposing bid to halt county open space programs

February 10, 2012

Opinion

Letters: Memorial Day events on the Island and more

May 17, 2012

Column: Not as easy as it looked on television

May 12, 2012

Suffolk Closeup: Media scourge on Rupert Murdoch

May 11, 2012

Suffolk Closeup: Betting on a casino

The current issue of New York magazine speaks of Governor Andrew Cuomo seeking “gambling everywhere.” That’s a bit of an exaggeration. In his recent State of the State speech, Mr. Cuomo called for a change in the state constitution to allow for non-Indian, off-reservation casinos in New York, which currently prohibits them. It’s not “gambling everywhere” but the governor does want a major expansion of legalized gambling.

“Cuomo Bets On A Casino” was the headline in Newsday. It referred specifically to Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens as a place where the governor wants to see a big casino.

A casino there would be a problem for the Shinnecock Indian Nation, which wants to build a casino at nearby Belmont Park in Elmont. Newsday quoted State Senator Jack Martins of Mineola as saying a casino at Aqueduct would “effectively kill” plans for a Shinnecock casino at Belmont. A broader concern is whether or not the legalized gambling market is being saturated by casinos opening all over the nation, -Native American and non-Indian.

Mr. Cuomo is betting on a big financial boost for New York State through a major expansion of legalized gambling here but the market has its limits.

The day of Mr. Cuomo’s State of the State speech, the New York Times reported on the “hopes of reviving Atlantic City.” Gambling revenue was down in Atlantic City, the Times reported, and there’s hope that a new $2.4 billion resort and casino, being built with state financial help, will “usher in a new era for Atlantic City.”

“Atlantic City has been in decline since 2006,” the Times reported, “when Pennsylvania opened its first casino, beginning a slow bleed of gamblers that have never returned. With rival casinos opening in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and upstate New York, there is little Atlantic City can do to stop the loss …”

This spread of gambling has not only hurt Atlantic City but Las Vegas, too, and severely. Factor in the impact of the recession on gambling and it would seem the industry is in trouble. So how can New York State figure on a big win?

But that’s the dream -or illusion-, not only in New York but other areas of the nation. A Times story last month reported on the Florida Legislature considering three “Las Vegas-style casino resorts” in south Florida to offset the economic downturn following the burst of Florida’s big real estate bubble.

Meanwhile, what about gambling as a way for Indian tribes to break out of centuries of economic hard times? That was the basis of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988, the federal law that set up a system under which Native Americans were given the go-ahead -and structure- to develop gambling.

It was a kind of long-delayed reparation for Native Americans for the loss of their homeland and culture and it has made some tribes-, including several in Connecticut-, super-wealthy.

These days, if you take a drive on the stretch of New Mexico between Albuquerque and Santa Fe, you’ll come upon a gambling casino every few miles, in front of each Indian pueblo, with few cars in their parking lots. And in recent years, with non-Indians being allowed to get into gambling elsewhere, it’s not just intra-Indian competition that’s diluting the market.

Although legalized gambling had to come, it’s a problematic activity for society. There are the high-rollers at casinos in Las Vegas and Atlantic City and Connecticut. My impression of the bulk of bettors, however, is that they are desperate people who mostly play the one-armed bandits, dumping in their quarters, hoping for a bonanza.

For society to benefit by drawing money from legalized gambling- as it cannot from illegal gambling- is one thing. But to promote it, subsidize it and depend on it is another.

Then there’s the over-expansion, and the consequent cost to Native Americans including the Shinnecocks, who have had it tough economically for centuries and only recently achieved federal tribal recognition. They had been hoping for some payback, finally. Now the house may be rigging the game against them.