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1 Anonymous Users
Re: NYC's OTB - Shutting Down
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Home away from home
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Quote:
OTB ? Oh I get it Off the Boat
Posted on: 2008/2/20 12:05
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Re: NYC's OTB - Shutting Down
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Home away from home
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OTB closing shop is only going to make underground gambling even stronger.
Posted on: 2008/2/20 1:30
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Re: NYC's OTB - Shutting Down
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Home away from home
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I bet they weren't betting on that.
I am glad to see them go - those places are magnets for poor dumb derelicts. Hey, Texas has added a $50 lottery "scratch" ticket -- guess it never ends... http://www.lotterypost.com/news/155687
Posted on: 2008/2/19 19:42
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NYC's OTB - Shutting Down
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Home away from home
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See article below - what shocks me is that taxpayers were subsidizing this in the first place... Nuts...
BN 13:14 New York City Off-Track Betting Board Votes to Close Business By Chris Dolmetsch Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The board of New York City's Off- Track Betting Corp., the first legal off-site pari-mutuel wagering operation in the U.S., voted today to shut down the business at the urging of Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Bloomberg, who controls the board, said in November that the city is facing a $2.7 billion deficit in the coming fiscal year and couldn't afford to inject more money into OTB. He asked Chairman David Cornstein to draft a plan to shut it down. ``If OTB is unable to operate without taxpayer subsidies, then it should not operate -- period,'' Bloomberg said in a prepared statement today. ``The city simply cannot take dollars away from schools and hospitals to pay for a gambling operation.'' OTB, which collects more than $1 billion in bets a year, is required by legislative mandates to compensate the racing industry based on gross revenue. In 2006, the business had a $125 million operating profit, yet had to pay the state's racing industry $98 million. City Comptroller William Thompson said OTB might run out of money by June. According to the closing plan, operations would stop June 15 and layoffs would be effective the next day. Notices of job cuts would go out April 17. Two parlors, one in Astoria, Queens, and one in the New Dorp section of Staten Island, would close by month-end. OTB was created by a referendum in 1963 to put private illegal bookies out of business and started operation in April 1971. It takes bets at about 70 locations throughout the city and via the Internet and telephone. Jobs Lost About 1,500 workers would lose their jobs in an OTB shutdown. Since 2004, the business has cut 14 percent of its workers and closed six branches. Today's decision comes as state politicians are near agreement on a $105 million plan to bail out the New York Racing Association, which operates thoroughbred horseracing tracks at Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga. Bloomberg is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News. --Editors: Charlotte Porter, Mark Schoifet.
Posted on: 2008/2/19 19:34
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