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Home > Casino News > 2 Sep 2005

Riverboat Casinos Demolished By Katrina

2 Sep 2005


For the Gulf Coast gambling industry, land-based casinos might become a public policy question among legislators. Hurricane Katrina's destruction left Mississippi's coastline without riverboat casinos. Now, state legislators will have to carefully consider the option of making all casinos land-based, in order to protect these casinos from harm or danger by possessing vulnerable locations on the water.

More than half of the 13 casinos in Biloxi, Gulfport and Bay St. Louis were destroyed by the hurricane that roared in off the ocean, Gregory said Wednesday. 'The only casino I saw that looked intact and stable was the Beau Rivage, in Biloxi,' he said of property owned by Las Vegas-based MGM Mirage Inc. 'It's more than just the casinos. It's the infrastructure. It's going to take several years to get that up and running.'

Mississippi requires casinos to float, either along the Gulf Coast or on the Mississippi River. A state law that took effect earlier this year allows the floating casinos to build permanent pilings to stabilize the barges. It is not clear if that reinforcement would have been enough to save the casinos in a Category 4 or 5 hurricane. None of the casinos had a chance to construct pilings.

Some lawmakers, particularly religious conservatives, have opposed land-based casinos along the coast or the Mississippi River because they fear other, inland counties would push for a gambling house, too. 'After the hurricane, I think what you're going to see, politically, is a different mind-set on everything,' Holland said. Powerful winds and a massive storm surge laid waste to the region, tossing some of the barges on which the casinos rested like toy boats and crippling the state's $2.7 billion gambling industry.

Rep. Steve Holland, D-Plantersville, said the law should be rewritten to allow land-based casinos, but only in areas that had gambling barges before. 'I think if they had been on land, it still would have been disastrous, but not nearly as much,' said Holland , a member of the Gaming Committee in the Mississippi House.



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