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Biloxi Mayor Details Casino Industry Status for Audience at
2007 Gaming Summit Casino resorts in Biloxi have acquired more than 175 acres in Biloxi in the 20 months since Hurricane Katrina. Biloxi Mayor A.J. Holloway told a Southern Gaming Summit audience Thursday morning that the city will continue to see extraordinary growth without compromising quality of life. (Note, Creel advised GCN after the mayor had spoken that the total number of acres acquired by casinos was larger than the 125 mentioned in the mayor's speech. Lands by the Isle of Capri and a couple of other projects were not in the initial total in the speech. GCN's story reflects the corrected estimate)
In his brief review of major projects, the mayor said: --- Harrah’s, which operates the Grand Biloxi, has acquired about 80 acres in east Biloxi since the storm, the largest footprint of any casino resort in the area, and will announce its plans for east Biloxi next week. --- The Hard Rock – “which had one customer, Katrina, the first time it tried to open” -- will open on 7-7-07, and Treasure Bay is racing to have its new-and-improved casino resort open around that time. --- Bacaran Bay Casino Resort and Condominiums will be in the center of
the city’s new Caillavet Street revitalization corridor.
--- IP Casino Resort & Spa, which has continually added amenities since reopening four months after the storm, has acquired more than 25 acres surrounding it Back Bay site. (Photo Right) --- A casino resort project next to Boomtown on Back Bay, called the Bayview Casino Resort, is moving forward with plans for a resort that will include 55,000 square feet in gaming space and a 500-room hotel. --- Boomtown has acquired 23 acres of land near its site and in the next month will start working on master planning for its future growth. --- The Palace this fall will complete a $10 million,
20,000-square-foot addition to increase gaming capacity, and is working on
a --- The Isle of Capri is in the final stages of a $180 million-dollar
expansion that will bring its gaming capacity to more than 100,000 square
feet, re-open its convention and entertainment space, as well as add other
amenities. Holloway (Photo right) noted that the Biloxi casino industry has set gross gaming revenue records six of the last seven months, with two of the months setting all-time records. Said the mayor, “Biloxi is the engine, and the fuel is the 800-foot onshore gaming legislation passed by the legislature and signed into law by the governor.” Holloway, who lobbied the legislature for limited on-shore gaming, reminded the audience that he predicted some months after the storm that Biloxi could see as many as 18 to 22 casinos within 10 years, and some have said the number of Coast hotel rooms could increase from its pre-Katrina level of 20,000 to 30,000, and the number of industry employees could double to 30,000.
“In fact, I point to those years before the storm, when we were successfully dealing with quality of life issues -- like providing nationally-recognized public schools, safe neighborhoods, award-winning work in historic preservation, quality recreation for children and adults, affordable housing initiatives, citywide economic development, and good streets and drainage. And we were doing it all while cutting the city property tax rate in half. “This storm,” the mayor observed, “was the worst the nation had ever seen, and we’re meeting it with an unprecedented response. We’re reviving that renaissance we were enjoying before August 29, 2005.” (Photo left - New four-lane Caillavet
Street with IP and portion of Beau Rivage tower) ---To read complete text of Mayor Holloway's remarks, ---To monthly gross-gaming revenue totals for Biloxi casinos, ---To see links to individual casino resorts and proposed resorts in
Biloxi along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, as compiled by the Mississippi
Gulf Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau, |