Hot news

Dublinbet

Dublinbet

DublinBet.com is an innovative and classy casino and card room. It offers classic online casino game favourites plus some of the best live dealer games on the net for January 2012.

Through the latest webcasting technology you can interact with dealers from the privacy of your home (or office!). The sounds and dealer action is live from the Fitzwilliam Card Club and Casino, in Dublin Ireland. DublinBet's Distance Gaming® is a 'must try even if you're not fussed for live dealer games - try the unique early payout

+ More info...

888

888

Do you find it hard to get to a live casino to play poker? Then simply come to 888poker, the best poker online room in Australia and experience the same thing with no hassle.888 Casino is one of the most famous casinos in cyberspace, thanks to some of the most eye-catching promotions in the industry and an ongoing commitment to innovation. Owned and operated by a subsidiary of 888 Holdings plc, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, 888 Casino was launched in 1997 and more than 25 million people have played here since.

+ More info...

365 Casino

365 Casino

Enjoy a huge selection of casino games at 365 Casino with monthly bonuses and weekly promotions, Play Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat, Slots, and Video Poker and win big at 365 casino. 24hrs a day, 365 days a year Safe & secure with excellent Customer Service.

+ More info...

Elegance Casino

Smart Live Casino

The unique thing about Smart Live Casino is its live casino games. It offers live baccarat, live roulette and live blackjack where the player sees the dealer and the action unfold infront of his own eyes. They have a fully array of games as well as sports betting. The site also comes in a variety of languages.

+ More info...

Chicago casino gets green light, budget passage imminent in waning hours of special session

E-mail Print PDF

SPRINGFIELD — Lawmakers Saturday night approved a Chicago casino, a feat decades in the making, as the Illinois General Assembly worked into the late hours to approve a $41 billion “maintenance” budget plan that’s largely reliant on borrowing and the hope that the federal government will further help Illinois with COVID-19 relief.

A pandemic spending package to get Illinois through the rest of the year, and next, was pending in the Illinois Senate on the fifth day of a special session.

The Illinois Senate approved the casino plan 42-14, and it will be sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk. It marked a huge feat for Mayor Lori Lighfoot, who achieved what several Chicago mayors couldn’t.

Bill sponsor State Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, said the state’s capital programs will get $45 million upfront in licensing fees before the casino is even opened. And the state will receive an additional $700 million in a re-worked reconciliation fee.

“It’s fair to say that over the next handful of years, the Chicago casino is going to provide hundreds of millions of dollars, indeed well over a billion dollars to our capital program,” Cunningham said.

The revenue from the casino would also help the city’s desperately underfunded police and fire pensions. The measure that passed restructured the Chicago casino tax rate structure that a feasibility study last year called “onerous.” It also changes the reconciliation fee payments for all casinos from two years to six years, and it allows for new gaming applications to have more time to pay licenses if the Illinois Gaming Board grants them. That would be switched from July 2020 to July 2021. The delay is intended to help casinos that are currently closed due to the pandemic.

The casino plan earlier cleared the Illinois House 77-32 with some bipartisan support. Eighteen House Republicans voted for the measure.

Bill sponsor Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, credited Lightfoot’s “tenacity” in pushing for the measure, in his closing remarks.

The legislation also included technical changes for the Danville casino, and it addresses a procurement issue for video poker machines at the Illinois State Fair in Springfield and the DuQuoin State Fair.

For most of the day, legislators reworked key provisions in a $41 billion spending plan. Once on the makeshift House floor at the Bank of Springfield Center, Democrats called the plan a way to get through the worst of times. Republicans called it a power grab by Pritzker, whom they said would have the control of billions of dollars in federal funds.

A measure cleared Friday allows for the authorization of $5 billion in borrowing from the Federal Reserve’s newly created Municipal Liquidity Facility authorized under the CARES Act, which is being used to balance the budget.

“This crisis has taken a toll on us all, physically, emotionally, spiritually,” House Majority Leader Greg Harris, D-Chicago, said. “There are a lot folks who need help out there across the state of Illinois. And we have a chance to make that help available. And again, this would be paid by the federal government.”

Chicago casino gets green light, budget passage imminent in waning hours of special session State Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, chats with a reporter during the opening of Illinois’ first sportsbook, at Rivers Casino in Des Plaines, in March. Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

The budget maintains funding for most of state operations, but it does help health care agencies that have been deeply affected by COVID-19.

The budget also includes $20 million grants from the Illinois Dept. of Public Health to nine hospitals in the state, chosen by the highest percentage of Medicaid patients and aimed to help hospitals “disproportionately impacted by the COVID pandemic,” Harris said.

School districts will receive the same amount of funding as they received in 2020. The plan also keeps higher education spending flat to last year’s budget. It also fully funds the certified contributions for pensions.

“What we’ve heard today is a budget that is balanced only on a wing and a prayer. It relies on $5 billion in borrowing or magical revenue that comes from the federal government with no strings attached,” State Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, said.

Demmer said it offers no government efficiencies and doesn’t include any proposed cuts recommended by Pritzker’s administration during normal operating times.

The budget debate gave Republicans the time to vent about what they said was a lack of communication with Pritzker’s office during the pandemic.

“We have not had a productive relationship with the governor’s office over many aspects to the stay-at-home order, or the Restore Illinois plan,” Demmer said. “We’re told we’re heard, and not necessarily seeing the results of that.”

Also, a measure to help struggling bars passed both chambers and will head to Pritzker’s desk. The legislation allows bars and restaurants to serve cocktails to-go. It requires that any curbside-cocktails be served in a sealed container and placed in the trunk of the car.

Municipalities would be able to opt out and create their own regulations for cocktails-to-go.

Tina Sfondeles reported from Chicago; Neal Earley reported from Springfield

Contributing: Mitchell Armentrout

Read more https://chicago.suntimes.com/2020/5/23/21268597/chicago-casino-bill-fix-springfield-illinois-house-pass-pritzker-gambling-expansion

You are here