Southern Illinois casino opens, sends $25 million to the state
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[August 26, 2023]
By JENNIFER FULLER,
MOLLY PARKER &
ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
CARTERVILLE – Gov. JB Pritzker joined hundreds of people from across
southern Illinois on Friday to celebrate the opening of the state’s 14th
casino on a rural estate just outside of Carterville.
The Walker’s Bluff Casino Resort is the fourth casino to open in recent
years that was authorized by a 2019 gambling expansion law that was a
centerpiece of Pritzker’s first term. It features 650 slot machines and
table games, a hotel, restaurants, a full-service spa and 1,200-seat
event center. It is expected to employ about 300 people.
“Hospitality, jobs, economic development – that is what today's
announcement represents,” Pritzker said. “When I proposed that we pass a
casino gaming bill a few years ago, this is what I had envisioned.”
The 2019 law amending the Illinois Gambling Act authorized six new
casinos, including the one in Carterville, four “racinos” – combination
horse racetracks and casinos – online and retail sports betting and
expanded video gambling.
Proceeds from the gambling expansion were earmarked, in part, to provide
funding for Rebuild Illinois, the state’s multi-year capital improvement
program to repair and build new roads, bridges and government buildings
across the state. The transportation-related portions of the capital
improvement program is also supported by increases in the motor fuel tax
and licensing fees.
Each casino is required to contribute one-time fees within 30 days of
opening to the Rebuild Illinois fund. For Walker’s Bluff Casino Resort,
that amounts to $25.3 million, according to the Illinois Gaming Board.
Pritzker said the state has already committed Rebuild Illinois funding
to numerous projects throughout the southern Illinois region, such as
for new buildings at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and John A.
Logan College in Carterville.
The $147 million project in southern Illinois has been in the making for
years, an effort spurred by Cynde Bunch and her late husband David, who
opened an upscale restaurant and general store by the same name in 2008
on land that had been in Cynde’s family for generations. Elite Casino
Resorts LLC is the majority owner and operator of the casino and resort,
although Cynde is a partial owner as well.
The ribbon-cutting on Friday follows the openings of the Hard Rock
Casino in Rockford in November 2021 and the American Place Casino in
Waukegan in February 2022, both in upstate Illinois, as well as the
Golden Nugget in central Illinois’ Danville in June. The Rockford and
Waukegan casinos opened in temporary facilities.
The state’s land-based casinos are already attracting visitors. Last
month, just shy of 150,000 people visited the three casinos,
representing 15.6 percent of all visitors to the state’s 13 casinos,
according to data from the Illinois Gaming Board.
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Gov. JB Pritzker (center) is joined by
state and local leaders to cut the ribbon on Walker’s Bluff Casino
and Resort on Friday, Aug. 25, 2023. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Jennifer Fuller)
These casino visitors bring in millions of dollars to the state and to
local governments each month. In July, casinos allocated $38.3 million
for taxes on admissions and gambling – with $30.7 million set aside for
the state and $7.6 million for local governments.
The state portion of this money is separate from Rebuild Illinois
infrastructure spending and pays for costs at the gaming board, with any
excesses being used for educational spending.
There are two more land-based casinos set to open in the coming years.
Perhaps the most high-profile casino is the $1.7 billion Bally’s
development in Chicago’s River West neighborhood. The Rhode Island-based
company operates more than a dozen other casinos around the country,
including a riverboat casino in the Quad Cities.
Ahead of the resort’s opening, Bally’s is set to open a temporary
operation in the Medinah Temple in Chicago’s River North neighborhood.
The state’s gaming board has preliminarily deemed it suitable and is
expected to conduct inspections in the first week of September, meaning
the temporary casino could be open as early as the following week.
The sixth casino is slated to open in 2025 in the south suburban Chicago
villages of Homewood and East Hazel Crest near the Indiana border.
The 2019 gambling law represented the largest expansion of casino
operations in Illinois in decades. It authorized the Illinois Gaming
Board to issue up to 10 new casino permits, including for the four “racinos,”
doubling the number of potential licensees.
However, none of the planned racetrack-casino combos have come to
fruition to date. Plans for two of them were abandoned. The operators of
tracks in Collinsville in the Metro East and Cicero near Chicago have
preliminary approval to add casinos but have yet to do so.
The recent expansion of gambling is the first major change to Illinois’
casino industry since 1990, when the Illinois legislature legalized
riverboat gambling. It was only the second state to do so – behind Iowa
– though numerous states along the Mississippi River followed suit. The
first riverboat casino opened in Alton in 1991. Nine others later
opened, spanning from Metropolis at the state’s southern border near
Kentucky, to the Chicago suburbs.
That original law only authorized riverboat casinos. For years, they
were required to traverse the waterways during gambling sessions. A
change in law in 1999 allowed the riverboats to remain docked and most
of them eventually stopped setting sail.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
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Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along
with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and
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