Rules for legalized slots at racetracks laid out in Ohio
June 16, 2011 - 1:13 am
CLEVELAND — Ohio Gov. John Kasich laid out rules for legalized racetrack slot machines on Wednesday as part of an agreement that settles a dispute with Rock Ohio Caesars, which is developing casinos in Cincinnati and Cleveland.
The deal was announced by Kasich and casino developer Dan Gilbert, owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers, in a former department store where the initial Cleveland casino phase is scheduled to open early next year.
Rock Ohio Caesars is a joint venture between Gilbert’s Rock Gaming and Las Vegas-based Caesars Entertainment on two Horseshoe-themed casinos in Cincinnati and Cleveland.
The deal frees ROC from paying the state’s commercial activity tax on all wagers, a sticking point between the company and state budget writers in Columbus.
The Republican-controlled Ohio House had added a provision to Kasich’s nearly $56 billion, two-year state budget that said the so-called CAT tax applies to wagers plus payouts, a definition casino operators said would cost tens of millions in extra taxes and violate terms of a constitutional amendment approved by voters in 2009.
The deal taxes the company on wagers minus payouts.