had to say about a shopping center on Sunrise Highway wherein there is a Nassau OTB Branch.
Put the casino in Times Square or the west side of Manhattan. Perhaps you will attract more people who don't live in New York?
N.Y. / Region
Big City
In Queens, a Casino Bet Gone Bad
Robert Stolarik for The New York Times
Pawnshops dot Rockaway Boulevard in South Ozone Park, Queens, now that a casino has been built in the area.
By GINIA BELLAFANTE
Published: June 15, 2013 58 Comments
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On a recent Saturday afternoon I set out to explore South Ozone Park in
Queens, in particular a stretch whose racial composition — according to
recent census data, about a quarter white, a quarter Asian, 10 percent
black and 11 percent biracial, with 30 percent of residents belonging
to the statistical category of “other” — makes it one of the three most
diverse patches of the city. Ethnically, too, it contains multitudes:
Dominicans and Puerto Ricans live alongside Ecuadoreans, Indians,
Pakistanis, Chinese and people who look as though they might be cast in
the production of anything succumbing to Italian-American caricature.
Big City Book Club
Just Kids by Patti SmithInspired by “Punk: Chaos to Couture,” the
tribute to punk fashion now on exhibit at the Costume Institute of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Book City Book Club’s next selection is
the singer-songwriter Patti Smith’s memoir, “Just Kids.” Ms. Smith’s
chronicle of the music scene and creative life in New York City in the
1970s won the National Book Award three years ago.
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What had prompted my visit was, in a sense, a tourist’s curiosity about
how integration of this kind might actually be lived and how, in the
midst of a mayoral race, political conceptions in such a place might be
evolving.
There were instances of inspiration to be found, encounters with a New
York of one’s gorgeous mosaic fantasies. A barbershop called E Place,
owned by an Uzbek immigrant named Eric Dzhuray, caters to Trinidadians
and Guyanese — who make up a considerable share of the community in
South Ozone Park — and at least one young white suburbanite who had
grown so devoted to the shop when he lived in neighboring Howard Beach
that he continued his patronage even though he had married and moved to
Long Island.
The fact that a catering hall called La Bella Vita, owned by a man
named Tony Modica and steeped in Pompeii aesthetics, was full of black
patrons on the day I wandered in suggested that a certain kind of
social progress had been made since the divisive days of Spike Lee’s
“Do the Right Thing,” two decades ago.
Both the barbershop and catering hall were to be found on Rockaway
Boulevard, the primary commercial thoroughfare in South Ozone Park.
Though it seemed as if it should be a busy place, full of pedestrian
traffic and businesses servicing varied cultural interests, it has the
bloodless feel of a Sun Belt village lost to misbegotten visions. The
area itself is not poor; in the particular census tract I was visiting,
median family income stands at $63,000 a year, above the figure for the
city on the whole. But whatever vitality the demographics might suggest
is so obviously lacking that one longtime resident mentioned that he
hoped simply for a McDonald’s to energize the slackened mood.
How could this have happened? When the subject of politics came up, it
elicited little interest (except from a man named Danny Napoli, who
wore dark glasses and a flag bandanna around his head and said that he
was supporting Christine Quinn, offering that it didn’t matter to him
that she was gay). Few others seemed to have much sense of who was
running for mayor at all or much faith that government could effect
significant change — or at least significant good — locally.
Something unfortunate had happened in the neighborhood, and now there
seemed to be no turning back, people said: the opening nearly two years
ago of Resorts World Casino on Rockaway Boulevard, adjacent to the
Aqueduct Racetrack. As Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo pushes for the
authorization of three Las Vegas-style casinos in upstate New York, and
as the possibility of additional casinos in the city looms in the years
ahead, there are certainly lessons to be absorbed from what Resorts
World has wrought.
As Alberto Livecchi, a longtime resident of South Ozone Park and the
owner of a store selling musical equipment, explained, the construction
of the casino — a racino, in gambling parlance — came with promises
that have not materialized. Having been sold as a boon to local
commerce, it has instead affected businesses negatively, Mr. Livecchi
argued. “People are just funneled into the casino and don’t leave,” he
remarked. Whatever street life there was has been destroyed, residents
said; pawnshops are ubiquitous. “Casinos are only interested in
enriching themselves,” Mr. Modica said.
Ample data on how gambling affects local businesses suggests that these
men are not hallucinating. In the 1990s, researchers at Iowa State
University examined the consequences of riverboat gambling for business
owners in Clinton, Iowa, and found that while 12 percent reported an
increase in business, 29 percent reported a decrease, and 60 percent
reported no change at all. And racetrack casinos, as Clyde Barrow, a
political economist who studies gambling, explained, draw most
customers not from the far and wide but from a 30-minute radius. Rather
than drawing new money to the area, it seems, they divert local dollars
to gambling.
What we hardly need research to tell us is that the world that emerges
around casinos is often an intensely depressing place. Across the
street from Resorts World is Sell and Pawn Inc., which takes gold,
silver, jewelry, electronics and so on from those compelled to find
their way to their next slot machine dollar. The shop’s owner, a
Russian immigrant, opened up a year after the casino did, having worked
in construction and seeing that work dry up after the financial crisis.
A friend urged him to open a pawnshop because it was lucrative, but he
was not, it seemed, prepared for the psychological toll this new
occupation would take, for the fact that moral bankruptcy was now a job
requirement.
“You have to take advantage of desperate people,” he told me, looking fairly miserable. “I don’t like this business at all.”
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