Hopefully, a compromise can, in fact, be reached — one that would put slots at several tracks and legalize one or two casinos, with their larger up-front fees, greater job creation, and billions of dollars in new construction. Let’s give those Massachusetts citizens that lost their textile-industry jobs to lower wages in Asia an opportunity to earn a living wage, family medical, and 401(k) plans. This can be achieved by approving an industry, gaming, that doesn’t require a Harvard MBA or a graduate degree from MIT. Positions in life sciences are certainly desirable to keep state-college graduates from fleeing to New York. But why not create two industries to satisfy some of the needs of the 125,000 unemployed in Massachusetts?

Steve Norton
Alton, Illinois

EDITOR’S NOTE: The letter writer, a former president of the Sands Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, and of Argosy Gaming Company, has expressed interest in possible casino sites in New Bedford and Palmer.

< prev  1  |  2  | 
Related: Days and Clouds, Fear(s) of the Dark, Love letter, More more >
  Topics: Letters , Deval Patrick, Salvatore DiMasi, U.S. Government,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   STEIN'S BACK  |  September 12, 2012
    I didn't know she was here, but I'll be voting for her [Jill Stein] because neither major party gives a shit about me.
  •   LETTERS TO THE BOSTON EDITORS, SEPTEMBER 7, 2012  |  September 05, 2012
    Jill Stein has not called for the dismantling of the CIA, the DHS, or the NSS.
  •   THE HIPSTER CANDIDATE  |  August 29, 2012
    Stein has spent the past decade hammering inequities that the increasingly broke public claims it wants corrected." Truly, she's the hipster candidate.
  •   LETTERS TO THE BOSTON PHOENIX EDITORS, AUGUST 24, 2012  |  August 22, 2012
    It's clear that the heart of "Gone Begging" was a call for more infrastructural support for the arts.
  •   ART ATTACK  |  August 15, 2012
    It's true Boston is a culturally conservative city with a lackluster contemporary art scene.

 See all articles by: BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS