Chicago Casino Approved By City Council After Screaming Match Between Mayor, Alderman

Block Club Chicago
 
Chicago Casino Approved By City Council After Screaming Match Between Mayor, Alderman
Super Slots

CHICAGO — Chicago’s first casino is almost a done deal after City Council approved the plan Wednesday.

Bally’s plan to build a $1.7 billion riverfront casino and resort at the Tribune Publishing site in River West was approved by a 41-7 vote. Now it heads to the Illinois Gaming Board for final approval.

See how your alderperson voted:

Wednesday’s vote comes just weeks after Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced Bally’s casino was her top pick and after just four meetings of the city’s special casino committee. Bally’s plans to launch a temporary casino at River North’s Medinah Temple in summer 2023, and the permanent casino in late 2025 or early 2026.

The deal has been criticized by neighbors and alderpeople, some who slammed the process as rushed as the much-loathed Chicago’s parking meter deal. But Lightfoot’s administration and Ald. Tom Tunney (44th), who led the city’s special casino committee, said the casino is a good deal for the city, one that was picked during a three year-process, which started with a survey in summer 2019.

The Bally’s casino is projected to bring in $200 million in tax revenue to offset the city’s police and fire pension debt by the permanent casino’s second year in business, the most of any of the three casino finalists. The temporary casino will initially bring in $55 million in tax dollars, city officials said.

Bally’s also became Lightfoot’s front-runner because it agreed to provide an upfront payment of $40 million to the city and $4 million in annual payments after that. It also won because the company “wanted it the most,” made a deal with labor unions first and had no casinos in the area, Tunney previously said.

Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd), who opposed the casino site, raised questions about the casino’s revenue projections Wednesday because of the city consulting firm’s ties to Bally’s. Crain’s reported Union Gaming, the consulting firm the city has leaned on through the casino study and selection process, was hired by Bally’s for other work in the past year.

In a heated exchange, Pilsen Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) called the casino’s vetting process a sham.

“I know Mayor Lightfoot does not want to hear the facts, and it’s convenient to ignore the facts,” Sigcho-Lopez said. “I think as legislators we have the responsibility to review this process, a failed process, in an administration that is more worried about campaign contributions than doing the right thing for the city of Chicago.”

Lightfoot fired back: “I will not tolerate you besmirching the hard work of so many people who have worked on this. Almost every word that comes out of your mouth after you saw your name is a lie.”

Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. (27th) whose ward includes the Tribune site, said some residents in his ward don’t want the casino, but he supports it because it will help the city meet its pension obligations without raising taxes.

“We need to seize the moment,” Burnett said. “…“There hasn’t been anything that has been built in my ward that has hurt the residents of my ward.”

The permanent Bally’s casino at Tribune Publishing, 700 W. Chicago Ave., will include 3,400 slots, 173 table games, 500 hotel rooms, a 3,000-seat entertainment venue, six restaurants, a food hall and three bars. The company has committed to $75 million to infrastructure improvement projects around the casino site,which include projects ranging from synchronized traffic signals to reconstruction and widening of nearby roads.

City Council’s sign off on the casino meets the Lightfoot administration’s self-imposed deadline to send the casino application to state officials by the end of the month.

See renderings of the Bally’s proposal here:

This a developing story. Check back for updates.

, an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s neighborhoods.

Click here to support Block Club with a tax-deductible donation.

Thanks for subscribing to Block Club Chicago, an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s neighborhoods. Click here to support Block Club with a tax-deductible donation.