There will be no casino in Manhattan after all proposals are rejected by locals
Briefly

There will be no casino in Manhattan after all proposals are rejected by locals
"Plans to build the Big Apple's first full-service casino in the heart of the city have run out of luck. A local panel on Monday rejected the last of three Manhattan proposals that had been among those vying for a new state license to operate a Las Vegas-style casino in the lucrative New York City market. The proposal - a six-acre project near the United Nations headquarters dubbed "Freedom Plaza" and operated by Mohegan, the gaming company run by Connecticut's Mohegan Tribe - was denied by a state-commissioned community advisory committee on a 4-2 vote."
"A Jay-Z-backed plan to build a Caesars Palace casino in Times Square and another proposal for a gambling resort on Manhattan's West Side in the Hudson Yards area were both voted down by two other local boards last week amid local opposition. As in those votes, committee members in Monday's decision appointed by Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams were in favor of the Freedom Plaza project, but panel members representing local lawmakers said no."
""To be clear, this is not simply a rejection of a new casino in Manhattan - it is a rejection of new housing, new schools, billions of dollars in investment, and more for the borough," said William Fowler, an Adams spokesperson. The other local politicians, all Democrats like Hochul and Adams, said in a statement that residents voiced concerns during public hearings about the development's impact on congestion and public safety in the area. Michael Hershman, CEO of the Soloviev Group, which was the lead developer on the more than $11 billion project, said Manhattan - the "undisputed capital of the world" - deserved the resort, which "would have attracted visitors while serving the needs of its community.""
A state-commissioned community advisory committee voted 4-2 to reject the Freedom Plaza proposal, a six-acre Mohegan-operated project near the United Nations, ending the last Manhattan bid for a full-service casino. Two other Manhattan proposals, including a Jay-Z-backed Caesars Palace plan in Times Square and a Hudson Yards resort proposal, were also voted down by separate local boards amid local opposition. Supporters cited new housing, schools and billions in investment, while opponents and residents raised concerns about congestion and public safety during public hearings. Developers argued the resort would have drawn visitors and served community needs.
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