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Cashing in

In 2019, a state study forecast that if the General Assembly allowed five casinos to operate in five economically disadvantaged Virginia cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond — that one-third of the revenue generated would stem from out-of-state visitors.

In other words, if you build it, casino backers sang out to the commonwealth’s legislators, they will come.

In 2020, local voters overwhelmingly voted to bring casinos to Bristol, Danville, Portsmouth and Norfolk. Richmond referendum voters twice rejected bringing a casino to their city, and now it looks like that casino opportunity may go to Petersburg. Meanwhile, a proposed Norfolk casino has been delayed and may wind up with the city choosing a different operator. However, the three casinos open so far are doing brisk business in Bristol, Danville and Portsmouth.

Bristol’s casino opened in a temporary location in July 2022, and made $157 million in net gaming revenues in its first year of operation. Its replacement, a permanent, $500 million-plus Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, is slated to open its casino floor in July, with the 303-room hotel and indoor entertainment venue following in the fall, according to Allie Evangelista, president of Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Bristol.

Danville’s Caesars Virginia casino followed, opening a temporary location in May 2023, racking up about $145 million during its first six months. Its permanent location, which will cost more than $650 million, is slated to open late this year and will include a 320-room hotel and over 50,000 square feet of meeting and convention space.

Virginia’s first permanent casino, the $340 million Rivers Casino Portsmouth, opened in January 2023 and made almost $250 million in gaming revenue during its first year. In addition to gaming, it offers restaurants, bars and more than 25,000 square feet of event space.

So, the question is, have the casinos delivered on their tourism promises? Are crowds of gamblers traveling from other towns and states to delight in the thrill of roulette, the rush of slots?

The short answer is, you bet. The longer answer is that tracking Virginia’s casino tourism traffic isn’t the easiest endeavor and remains a work in progress.

Rivers Casino Portsmouth General Manager Roby Corby says the casino has drawn visitors from across the country. Photo by Mark Rhodes

‘Pretty accurate’

The Virginia Tourism Corp., which promotes the state’s tourism industry, purchases “data insights” on casino visitation from Arrivalist, a Colorado-based location intelligence platform for the travel industry that collects location data from millions of mobile devices like smartphones.

It’s a helpful tool, but it’s also still “a little bit early” to build a full picture of casino visitation trends in the commonwealth, says Dan Roberts, VTC’s vice president of research and strategy.

To be identified as tourists, casino visitors must have traveled with their devices at least 40 miles to their destinations, explains Balakumar Raghuraman, vice president of analytics for Arrivalist’s parent company, AirDNA. Devices associated with commuter travel trends were excluded from consideration.

At Rivers Casino Portsmouth, most visitors’ devices (15.8%), as expected, originated from the Hampton Roads region last year. But the top 10 markets of origin last year also included tourists traveling from Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina (13%); Washington, D.C. (9.8%); Richmond and Petersburg (9%); and even areas as far away as Baltimore (3.2%) and New York (5.2%).

For Bristol’s temporary Hard Rock casino, visitors from the Roanoke and Lynchburg regions accounted for 26% of devices in 2023, followed by Knoxville, Tennessee (15%), and the Tri-Cities region (10%). Visitors also hailed from areas in southern West Virginia like the Bluefield region (5%), but Atlanta (3%) also made the top 10 list of places from which tourists traveled to the Bristol casino.

Of the tourists tracked at Danville’s temporary Caesars Virginia casino last year, most visitors (33.4%) came from North Carolina’s Research Triangle area, encompassing Raleigh and Durham, followed by tourists from Roanoke and Lynchburg (15.4%); and North Carolina’s Piedmont Triad region of Greensboro, Winston-Salem and High Point (14.2%). Devices originating from Los Angeles (2.6%) and West Palm Beach/Fort Pierce, Florida (1.9%), also made the list.

Mobile location insights, like those from Arrivalist, are commonly used by tourism officials to ensure they are delivering the most successful marketing messages to reach certain audiences, according to Candace Fitch, the Howard Feiertag Endowed Professor of Practice at Virginia Tech’s Pamplin School of Business, “They want to target those really precious marketing dollars to a very specific target market [to] make sure they’re reaching the right people,” she says.

As far as the accuracy of mobile device tracking data, “it’s hard to evaluate the reliability of it,” says Michael Maness, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of South Florida and an affiliated faculty member with the university’s Center for Urban Transportation Research. He added that he hasn’t seen any studies comparing data compiled from mobile locations with traditional sources like casino-tracked visitor data.

Nevertheless, spokesman Raghuraman says, Arrivalist’s data is “pretty accurate.” He points out that Arrivalist compares its lodging data information to numbers compiled by Smith Travel Research, which processes performance data from hotels. “We usually see more than 95% or 96% correlation, which is big when you’re talking about two completely different datasets.”

Rules of attraction

Casinos are “amazing” for attracting tourists, Fitch says. After all, visitors are coming to gamble, she says, and “that’s a big draw for people because you can’t have access to that everywhere in the United States.”

About two dozen states offer commercial casino facilities, according to the American Gaming Association’s 2023 State of the States report. Among Virginia’s bordering neighbors, casinos are legal in Maryland, North Carolina and West Virginia, but not in Tennessee, Kentucky or Washington, D.C.

Casinos, Fitch points out, also bring in big-name entertainers and tend to attract development of other tourist-appealing attractions like restaurants and retail opportunities that wouldn’t normally open in smaller markets. “Big chefs like to be in casinos,” she says.

Bob McNab, chair of the economics department at Old Dominion University and director of ODU’s Dragas Center for Economic Analysis and Policy, has a less rosy view of how casinos will impact tourism in Virginia.

“Is this really an inflection point for Virginia tourism?” he says. “One would probably argue it’s not at this point in time.”

McNab speculates that most individuals who visit the state’s casinos are day visitors.

“They’re not destination casinos, right?” McNab says of the commonwealth’s three operating casinos. “They’re not a Macau. They’re not a Las Vegas. They’re not an Atlantic City.”

Evangelista with Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Bristol says casinos usually track visitor data with loyalty rewards programs like Hard Rock’s Unity, Caesars Rewards, or the Rush Rewards program at Rivers Casino Portsmouth.

While Bristol’s temporary casino isn’t an official Hard Rock property, visitors can still use and earn Unity rewards there, according to Evangelista. “And so, when people come to the building, and they actually sign up for a card or they use their card to play, we know how much they [gambled], and we know where they did it from,” she explains.

Bristol’s temporary casino welcomed visitors from all 50 U.S. states during its first six months of operation in 2022, according to Evangelista. Hard Rock would not release specific visitation data for its Bristol casino patrons, but Evangelista says that typically its guests travel from no further than three hours away, with the majority of out-of-state guests hailing from Tennessee and North Carolina.

However, the number of North Carolina visitors fell after Danville’s casino opened in May 2023, Evangelista observes. “Now we see them maybe sharing, you know, coming to visit us a little bit [and] going to visit there as well,” she says. (Caesars Virginia representatives would not comment on tourism trends at the casino.)

As for Rivers Casino in Portsmouth, Roy Corby, the casino’s general manager, provided a statement to Virginia Business magazine noting that more than 2 million guests visited the casino during its first year in business. “Rivers Casino Portsmouth has welcomed guests from all 50 states,” Corby says. “We are pleased with the growing number of out-of-area guests in our first year and expect that trend to continue.”  

Madison Eades, general manager of Danville’s Bee and Holbrook hotels, says that even after the Caesars Virginia resort casino opens, plenty of guests will still seek a boutique hotel experience. Photo by Hannah King

Busy as a Bee

Danville, Portsmouth and Bristol have all seen an increase in local lodging taxes since their respective casinos opened. Lodging taxes in Bristol jumped from about $1.28 million in fiscal 2021 to more than $2.08 million in fiscal 2023, while Danville saw a similar increase during the same time period, rising from around $1.59 million to over $2.71 million. Meanwhile, Portsmouth saw a more modest increase, from $897,134 in fiscal 2022 to more than $1 million in fiscal 2023.

Danville City Manager Ken Larking is careful, however, to note that increases in hotel stays in his city may also have been impacted by construction workers coming to work on the permanent Caesars casino and other projects like the White Mill redevelopment.

Caesars frequently puts up Danville guests at local hotels, according to Corrie Bobe, Danville’s economic development and tourism director. “Currently, they’re averaging between 25 to 40 room nights per week when hosting guests,” she says. “So, our assumption is that these are out-of-town guests coming to visit the temporary facility.”

Two Danville boutique hotels are certainly seeing business from visitors to the temporary casino, according to Madison Eades, dual general manager of the Bee Hotel and the Holbrook Hotel, which opened in late 2023. “Holbrook is gaining traction for sure and getting busier,” she says. “The Bee has been busy.”

Eades doesn’t expect traffic at the hotels to slow after Caesars opens its permanent casino and hotel in Danville. After all, Caesars may sell out its own hotel rooms sometimes, Eades points out, and some visitors may also want to visit a boutique hotel instead. “We will still see a lot of guests coming in [who] want a different type of experience,” she says.

Initially, Caesars planned to build 500 hotels rooms in the permanent hotel, but now the facility has downsized the project to 320 rooms. Rising construction costs were likely behind the change, according to Larking. “Just like every business, they need to stay within some kind of a budget,” he says.

The City of Danville hired Alexandria-based RevPAR International, a hospitality industry advisory firm, to prepare a hospitality market study, which will cost about $21,900, according to Larking. The study, which should be completed over the summer, will allow Danville “to better analyze the current demand for hotel rooms as well as the type of hotel rooms that are needed within the market, and then forecast over the next 10 years what additional rooms need to be attracted or constructed,” Bobe says.

Larking hopes the study will draw developers of high-end hotels to the area. “They just don’t build it because you ask,” he says. “You have to actually show them there’s demand.”

Meanwhile, in Portsmouth, Keith Toler, the city’s assistant director for the department of museums and tourism, feels confident Rivers Casino Portsmouth is drawing big numbers of out-of-state and out-of-town tourists.

“We’re seeing people come from the Outer Banks,” he says. “We’re seeing people come from Virginia Beach. They’re doing their weeklong stay, but they’ll take a night and come up to the casino.”

From October to December 2023, more than 20% of Rivers Casino Portsmouth guests were from out-of-state, according to a presentation made at the Virginia Lottery Board’s January meeting.

That percentage stuck with Brian Donahue, Portsmouth’s director of economic development. “I was pleasantly surprised by the visitors that we’ve got coming from outside of Virginia,” he says. “We think it’s been a really impactful and transformative project for the city of Portsmouth and, really, the Hampton Roads region.”  

Va. casino gaming revenues total $65M in March

Virginia’s three casinos reported about $65.08 million in gaming revenues for March, according to Virginia Lottery data released April 15.

Last month, the Bristol Casino: Future Home of Hard Rock reported about $16.27 million in adjusted gaming revenues (wagers minus winnings), of which about $13 million came from its 911 slots and about $3.26 million came from its 29 table games. The Bristol casino temporary facility opened in July 2022, making it Virginia’s first operating casino. The Virginia Lottery Board approved HR Bristol’s casino license in April 2022.

After the lottery board approved its license in November 2022, Rivers Casino Portsmouth opened as Virginia’s first permanent casino in January 2023. In March, it generated about $19.5 million from its 1,462 slots and about $8.2 million from its 81 table games for a total AGR of about $27.7 million.

The temporary Caesars Virginia casino in Danville, which received its casino license in April 2023 and opened in May 2023, reported about $16.36 million in AGR from its 804 slots and about $4.7 million from its 33 table games, totaling about $21 million last month.

March’s casino gaming revenues were a 13.5% increase from the $57.3 million reported in February.

Virginia law assesses a graduated tax on a casino’s adjusted gaming revenue. For the month of March, taxes from casino AGRs totaled $11.7 million.

The host cities of Portsmouth and Danville received 6% of their respective casinos’ AGRs: about $1.66 million and $1.26 million, respectively. For the Bristol casino, 6% of its adjusted gaming revenue — about $976,200 last month — goes to the Regional Improvement Commission, which the General Assembly established to distribute Bristol casino tax funds throughout Southwest Virginia.

The Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund receives 0.8% of total taxes — about $93,700 last month. The Family and Children’s Trust Fund, which funds family violence prevention and treatment programs, receives 0.2% of the monthly total, about $23,400 in March.

There is currently one other casino underway in Virginia: the $500 million HeadWaters Resort & Casino in Norfolk. The developers — a partnership between the King William-based Pamunkey Indian Tribe and Tennessee billionaire Jon Yarbrough — submitted new plans to the city, aiming to start continuous, rather than phased, construction in spring 2024.

The Norfolk Architectural Review Board is the first body to review plans in the approval process, which ends with the Norfolk City Council. The board was initially set to review the new plans in January, but the developers have continued the review indefinitely. The casino must obtain its license from the lottery board by November 2025, or the referendum approved by Norfolk voters in 2020 becomes null and void under state law.

“The Pamunkey Tribe has continued to work diligently with its architecture and engineering teams to produce the additional design work necessary to address the direction provided by [Norfolk] City Council. Until that work is completed, we have asked for a continuance before the ARB,” Jay Smith, spokesperson for HeadWaters Resort & Casino, said in a statement after the Architectural Review Board’s Jan. 22 meeting. “As soon as we are confident that the plans meet the needs of the city and Tribe, we will ask to be put on the ARB agenda. … Once design is completed, we will employ an aggressive construction schedule to bring this project to life.”

Petersburg will likely hold a casino referendum this fall, something its lawmakers have pushed for since Richmond voters first rejected a proposed $562 million casino proposal in their city — and then rejected it a second time. On Wednesday, the Virginia House of Delegates and Senate passed Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s amended version of a bill, sponsored by Sen. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg, replacing Richmond with Petersburg among Virginia cities eligible to host a casino if voters approve it.

Petersburg casino referendum could take place in 2024

Petersburg voters will likely get the opportunity to vote on a casino referendum this fall, as a Virginia General Assembly obstacle has been removed from its path.

SB 628, sponsored by Sen. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg, replaces Richmond with Petersburg among Virginia cities eligible to host a casino following approval by voters on a ballot. An earlier version of the bill had required a second General Assembly vote in 2025 before the law could take effect, but Gov. Glenn Youngkin removed that section of the measure this spring.

On Wednesday, both legislative bodies passed Youngkin’s version — meaning a vote could take place this fall in Petersburg, expediting the possible development of a casino resort in the city.

“After two previous failed attempts, in my first Senate session, the General Assembly has officially given its support to allow the citizens of Petersburg to have a referendum vote on a casino,” Aird said in a statement Wednesday. “I made a promise to give my community this opportunity, and today I delivered on that promise. While voters will have the final say on whether a casino becomes a reality, this legislation has the potential for multimillion-dollar economic investment to be made in a community that both needs and truly deserves it.”

The Virginia House of Delegates passed a Petersburg casino bill on April 17, 2024, in a special session.

Petersburg’s city council, the Virginia Lottery Board and the Petersburg Circuit Court must also approve the addition of the referendum to the 2024 local ballot, but those are largely administrative tasks that are not expected to affect the referendum’s progress to voters.

Wednesday’s vote will be good news to some Petersburg officials and the five development groups vying for an opportunity to build a casino in Petersburg. Bruce Smith, a Virginia Beach developer and NFL Hall of Fame member who is partnering with Baltimore-based casino company Cordish Cos., has been outspoken about the legislative obstacle, calling for House Speaker Don Scott to pass Youngkin’s amended version of the bill in recent interviews.

“Now’s not the time to play politics with the people of Petersburg,” Smith said last week in an interview with Virginia Business, directing his remarks toward Scott. “They need this economic development opportunity — more so than any other city in the state of Virginia. This is a critical time. That is costing the city money [and] jobs, trying to alleviate the problems of food deserts [and] underfunded schools. We can’t allow folks to say one thing and do another. The time to act is now, and all we’re asking for is to … take the reenactment clause right out of the bill.”

Bally’s, Cordish Cos., Penn Entertainment, Rush Street Gaming and The Warrenton Group are the five contenders in Petersburg, and Aird hosted a town hall on Sunday at which representatives of the development teams presented details of their proposed casino resorts.

The Virginia State Senate passed the amended bill 32-8 on Wednesday afternoon, moving it to the House of Delegates for consideration. Because the House of Delegates had added the reenactment clause to the earlier measure, the bill’s fate was slightly less certain in that body, but the bill passed 80-19 in the House.

In 2020, the state legalized commercial casinos to be built in five economically underserved cities: Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond. The first four cities passed casino referendums easily in 2020, but Richmonders voted down casino referendums in 2021 and 2023. Petersburg’s process would be similar to the other cities’ processes, requiring the city council to choose a casino operator and a city referendum to win for the plan to move forward.

Petersburg casino competitors roll out details

More details have rolled in about the five Petersburg casino contenders, all of whom presented their plans during a town hall Sunday at the Petersburg Public Library.

Hosted by state Sen. Lashresce Aird, D-Petersburg, the town hall saw officials representing Bally’s, Cordish Cos., Penn Entertainment, Rush Street Gaming and The Warrenton Group reveal more details about their casino proposals, even though the city doesn’t yet have the state legislature’s go-ahead to include a casino referendum on this fall’s ballot.

Virginia Beach developer and NFL Hall of Famer Bruce Smith, who is partnering with Cordish, has called on Virginia House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott to expedite an amended bill allowing a referendum this year instead of requiring a second General Assembly vote in 2025, which would delay construction of a casino by at least a year.

“Now’s not the time to play politics with the people of Petersburg,” Smith said in an April 12 interview with Virginia Business.

The state legislature meets in Richmond on Wednesday to vote on the 2024-26 state budget and other bills amended by Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who removed the reenactment clause from the casino bill, allowing a 2024 vote.

Here are the five prospective casino developers and their proposals, of which the Petersburg City Council may green-light one for development as soon as this summer:

  • Bally’s, a major national player in the casino industry, previously vied for the Danville casino (which Caesars Entertainment ultimately won) and a proposed Richmond casino, ultimately losing to Urban One in 2021. The proposed Bally’s resort, with a casino, 500-room hotel, restaurants and entertainment space, would be on Rives Road near Interstate 95, and officials say 15% of the casino’s equity would go to local people.
  • Baltimore-based Cordish, which competed unsuccessfully to build a casino in Richmond in 2021, received Petersburg City Council’s approval for a $1.4 billion casino development in 2022, but without state approval, that project was null and void. This year’s proposal is similar to the company’s earlier proposal, Smith says, and would include 400,000 square feet of gambling, hotel and dining space, as well as a 3,000-seat entertainment venue. To be built on 90 acres at the intersection of Wagner Road and Interstate 95, the venue would be known as Live! Casino & Hotel Virginia.
  • Rush Street Gaming is the Chicago-based company that operates the Portsmouth Rivers Casino, the first permanent casino to open in Virginia. Its proposed Petersburg resort would include a casino, hotel, business and entertainment space, possibly off County Drive.
  • Penn Entertainment is based in Pennsylvania, and its focus is on “community casinos,” as opposed to those based in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. Its proposal includes a 200-room hotel, an 8,000-capacity amphitheater partnered with Live Nation, in addition to a casino and ESPN sportsbook.
  • The Warrenton Group is a Washington, D.C.-based business developer that has an agreement with casino operator Delaware North and the Upper Mattaponi Tribe, based in King William County. Its proposal is significantly different from the other four, as development would be in two different parts of Petersburg. A 160,000-square-foot casino and 200-room hotel, as well as restaurants and housing units for casino employees, would be at the “Southern Gateway” location off Route 301, and a second phase, known as the “Northern Gateway” on the waterfront of Pocahontas Island, would include a 100-to-150-room hotel, 120,000 square feet of retail and housing for Virginia State University students.
Rendering of Cordish Cos.’ proposed Petersburg casino development, which would include retail and residential buildings. Image courtesy Cordish

Who’s involved

Smith, who played defensive end for the Buffalo Bills and the Virginia Tech Hokies football teams, was on hand at Aird’s town hall. He said that the Cordish ownership team would have 50% minority equity participation, more than the other development teams vying for the opportunity to develop a casino in Petersburg and, if successful, it would have the largest minority equity participation in a U.S. casino. Other investors are former Philadelphia Eagles and University of Virginia All-American receiver Billy McMullen, former Cox Communications executive Gary McCollum and the Reynolds family, which founded Reynolds Metals.

The Warrenton Group’s alliance with the Upper Mattaponi Tribe distinguishes it as the only proposal with a federally recognized Indian tribe. U.Va. basketball legend Ralph Sampson, a Harrisonburg native whose mother attended VSU, and VSU President Makola M. Abdullah wrote letters to support the project known as Gateways2Petersburg.

Rush Street said in its presentation Sunday that its casino, if chosen, would have up to 40% minority investment and ownership.

There have been Black-owned casinos in the U.S. before, most notably by the late Don H. Barden, who owned resorts in Pittsburgh, Las Vegas, Colorado and Mississippi. In 2021, Maryland-based Black-owned media company Urban One promoted its Richmond casino as being the only Black-owned casino currently operating in the U.S., although the proposal failed in a city referendum. Its 2023 proposed venture was a 50-50 collaboration with Churchill Downs, and that referendum also failed, opening the doors to the possibility of a casino in Petersburg.

In 2020, the state legalized commercial casinos to be built in five economically underserved cities: Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond. The first four cities passed casino referendums easily in 2020, but Richmonders voted down casino referendums in 2021 and 2023. Petersburg’s process would be similar to the other cities’ processes, requiring the city council to choose a casino operator and a city referendum to win in either 2024 or 2025 for the plan to move forward.

 

Bruce Smith teams with Cordish on Petersburg casino plan

Virginia Beach developer and NFL Hall of Famer Bruce Smith is vying for the chance to develop a casino in Petersburg and has joined forces with Cordish Cos., the Baltimore-based entertainment company that has already made inroads in Virginia.

There’s just one obstacle facing Smith and other prospective developers, including Bally’s, Penn Entertainment, Rush Street Gaming and D.C.-based Warrenton Group: a piece of legislation awaiting action by the Virginia General Assembly. Virginia State Senate Bill 628 replaces Richmond with Petersburg in the state’s list of cities eligible to host a casino, clearing the way for a casino referendum to be held in Petersburg.

However, the House of Delegates added a reenactment clause to the bill’s wording at the last minute, which would require next year’s General Assembly to take up the bill and vote for it a second time before Petersburg can move forward with a referendum vote — a move that would delay the development of a casino there by at least a year.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin removed the reenactment clause and sent the bill back to the legislature, which will vote on his amended bills April 17. If the General Assembly leaves the bill as-is, Petersburg will likely hold a referendum this fall — and that’s what Smith hopes will happen. He says Petersburg is ready and needs the economic benefit of a casino sooner rather than later.

“Now’s not the time to play politics with the people of Petersburg,” Smith said this week in an interview with Virginia Business, directing his remarks toward House Speaker Don Scott. “They need this economic development opportunity — more so than any other city in the state of Virginia. This is a critical time. That is costing the city money [and] jobs, trying to alleviate the problems of food deserts [and] underfunded schools. We can’t allow folks to say one thing and do another. The time to act is now, and all we’re asking for is to … take the reenactment clause right out of the bill.”

The former defensive end for the Buffalo Bills and Virginia Tech Hokies plans to unveil details of his and Cordish’s casino proposal Sunday at the Petersburg Public Library. The proposed casino will be similar to a $1.4 billion development submitted in 2022 by Cordish and approved by Petersburg City Council in a nonbinding agreement — which became null and void because Petersburg did not receive legislative support to hold a casino referendum that year. Smith, who collaborated with Cordish on a failed Richmond casino proposal in 2021 but was not part of the 2022 Petersburg bid, said the new proposal is “similar, with some tweaks.”

While he will disclose more details Sunday, Smith said “the structure of the deal in itself” will be different. “I will discuss those details on Sunday at the town hall, and they will be groundbreaking — and I think it will be breaking news.” Smith said he became interested in working in Petersburg after a visit with other NFL all-stars a few years ago to a local school and seeing room for economic improvement.

As in the 2022 proposal, the Cordish resort would be built on 90 acres at the intersection of Wagner Road and Interstate 95, and the casino would be “just one component in this massive development,” Smith said, including a 3,000-seat theater among residential, office and retail buildings on the site. He says his team expects to create 7,500 jobs total, including construction jobs, and produce about $2.8 billion in economic impact for the city over the casino’s first 10 years in operation, according to a CNBC interview he gave about the venture this week.

Smith says that his status as a born-and-bred Virginian — having grown up in Norfolk, graduated from Virginia Tech and moved to Virginia Beach to start his real estate business — is a major point in his favor.

Bruce Smith Enterprises, based in Virginia Beach, has previously developed hotels in Washington, D.C., and Virginia Beach in partnership with Armada Hoffler, and Smith is involved in projects slated for Virginia Beach’s Rudee Loop and a 287-unit apartment complex in Norfolk.

He also says that his development team would focus on making sure there is robust local participation in the project, noting that in some majority Black cities that host casinos, participation from investors of color is minimal. “Historically, when opportunities for major developments have taken place, Virginians have either been shut out, or given such a small percentage, even in areas that are disenfranchised,” he said. Petersburg’s population is about 77% African American, Smith notes.

“First and foremost, this is about the citizens and the city of Petersburg, a city that has been ignored and disenfranchised for three generations, to be quite honest,” Smith said. “A city with historically high unemployment, poverty, food deserts [and] underfunded schools, just to name a few problems. This city needs this economic engine more than any other city. It’s time to put Virginians first.”

Meanwhile, the Smith-Cordish plan is not the only one under consideration; four other prospective developers have applied for consideration:

  • Bally’s is a major national player in the casino industry and has previously vied for the Danville casino (which Caesars Entertainment ultimately won), but according to news reports, the company also is struggling to raise capital for a new resort in Chicago;
  • Rush Street Gaming is the Chicago-based company that operates the Portsmouth Rivers Casino, the first permanent casino to open in Virginia;
  • Penn National Gaming is based in Hollywood, and its focus is on “community casinos,” as opposed to those based in Las Vegas and Atlantic City;
  • The Warrenton Group is a Washington, D.C.-based business developer that has an agreement with casino operator Delaware North, but the Warrenton Group itself is a new entrant to the casino industry.
Rendering of a proposed Petersburg casino from 2022 that is expected to be similar to the 2024 proposal. Image courtesy The Cordish Cos.

Cordish pitched a $600 million hotel and resort casino in 2021 in Richmond’s North Side that would have featured a live music hall, but ultimately a plan proposed by Urban One on the city’s South Side won approval from the city. Cordish also sued the City of Norfolk in 2021 for $100 million alleging the city government breached its contract with the company, in which Cordish said it agreed to develop the Waterside District in exchange for the exclusive right to develop and operate a casino in Norfolk — although at the time casinos were not yet legalized in Virginia.

Instead, Norfolk reached a deal with the Pamunkey Indian Tribe to develop the HeadWaters Resort & Casino with Tennessee billionaire investor Jon Yarbrough. Cordish’s lawsuit was dismissed by a Norfolk circuit court in 2022, and the state Court of Appeals upheld the lower court’s decision last month, but there is still a possibility that another entity will take control of the long-delayed HeadWaters project.

According to an April 4 Virginian-Pilot story, Norfolk city leaders are considering the possibility of partnering with a developer other than the tribe and Yarbrough. Under the casino referendum passed by city voters in 2020, the development team is required to obtain a gaming license within five years, or by November 2025. To do so, developers needed to begin construction of the permanent casino by this spring, a casino spokesperson said previously. Smith said it’s possible that he and Cordish would enter the running if the city opens the field to other casino developers.

“If there’s an opportunity that exists in Norfolk, in my hometown, after we take care of Petersburg, we will certainly address that opportunity if it arises,” Smith said, while noting, “first and foremost, our focus is on Petersburg.”

Virginians wagered $545M on sports in February

Virginians bet $545 million on sports in February, 25.6% more than in February 2023, according to data released Monday by the Virginia Lottery.

February’s handle was a 16.5% decrease from the $652.87 million Virginians bet in January. Virginia bettors won approximately $495 million in February and more than $587.5 million in January.

About $540 million of February’s gross sports gaming revenues came from mobile operators, and the remaining roughly $4.9 million came from casino retail activity. Virginia currently has three casinos: the temporary Bristol Casino: The Future Home of Hard Rock, the permanent Rivers Casino Portsmouth and the temporary Caesars Virginia casino in Danville. In February, Virginia’s gaming revenues from casinos totaled $57.3 million, according to the Virginia Lottery.

The licensed operators included in February’s reporting were:

  • Betfair Interactive US (FanDuel) in partnership with the Washington Commanders
  • Crown Virginia Gaming (Draft Kings)
  • BetMGM
  • Rivers Portsmouth Gaming (Rivers Casino Portsmouth)
  • Caesars Virginia
  • WSI US
  • Twin River Management Group
  • Penn Sports Interactive
  • Unibet Interactive
  • Colonial Downs Group
  • Digital Gaming Corporation VA
  • VHL VA
  • HR Bristol
  • Hillside (Virginia)
  • DC Sports Facilities Entertainment
  • Betr VA
  • PlayLive Virginia.

Virginia places a 15% tax on sports betting activity based on each permit holder’s adjusted gross revenue (total wagers minus total winnings and other authorized deductions). With 11 operators reporting net positive AGR for February, the month’s taxes totaled $6.3 million, of which 97.5% — about $6.18 million — will be deposited in the state’s general fund. The remaining approximately $158,570 goes to the Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund, which the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services administers.

Va. casinos report $57.3M in Feb. revenue

Gaming revenues from Virginia’s three casinos totaled $57.3 million in February, according to Virginia Lottery data released Friday.

The Bristol Casino: Future Home of Hard Rock temporary facility opened July 2022, making it Virginia’s first casino. The Virginia Lottery Board approved HR Bristol’s casino license in April 2022. Last month, the Bristol casino generated about $11.67 million from its 911 slots and about $1.67 million from its 29 table games, for a total of about $13.3 million in adjusted gaming revenues (wagers minus winnings).

Rivers Casino Portsmouth opened in January 2023, becoming Virginia’s first permanent casino. The lottery board had previously approved its license in November 2022. In February, the Portsmouth casino reported about $25 million in AGR, of which about $18.2 million came from its 1,468 slots and the remaining roughly $7 million from its 81 table games.

The temporary Caesars Virginia casino in Danville opened in May 2023, after receiving its casino license in April 2023. In January, Caesars Virginia held a topping-off ceremony for the 12-story hotel that will be part of the permanent resort casino slated to open late this year. The casino reported about $13.98 million from its 808 slots and $4.75 million from its 33 table games, totaling about $18.7 million.

February’s casino gaming revenues were an almost 8.5% increase from the $52.86 million reported in January.

Virginia law assesses a graduated tax on a casino’s adjusted gaming revenue. For the month of February, taxes from casino AGRs totaled $10.32 million.

The host cities of Portsmouth and Danville received 6% of their respective casinos’ AGRs: about $1.5 million and $1.12 million, respectively. For the Bristol casino, 6% of its adjusted gaming revenue — about $800,800 last month — goes to the Regional Improvement Commission, which the General Assembly established to distribute Bristol casino tax funds throughout Southwest Virginia.

The Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund receives 0.8% of total taxes, which was almost $82,570 last month. The Family and Children’s Trust Fund, which funds local family violence prevention and treatment programs, receives 0.2% of the monthly total, about $20,640 in February.

One other casino is currently underway in Virginia: the $500 million HeadWaters Resort & Casino in Norfolk. The developers — a partnership between the King William-based Pamunkey Indian Tribe and Tennessee billionaire Jon Yarbrough — submitted new plans to the city, aiming to start continuous, rather than phased, construction in spring 2024.

The Norfolk Architectural Review Board is the first body to review plans in the approval process, which ends with the Norfolk City Council. The board was set to review the new plans in January, but the developers have continued the review indefinitely.

“The Pamunkey Tribe has continued to work diligently with its architecture and engineering teams to produce the additional design work necessary to address the direction provided by [Norfolk] City Council. Until that work is completed, we have asked for a continuance before the ARB,” Jay Smith, spokesperson for HeadWaters Resort & Casino, said in a statement after the Architectural Review Board’s Jan. 22 meeting.

“As soon as we are confident that the plans meet the needs of the city and Tribe, we will ask to be put on the ARB agenda,” Smith said in the statement. “We know so many residents of Norfolk share our eagerness to open HeadWaters Resort & Casino, and once design is completed, we will employ an aggressive construction schedule to bring this project to life.” The casino must obtain its license from the lottery board by November 2025, or the 2020 referendum becomes null and void under state law.

Following Richmond voters’ rejection of a proposed $562 million casino for the second time, Petersburg lawmakers sought to hold a referendum in their city. A bill that would replace Richmond with Petersburg on the list of cities eligible to host a casino in Virginia has passed the Virginia Senate and the House of Delegates, but the House added an amendment that requires a second vote on the bill during a “subsequent regular or special session,” so the bill is stalled for now. A second bill that would have given Fairfax County a casino referendum has also been tabled until 2025’s session.

Virginians bet nearly $653M on sports in January

Virginians bet more than $652.87 million on sports in January, up 27.2% from January 2023, according to data released Friday by the Virginia Lottery.

January’s handle is a 3.11% increase from December 2023, when Virginians bet about $633 million on sports. Virginia bettors won more than $578.5 million in January and more than $569.57 million in December.

About $646 million of January’s gross sports gaming revenues came from mobile operators, with the remaining roughly $6.6 million coming from casino retail activity. Virginia currently has three casinos: the temporary Bristol Casino: The Future Home of Hard Rock, the permanent Rivers Casino Portsmouth and the temporary Caesars Virginia casino in Danville. In January, Virginia’s gaming revenues from casinos totaled $52.86 million, according to the Virginia Lottery.

The licensed operators included in January’s reporting were:

  • Betfair Interactive US (FanDuel) in partnership with the Washington Commanders
  • Crown Virginia Gaming (Draft Kings)
  • BetMGM
  • Rivers Portsmouth Gaming (Rivers Casino Portsmouth)
  • Caesars Virginia
  • WSI US
  • Twin River Management Group
  • Penn Sports Interactive
  • Unibet Interactive
  • Colonial Downs Group
  • Digital Gaming Corporation VA
  • VHL VA
  • HR Bristol
  • Hillside (Virginia)
  • DC Sports Facilities Entertainment
  • Betr VA
  • PlayLive Virginia

Virginia places a 15% tax on sports betting activity based on each permit holder’s adjusted gross revenue. With 10 operators reporting net positive AGR for January, the month’s taxes totaled about $9.9 million, of which 97.5% — about $9.68 million — will be deposited in the state’s general fund. The remaining roughly $248,300 will be deposited in the Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund, which the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services administers.

Tourism: Game on

According to the state government, visitor spending across Virginia surpassed $30 billion in 2022, exceeding 2019 expenditures by 4.4%. Nevertheless, business travel still hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels, particularly in Northern Virginia. But leisure travel is back and booming.

Hotel revenues were up 13% statewide in 2023, compared with 2019, with more rooms sold at higher prices, due to inflation. Charlottesville saw room revenue rise 30% over pre-pandemic numbers, while Hampton Roads room revenue was up 22.6%.

Not surprisingly, the beach, Virginia’s historic attractions, sporting events and outdoor activities were big draws last year, as were the state’s three new casinos in Bristol, Portsmouth and Danville.

The three casinos brought in $58.5 million in December 2023, up from $51.9 million in November. The temporary Hard Rock casino in Bristol reported $157 million in net gaming revenues in its first year of operation, while Rivers Casino Portsmouth, the state’s first permanent casino, racked up almost $250 million last year. Danville’s Caesars Virginia casino, meanwhile, which opened in a temporary space in late May 2023 while a permanent casino is under construction, generated about $145 million for the six months it operated last year.

The permanent casinos in Bristol and Danville are expected to be completed by the end of this year, although the clock is ticking on Norfolk’s casino, a joint venture between the King William-based Pamunkey Indian Tribe and Tennessee billionaire Jon Yarbrough. Its plans have still not met local officials’ approval.

The casino’s developers submitted new plans late last year to the city government, aiming to start construction this spring, with completion planned by November 2025, the statutory deadline. Meanwhile, Richmond voters said no a second time to a casino, and now talk about a possible fifth casino in Petersburg or Fairfax County is building, although a General Assembly bill proposing a referendum in Fairfax has been tabled until 2025.

Another major deal waiting on General Assembly approval is a proposed $2 billion entertainment complex in Alexandria that would include a new arena for the Washington Wizards NBA team and the NHL’s Washington Capitals. Although it has the full backing of Gov. Glenn Youngkin and some Northern Virginia officials, many residents and some state legislators have expressed wariness and even strong opposition. If the General Assembly and Youngkin sign off on plans for a proposed sports and entertainment district in Alexandria, it would bring a 9 million-square-foot project to the Potomac Riverfront in National Landing, very close to Amazon.com Inc.’s HQ2 East Coast headquarters

Youngkin calls it a “once-in-a-generation historic development,” but Senate Democrats put the brakes on a bill that would create an authority for the project. A House bill was still alive in mid-February.

In other tourism and hospitality news, Kings Dominion’s parent company, Cedar Fair Entertainment, announced in November 2023 an $8 billion merger with Six Flags Entertainment that is expected to close in the first half of this year. And in York County, Princess Cruise Lines aborted its plans for making it a port of call this year and instead plans to stop in Norfolk. The proposal to bring in cruise line passengers had encountered opposition from local residents, some of whom expressed concerns regarding the potential environmental impact.

Also, Kalahari Resorts broke ground in Spotsylvania County in October 2023 for its $900 million destination water park resort, planned to include a 907-room hotel and 150,000 square feet of convention space. (See related story.) Local officials are bullish about the project, which is expected to bring in $83 million in tax revenue over its first 20 years and create up to 1,400 jobs when it opens in 2026.  

This story has been updated from an earlier version.


 

Fairfax, Petersburg could hold casino referendums

Two pending Virginia State Senate bills would change the list of locations eligible to host a casino, adding Petersburg and Fairfax County to the mix and removing Richmond.

On Tuesday, the Senate Committee on General Laws and Technology’s gaming subcommittee met to discuss these and other measures regarding skill games, sports betting and horse racing. Both casino measures received enough votes to move forward to a full vote of the Senate General Laws and Technology Committee expected Wednesday.

Sen. Dave Marsden, D-Fairfax, sponsored SB 675, a bill that would add Fairfax County to the list of localities that could host a casino in Virginia if voters pass a referendum — although Marsden placed some restrictions on the measure, including that a casino would have to be located within a quarter-mile of an existing Metro station on the Silver Line. Also, the locality’s officials are required to consider a gaming operator’s history of paying prevailing wages to construction workers and entering into labor agreements with unions when awarding the contract.

According to WTOP, if successful, the casino would be placed in Tysons on Route 7 near the Spring Hill Metro station, on land where a car dealership was previously located. Marsden’s legislation previously included the possibility of building a casino in Reston, but after resident opposition, Reston has been excluded from consideration.

Advocating for his bill before the subcommittee, Marsden said that the MGM National Harbor Hotel & Casino in Maryland is “taking $150 million a year out of Virginia coffers,” and that Northern Virginia has suffered financially since the pandemic. He also emphasized that a casino project would include a convention center “that does not exist in Fairfax County. We’re also talking about a hotel, a concert venue and the casino itself.”

Subcommittee member Sen. Christopher Head, R-Roanoke, said he has received “hundreds and hundreds and hundreds” of emails from community members opposed to the Fairfax casino and asked whether Marsden had heard from any community groups that support a casino in Fairfax. Marsden replied that he believes MGM is stirring up opposition to a Tysons casino “to make sure that their interests are preserved, but I’m getting tired of paying for Maryland schools,” referring to Virginians spending money at the MGM casino.

Benita Thompson-Byas, senior vice president of Reston-based Thompson Hospitality, was one of a few speakers in support of a Fairfax casino and said her company would be a minority partner if the casino is approved by voters.

Another subcommittee member, Democratic Sen. Adam Ebbin of Alexandria, said he also has received “hundreds” of emails opposing a casino and said he wouldn’t support the proposal without more input from the Fairfax County government. Marsden said he has been in discussions with Fairfax supervisors who said they would follow through with due diligence if the bill progresses.

Subcommittee member Sen. Jennifer Carroll Foy, D-Woodbridge, said she would vote for the bill, noting that a referendum gives Fairfax voters the ultimate choice on the matter. “They are the best ones to decide,” she said. The bill ended in a 4-4 tie, sending it to the Senate General Laws committee for a vote.

Meanwhile, Sens. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg, and Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, are chief co-sponsors of SB 628, which would replace Richmond with Petersburg on the list of cities eligible to host a casino if city voters pass a referendum. No one spoke in opposition to the bill, which passed the subcommittee and will go forward for a committee vote.

Aird emphasized Petersburg’s high poverty rates and aging infrastructure as factors in the city’s favor. “Petersburg needs a transformative economic development opportunity to generate immediate revenue and provide long-term benefits,” she said. Several people representing a hospitality workers’ union wore red T-shirts and sat in the audience, showing support for the measure.

Also, Sen. Lamont Bagby, D-Richmond, sponsored SB 541 removing Richmond as an eligible host city, which passed the subcommittee unanimously. Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, sponsored a measure to reduce the number of casino-eligible cities from five to four, but struck the bill earlier Tuesday and instead supported the measure allowing Petersburg to vote on a referendum.

Republican Sen. Bryce Reeves sponsored a bill, SB 345, that would block a city from holding a second casino referendum within three years if a first referendum fails. That bill passed with seven ayes and one no vote.

Measures removing Richmond as a casino-eligible city were clear responses to last fall’s second unsuccessful referendum in Richmond to establish the $562 million Richmond Grand Resort & Casino on the city’s South Side. About 61% of city voters said “no” on November 2023 ballots to the do-over referendum, a much larger margin than in the 2021 vote, which was narrowly defeated by about 1,500 votes. During the 2023 session, Del. Kim Taylor, R-Petersburg, and former state Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Petersburg, tried unsuccessfully to get a casino referendum on Petersburg’s ballots and prevent a second vote in Richmond.

Also under consideration Tuesday was SB 124, a bill from VanValkenburg that would permit betting on Virginia college sports, except for proposition betting, such as point spreads; under current law, the state allows betting on all college sports except those played by Virginia college athletes. Illegal betting is currently a class 1 misdemeanor in Virginia. The bill passed the subcommittee and will next be voted on by the Senate General Laws and Technology Committee.

Another measure, SB 212, would create a regulatory infrastructure for so-called “skill game” machines (also called “gray machines”) in Virginia convenience stores and other small businesses. Sponsored by Sen. Aaron Rouse, D-Virginia Beach, the bill would direct the state tax department to collect a 15% monthly tax from the gross revenue of every skill game machine. As of Tuesday, the bill has been re-referred to Senate Finance and Appropriations. SB 307, a bill sponsored by Democratic Sen. Jeremy McPike, would impose a 34% tax on all gross profits from gaming devices and would send most tax proceeds to the state’s general fund. The vote was postponed to make further adjustments to the bill.