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Petersburg casino bill passes Va. House

The Virginia House of Delegates narrowly passed a bill Tuesday that would allow Petersburg residents to vote on a casino referendum this fall. The legislation moves next to the Virginia State Senate, where a similar bill died in committee.

Del. Kim Taylor, R-Dinwiddie, sponsored HB 1373, which passed 49-44 in the full House vote, with one delegate abstaining. Tuesday is the last day before crossover, when bills passed by each legislative body move to the other chamber for consideration. Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Richmond, was chief patron of the Senate bill, which failed in a narrow vote last week in the Senate Finance and Appropriations committee.

Taylor said on the House floor Tuesday that the measure, which would prevent Richmond from holding another casino referendum until Petersburg residents have had a chance to vote, would mean “economic independence” for Petersburg, which has come close to bankruptcy in recent years. She noted that the average annual income in Petersburg is about $26,000, while jobs at a proposed casino would be in the $60,000-per-year range.

“This bill is about raising the per capita income in my city,” she said.

Petersburg City Council members signed a commitment with Baltimore-based commercial real estate company The Cordish Cos. in October 2022 to develop a Live! Casino & Hotel resort, pending passage of state legislation and Petersburg voters’ support of a casino referendum this fall. Cordish officials have promised to spend $1.4 billion to build a casino, hotel and parking garage, as well as a multiuse development on the surrounding 90 acres, producing 1,800 direct jobs. However, Maryland-based Cordish, which has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida, said it is not interested in developing a casino if Petersburg and Richmond both received a legislative green light to build casinos.

“We are excited Petersburg residents are one step closer to a better economic future,” Zed Smith, Cordish’s chief operating officer, said in a statement Tuesday.  “We are hopeful this progress will continue favorably to allow Petersburg, an economically distressed city whose residents have suffered for years from a lack of investment, an opportunity to hold a local referendum and vote on a $1.4 billion transformative, privately funded development that will benefit the city for generations to come.”

Richmond officials, who have backed a second chance at passing a referendum to allow construction of Urban One Inc.’s proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort in the city’s South Side, oppose the bill. In November 2021, Richmond voters defeated a referendum that would have allowed the casino to be built.

Del. Mark Sickles, D-Springfield, was the only Democrat to support the bill in the House Appropriations committee last week, along with 11 Republicans. He said on the House floor Tuesday that the measure has “been presented as a zero-sum game, and I don’t really like it,” and noted that a study by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) said that both Richmond and Petersburg could potentially support casinos.

Sickles also said that Taylor’s bill’s passage in the Senate is “questionable,” given the defeat of Morrissey’s bill, but he said he would support the measure to keep the possibility of a Petersburg referendum alive.

Morrissey’s Petersburg casino bill fails in Senate Finance

Updated Friday, Feb. 3

With an 7-8 no vote Thursday evening, the Virginia Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee killed state Sen. Joe Morrissey’s measure to bring a casino referendum to Petersburg’s ballots this fall. A similar bill in the House of Delegates, however, is still alive.

A few days after receiving support from the Senate gaming subcommittee and the General Laws and Technology Committee, which sent the bill to Senate Finance with an 11-4 vote Wednesday, eight senators — Republicans and Democrats — voted ‘no’ on a motion to report the bill for a Senate floor vote. Seven others voted to send the bill on for a full Senate vote.

As the matter stands, Petersburg could still have a referendum for a $1.4 billion casino development this fall, or Richmond voters could vote a second time on a proposed casino.

Although the measure took about five minutes in the busy finance committee agenda, supporters and opponents of a Petersburg casino came out in force to testify at the gaming subcommittee meeting last week. Morrissey’s bill would have added Petersburg to the list of cities eligible to host a casino in the state, and it effectively would have prevented Richmond from holding a second casino referendum vote this fall, following a 2021 defeat.

Del. Kim Taylor’s bill, which also adds Petersburg to the list of five eligible cities and would not allow Richmond to hold a referendum, was reported to the House Appropriations committee by a General Laws subcommittee this week in a 5-2 vote. On Friday, the House Appropriations committee voted 12-9 to send the bill to a full vote. One Democrat, Del. Mark Sickles, joined Republicans in voting yes on the motion.

According to the state Department of Planning and Budget, the proposed legislation would not have an impact on state spending, but additional Virginia Lottery and Petersburg staffing and operational spending would be necessary.

Most opponents to the bills are city of Richmond officials, who have backed a second chance at passing a referendum to allow construction of Urban One Inc.’s proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort in the city’s South Side.

Boosters of the bills are mainly Petersburg officials; Petersburg City Council signed a commitment with Baltimore-based commercial real estate company The Cordish Cos. in October 2022 to develop a Live! Casino & Hotel resort, pending passage of Morrissey’s and Taylor’s bills and Petersburg voters’ support of a casino referendum this fall. Cordish officials have promised to spend $1.4 billion to build a casino, hotel and parking garage, as well as a multiuse development on the surrounding 90 acres, producing 1,800 direct jobs. The Maryland-based company, which has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida, said it is not interested in developing a casino if Petersburg and Richmond both got the green light to build casinos.

“We will continue to work with local leaders and members of the General Assembly to bring a transformative urban revitalization project to Petersburg that will generate desperately needed new jobs for Petersburg, along with substantial additional tax revenue for the city and commonwealth,” Zed Smith, Cordish’s chief operating officer, said in a statement Thursday night.

When the state legalized commercial casinos in 2020, it limited the options for casinos to one facility apiece in five economically disadvantaged cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond. Morrissey and other proponents of a Petersburg casino said that the city — which has suffered serious financial setbacks in recent decades — deserved a chance to bring in a casino before giving Richmond a second bite at the apple.

“Petersburg was much more of a natural fit,” Morrissey said in a November 2022 interview with Virginia Business. “The casino legislation was to help struggling cities in the commonwealth, not counties or cities that were going gangbusters. You had to work to construct language that allowed Richmond to fit into one of the five host cities.”

Morrissey and Taylor’s staffs did not respond to requests for comment Thursday evening.

Petersburg casino bill moves to Senate committee

A Virginia State Senate bill that would allow Petersburg residents to vote on allowing a casino in their city is still in play, following a 7-2 vote by the Senate gaming subcommittee Thursday. The bill will progress to a General Laws and Technology committee vote Wednesday.

The bill from Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Richmond, adds Petersburg to the list of cities eligible to host a casino in the state, and it effectively prevents Richmond from holding a second casino referendum vote this fall, following a Richmond casino referendum’s 2021 defeat. In an interview with Virginia Business in November 2022, Morrissey said a proposed Petersburg casino operated by Maryland-based The Cordish Cos. could bring up to 1,800 jobs to the city, as well as multiuse development of the surrounding 90 acres. According to news reports, the project would involve $1.4 billion in investments over the next 15 years.

Speaking Thursday evening, Morrissey, whose district includes Petersburg, promised music performers like Bruce Springsteen, Snoop Dogg and Carrie Underwood would play the Petersburg casino, which he said would create 1,700 jobs with an average salary of $60,000 in the first phase of the project, including the casino, a hotel and parking garage. He predicted the casino would ultimately create 10,000 jobs, both direct and indirect hires, within a decade of its completion.

Although the Petersburg City Council entered into an agreement with Cordish to develop a casino, Petersburg residents would still need to vote in favor of the referendum for the casino to be built, according to state law, and Morrissey’s bill must pass the General Assembly and be signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin for Petersburg to be able to place a referendum on ballots this fall. When the state legalized commercial casinos in 2020, it limited the options for casinos to one facility apiece in five economically disadvantaged cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond.

Cordish, which operates Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casinos in Hollywood and Tampa, Florida, and developed and operates Live! Casino & Hotel resorts in Maryland and Pennsylvania, has said it is not interested in building a casino in Petersburg if Richmond gets a green light this fall from voters to build a casino.

Petersburg city officials spoke in favor of the bill. “We just believe the time is now,” said City Manager John “March” Altman Jr., for what he described as a “once-in-a-lifetime economic opportunity.”

Cordish’s chief operating officer, Zed Smith, said his company’s officers “are urbanists at heart. Petersburg has struggled for many, many years. This is an opportunity. It gives the citizens of Petersburg the opportunity to move the needle in their own city.”

However, proponents of a Richmond casino, including Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney, oppose Morrissey’s bill because it would prohibit Richmond from holding a second local referendum on the same question “until the other eligible host city” — Petersburg — “has had a reasonable opportunity.”

Four Richmond City Council members and the city’s economic development director, Leonard Sledge, spoke against the bill. Most passionately opposed was council member Reva Trammell, who represents the South Side district where the proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort was to be built if its November 2021 referendum had passed.

Trammell said that her district is “struggling. Sen. Morrissey should know that. … I represent mostly brown and Black [people] in my district. … I’m out there taking them food and clothes. We don’t have internet in our house. We don’t have computers. We can’t afford them. What do we do? How do we survive? How do we send our children to school when they don’t have shoes to put on their feet? It breaks my heart. I’m just asking you please, please, give us one more chance.”

A few other speakers opposed the bill for other reasons, including Petersburg resident Lafayette Jefferson, a local NAACP leader who Morrissey had sharp words with last year in an incident at the state Capitol. Morrissey has admitted saying “I’ll rip your heart out of your chest” to Jefferson during an argument.

Jefferson said Thursday that Morrissey’s promise of an average $60,000 salary was “manipulation,” because it didn’t take into account taxes and other deductions. “The take-home [money] will be a lot less.” He also said that Petersburg’s process in choosing Cordish was not transparent, because there was not a public request for proposals. Instead, the city hired a third-party consultant to vet seven companies. Morrissey said later that the process is allowed under current state law, and in Bristol, Portsmouth and Norfolk, city council members chose their casino operators without public input.

Voters in Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth passed casino referendums by wide margins in 2020. Three permanent casinos are now under construction, and Rivers Casino Portsmouth, the state’s first permanent casino, opened Jan. 23.

 

Rivers Casino Portsmouth opens to big crowds

When Rivers Casino Portsmouth opened its doors Monday, Christopher Hoffman was among the thousands of patrons attending opening day at the first permanent casino to open in Virginia.

A Hampton resident and manager at Rosie’s Gaming Emporium, Hoffman said he wanted to be “part of history” happening in the state. He gave the casino a good review, saying he plans to visit about twice a month, but said he wished the 250,000-square-foot casino would designate a smoking area, instead of allowing smoking in the entire gaming room in a way reminiscent of Las Vegas casinos. Others guests Virginia Business spoke to agreed with the sentiment. (The Virginia Clean Indoor Air Act, which generally prohibits smoking in restaurants and other indoor public places, carves out exceptions for “any portion of a facility licensed to conduct casino gaming.”)

Nevertheless, it didn’t deter the crowd inside the casino Monday as they pulled levers on slot machines, slid playing cards across tables and sipped on cold drinks at the multiple bars. Chips flipped and dice rolled across gaming tables. Lights flashed from slot machines and people simultaneously celebrated wins and bemoaned money lost.

Officials cut the ribbon Monday at Rivers Casino Portsmouth, the commonwealth’s first permanent casino. Photo courtesy Rivers Casino Portsmouth

After initially delaying its opening by about a week, the $340 million Portsmouth casino opened to bustling crowds as people lined up early ahead of its 10 a.m. Monday opening. Norfolk State University’s Spartan Legion marching band kicked off the opening and Portsmouth Mayor Shannon Glover, Portsmouth Economic Development Director Brian Donahue, Virginia Lottery Executive Director Kelly Gee were present at the grant opening with Tim Drehkoff, CEO of Chicago-based Rush Street Gaming LLC, which operates the casino.

Gina Smith, the Virginia Lottery’s deputy director of gaming compliance, presented the casino its official operator license during the Monday opening ceremony.

“We’re here to serve the community, our guests and our team members,” Roy Corby, general manager of Rivers Casino Portsmouth, said in a statement. “We’ll accomplish that mission by creating a stellar guest experience and becoming the entertainment destination of choice for Portsmouth, Hampton Roads and visitors to our area.”

The casino had two soft opening nights benefitting three local charities before Monday’s opening. Proceeds from those nights went to Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, USO Hampton Roads and Central Virginia and Wesley Community Service Center. Each group received $170,000 in total contributions. Glover, state Sen. Louise Lucas and House Minority Leader Don Scott placed the ceremonial first wagers during the charity event Saturday.

The casino has hired about 1,000 employees so far, with plans to eventually employ 1,300 permanent workers. Rivers Casino Portsmouth’s estimated annual payroll will be $62 million.

Beatrice Joseph of Virginia Beach occupied a chair at one of the 1,446 slot machines in the casino’s gaming room. She arrived at the casino at about 2 p.m., but was unable to snag a seat at one of the 24 poker tables. Still, she deemed it a “really nice establishment,” saying she planned to come back often.

Another area of the casino has 57 game tables. Chesapeake cover band Better by Tuesday played on the stage of The Sound Bar. Meanwhile, casinogoers crowded around tables and bar at the sportsbook, with its 753-square-foot screen — a 12-foot-by-62-foot-wide viewing wall that can simultaneously display dozens of televised sports events.

The casino’s restaurants, which include Admiral’s Steak & Seafood, Crossings Cafe, Mian, Slice Pizzeria and Starbucks, also attracted long lines of patrons Monday. Later this year, a Yard House restaurant will open.

The casino also has  a 25,000-square-foot multipurpose Event Center. The Epsilon Nu Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. held its annual Martin Luther King scholarship luncheon as the venue’s first event on Jan. 16.

On the casino’s 90,000-square-foot main floor, nearly every seat was taken, and a line stretched out the door of folks waiting to get in to try their hand at gaming. Nearly every parking space in the 2,000-space lot was taken by mid-afternoon.

Ivory Ned of Chesapeake arrived at 9 a.m. He wanted to be there on opening day because he’s a fan of casinos and said he’s glad he won’t have to drive to Maryland to play now.

The Portsmouth casino is the first permanent casino to open in Virginia, but a temporary casino opened in Bristol in July 2022. Two more casinos, one in Norfolk and one in Danville, are in the pipeline, while Richmond and Petersburg officials are sparring over the possibility of a fifth casino in the commonwealth.

Rivers Casino Portsmouth was built by Virginia Beach-based S.B. Ballard Construction Co. and Philadelphia-based Yates Construction. Raleigh, North Carolina-based Kimley-Horn served as engineering consultant; Las Vegas-based Klai Juba Wald Architecture + Interiors was the architect of record; New York-based Jeffrey Beers International was the primary interior designer and Illinois-based DMAC Architecture & Interiors designed interior venues. The casino’s construction supported 1,400 jobs.

Rivers Casino Portsmouth opening delayed

Rivers Casino Portsmouth‘s grand opening has been delayed until Jan. 23, eight days after its initially scheduled opening planned for Jan. 15, the casino announced Tuesday. The casino wanted to allow for additional time to test and verify new gaming equipment, a spokesperson for the casino said in an email. 

Providing a superior guest experience is a top priority for Rivers Casino Portsmouth. Our intention is to be the entertainment destination of choice for Hampton Roads, and we’ll settle for nothing less. We apologize for any inconvenience and look forward to welcoming our guests very soon,” casino officials said in a statement. 

The “charity days” previously scheduled for Jan. 10 and 12 have been rescheduled to Jan. 19 and 21. 

The grand opening is now scheduled for 10 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 23.

The $340 million 250,000-square-foot casino will be operated by Chicago-based Rush Street Gaming. Construction began in December 2021. The entertainment venue, located along Victory Drive in Portsmouth, will feature 1,448 slot machines, 57 table games and 24 poker tables. It’s expected to bring $16.3 million in annual tax revenues to the city. When it opens, it will be the commonwealth’s first permanent casino, though a temporary casino has been open in Bristol since July 2022. Two other proposed casinos are in the pipeline in Danville and Norfolk.

 

 

Rivers Casino Portsmouth plans Jan. 15 opening

Rivers Casino Portsmouth will open to the public Jan. 15 at 3 p.m., according to an announcement Monday.

The $340 million venue, part of a planned entertainment district along Victory Boulevard off Interstate 264, will feature 1,448 slot machines, 57 table games and 24 poker tables as well as 10 bars and restaurants and an event space. It also includes a Topgolf Swing Suites that will overlook a BetRivers Sportsbook.

News of the opening comes just days after the Virginia Lottery Board unanimously approved the casino’s operators license. It is the second license issued in the state; the first was awarded in April to Bristol’s Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, which opened its temporary casino in July. A permanent, 90,000-square-foot resort and casino is expected to open there in July 2024.

Rivers Casino, which is owned and will be operated by Rush Street Gaming, will become the first permanent casino facility to open in Virginia. Proposed casinos are in the pipeline in Danville and Norfolk. Construction of Portsmouth’s casino began in December 2021.

“We’re grateful to the Virginia Lottery Board, the city of Portsmouth and the Hampton Roads community for their continued support,” Rush Street Gaming CEO Tim Drehkoff said in a statement. “It’s been exciting to watch the building go up, and we’re eager for the public to see what’s inside.”

The casino on Monday also announced that registration for its players club loyalty program is now open at riverscasinoportsmouth.com.

Rivers Casino will employ as many 1,300 workers. More than 950 job offers have been made with others continuing to go out.

“In the coming weeks, we’ll remain laser-focused on continued hiring and training efforts — ensuring our team is ready to deliver a first-rate customer experience when our doors open in January,” General Manager Roy Corby said in a statement Monday.

Construction of the Portsmouth casino began in December 2021.

Petersburg approves Cordish Cos. for possible casino

Petersburg City Council is taking a gamble on Maryland-based The Cordish Cos. to develop a casino there — even though Petersburg doesn’t yet have permission to build a casino, according to state law.

Council members voted unanimously Tuesday in favor of Cordish,, a commercial real estate company that has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida. It also redeveloped Norfolk’s Waterside District and Richmond’s Riverside on the James, an $86 million mixed-use development that repurposed a century-old power plant.

State Sen. Joe Morrissey, a Democrat who represents parts of Richmond and all of Petersburg, has already filed legislation for next year’s General Assembly session to allow Petersburg to build a casino and block a competing casino project in Richmond. Unless that measure gains support of the Republican-controlled House of Delegates, the Virginia State Senate and Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the Petersburg Council’s vote will remain symbolic.

“An important part of our evaluation was to identify a development partner with a proven track record in developing and operating mixed-use and casino properties, a long history of revitalizing cities across the country, and strong community engagement practices,” Petersburg Mayor Sam Parham said in a statement. “The development of a casino in Petersburg is a once in a generation opportunity to set the course for economic growth for decades to come. We are confident that we have selected the ideal partner in The Cordish Cos. to bring to fruition our vision for Petersburg.”

Parham did not answer questions about details regarding the development, including a possible location or estimated price, in an email to Virginia Business Wednesday but said there would be a “complete presentation” delivered at the Petersburg Public Library on Oct. 25 at 4 p.m.

Richmonders may be familiar with Cordish as one of several development teams that pitched casino projects there in 2021, proposing a $600 million hotel and resort casino. One of two finalists vying to build a resort casino in Richmond, Cordish caught a great deal of flak for proposing a location near the city’s North Side and Fan districts, where many neighbors and one Richmond City Council member said they would oppose any casino project. Ultimately, Richmond City Council endorsed Urban One Inc.’s ONE proposed $565 million Casino + Resort but voters rejected the casino in a competitive referendum in November 2021.

Since then, Richmond officials, Petersburg officials and Morrissey have been at loggerheads as both cities want their chance (in Richmond’s case, a second chance) at a casino. Morrissey has pushed for Petersburg to host a casino since late 2021, although his legislation to that effect was killed in this spring’s General Assembly session.

Richmond and Urban One Inc. then tried to place the referendum on the 2022 ballot for a second try but were blocked by state budget language — promoted by Morrissey — that said the city of Richmond could not hold another voter referendum on a casino until November 2023. Although Urban One and city officials threatened to sue the state over the legislation, they later agreed to focus on promoting a referendum in 2023. In September, however, news reports said the city’s casino contract with Urban One was terminated.

The state’s Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission released a report Monday finding that Richmond and Petersburg could each support a casino, and that adding one in both cities could boost state casino gaming revenue by 36% if both were authorized and open by 2027 and had a full year of operations completed by 2028.

According to scenarios laid out in the report, if a casino were authorized only in Petersburg and opened in 2027, state gaming revenue would be boosted by 18% after a full year. If a Richmond casino were authorized and opened in 2027, state gaming revenue would rise by 28.8%.

Petersburg could add 1,283 full and part-time workers by 2028 and generate as much as $204 million in revenue with a casino operating only in that city, the report adds, while a casino operating in Richmond could generate up to $300 million by 2028. If casinos are operating in both cities, Petersburg could generate up to $140 million by 2028; Richmond could see $248 million. Under that scenario, Petersburg’s casino would generate about 300 fewer jobs.

As of 2022, voters have approved four casinos in Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth, after the General Assembly legalized commercial casinos in five economically disadvantaged cities whose voters approve projects via referendum. Bristol’s Hard Rock Hotel & Casino opened in a temporary location in July; its permanent casino is expected to open in 2024. Danville’s Caesars Virginia casino and resort is expected to open in 2024, as is Norfolk’s HeadWaters Resort & Casino. Rivers Casino Portsmouth expects to open its casino in January.

Virginia Lottery reports record $3.75B in revenue

The Virginia Lottery posted record sales of $3.75 billion and a record of almost $779.6 million in profits for fiscal year 2022, the lottery’s board announced Tuesday.

Sales increased roughly 15% from last year, and the lottery’s profits increased about 1.9% over the prior fiscal year’s record. The lottery’s fiscal year ends on June 30.

“Solid business practices supported by a broad offering of games to our players and the opportunity for our valuable retail partners to earn commissions and bonuses are what led to this record year,” Virginia Lottery Executive Director Kelly Gee said in a statement. “We had positive impacts in every corner of the state, from players winning record amounts of prizes to retailers benefitting from their ticket sales.”

Online sales steadily rose for the second full year since that revenue avenue was legalized in July 2020. More than 5,300 brick-and-mortar retailers earned a total $138.6 million in commissions and bonuses.

Virginia Lottery players won $2.67 billion, another record. The largest prize was $10 million, which a woman in Haymarket won on an Extreme Millions ticket.

The Virginia Lottery’s profits support Virginia’s K-12 public schools.

Newer to the Virginia Lottery’s responsibilities are the licensing and regulation of mobile sports betting and casino gaming. Virginia legalized sports betting in January 2021. Since then, the lottery has taken in $5.6 billion in gross sports gaming revenues. The state had 13 licensed active sports betting permit holders at the end of the fiscal year.

On July 8, the first Virginia casino, the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Bristol, opened in a temporary space. Three other casinos are preparing to open in Portsmouth, Norfolk and Danville.

Caesars Entertainment Inc. announced earlier this month it would up its investment in the Danville casino and resort to $650 million and announced that the Eastern band of Cherokee Indians is a joint venture partner.

In July, HeadWaters Resort & Casino, the Pamunkey Indian Tribe’s $500 million gaming project planned for Norfolk, announced it was abandoning its temporary casino plans at Harbor Park, instead locating the facility on the same property as the permanent casino.

The $300 million Rivers Casino Portsmouth is on track to become the first Virginia casino to open a permanent location in January 2023. Rush Street Gaming, the casino’s owner, plans to hire 1,300 permanent employees.

Caesars ups Danville casino investment to $650M

Caesars Entertainment Inc. has once again upped its investment in the forthcoming Caesars Virginia casino and resort  in Danville, this time from $500 million to $650 million, while announcing Wednesday that the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is now a joint venture partner in the casino project.

Plans for the casino include a 500-room hotel, 1,300 slots, 85 live game tables, 24 electronic table games, a World Series of Poker-branded live poker room and a Caesars sports book. It is also slated to have a full-service spa, pool, bars, an entertainment venue that can accommodate up to 2,500 people and 40,000 square feet of meeting and convention space.

“This venture is a vital opportunity for our nation and our people. We are excited to be expanding our longstanding and successful partnership with Caesars Entertainment to develop a first-class resort that will be defined by luxury and service that Caesars’ guests have known and come to expect,” Principal Chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Richard Sneed said in a statement.

Caesars, EBCI and a local minority investor will be partners in the joint venture, according to news release.

The casino will break ground this week and is expected to be completed in late 2024.

This is a breaking news story and will be updated.

Gambling on Hampton Roads

Roy Corby’s first job at a casino was as a dealer.

Now, Corby is general manager of the $300 million Rivers Casino Portsmouth, which is on track to become the first Virginia casino to open in a permanent location. It plans to open in January 2023 at the intersection of Victory and Cavalier boulevards, off Interstate 264.

But to Corby, the resort casino’s practically up and running already.

“It really starts to become real as you start to go through the dealer school, as you start to mass hire employees,” he says. The casino kicked off hiring in May with a job fair at Tidewater Community College, recruiting employees to train for dealing cards and running table games.

Rush Street Gaming, the casino’s owner, plans to hire 1,300 permanent employees. As of late June, the casino had hired 27 workers, including select leaders, Corby says, and had received 500 job applications.

Two more job fairs have been scheduled: one Aug. 20 at the Sportsplex in Portsmouth, and another Sept. 28 at the Holiday Inn Virginia Beach Norfolk Hotel and Conference Center. The casino has partnered with TCC to assist with workforce development and recruitment.

Rivers Casino Portsmouth started construction in December 2021, with Virginia Beach-based S.B. Ballard Construction Co. and Philadelphia-based Yates Construction as general contractors. Rivers Casino Portsmouth avoided supply chain issues and inflation-related cost increases by securing materials in advance, Corby says.

In July, the casino opened a 2,317-square-foot office in a coworking space on High Street in Olde Towne to house multiple administrative departments and assist with recruitment.

Interim Portsmouth Economic Development Director Brian Donahue says the casino will generate about $16 million in annual tax revenue, accounting for 7% of the city’s current gross domestic product.

Meanwhile, across the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, the Pamunkey Indian Tribe’s rival HeadWaters Resort & Casino is on schedule to open in 2024 next to Harbor Park, says casino spokesperson Jay Smith, adding he doesn’t have a timeline for its construction to start.

Norfolk’s city government is pondering allowing the HeadWaters casino to open a temporary facility, which Smith says could help develop customers and allow the city to draw tax revenue sooner. The temporary venue received an OK from city planners in May but still requires city council approval.

Virginia Business Associate Editors Courtney Mabeus and Robyn Sidersky contributed to this article.