Sullivan County is telling investors there will be massive growth at a Catskills casino resort, but two consulting firms predict decline.
Sullivan County is telling investors there will be massive growth at a Catskills casino resort, but two consulting firms predict decline. ·  View in browser
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Local and county officials have predicted that newer downstate casinos will draw customers away from the Resorts World Catskill casino resort. Photo: Daniel Case/Wikimedia Commons | Illustration: New York Focus
Sullivan County is telling investors there will be massive growth at a Catskills casino resort, but its own consultants predict decline.
By Chris Bragg

Sullivan County is asking investors to ​lend ​more than half a billion dollars​ to rescue the struggling Resorts World Catskills​, touting rosy predictions that the casino resort will soon be flooded with visitors and make dramatically more money — even though formal studies, including one prepared for the county itself, predict the opposite.

Here’s the county’s pitch. Investors would buy up to $585 million in bonds from the county’s newly-formed local development corporation, spun out of its Industrial Development Agency, or IDA. The corporation would buy two hotels, a golf course, and an event venue — almost everything except the casino itself — from the current owner, Empire Resorts, Inc. The cash infusion could enable Empire Resorts to invest in the property and to pay off $300 million in debt due next year, helping it stave off possible bankruptcy.

Funding local news is more important than ever, and it will take a village to succeed. Join us in our work to rebuild local journalism as a pillar of democracy in New York.

A round of raises, following New York Focus reporting, could help change high turnover rates in the New York state Assembly. Photo: Matt Wade/flickr | Illustration: New York Focus
The first significant pay increase in years could strengthen the office responsible for reviewing major legislation.
By Sam Mellins

Albany sometimes has problems writing laws that actually work. Omissions and errors can render bills ineffective, leading to serious consequences like people staying in jail past their release dates or parents not being able to use child care vouchers.

One reason for these failures is that the staffers responsible for reviewing and finessing bills are underpaid, overworked, and frequently leave their jobs, starving the development of expertise and institutional memory.

A recent round of raises could help change that.

“Where is our governor?” state Assemblymember Marcela Mitaynes said at a protest against ICE Thursday. Isabelle Taft / New York Focus
Three months after the state legislature ended session without passing immigration protections, 15 elected officials faced down arrest to protest ICE and state inaction.
By Isabelle Taft

Fifteen elected officials, including 11 state legislators, were arrested Thursday at a Manhattan federal building where immigrants have been detained as they protested President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and called on the state and city to mount a stronger opposition to it.

The protest took place as federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement continues to ramp up arrests and detain record numbers of immigrants, including across New York state.

It also marked three months since the state legislature ended its annual session without passing immigration protection bills that advocates have framed as key to countering Trump’s agenda. Legislative leadership failed to bring the New York for All Act, which would prohibit state and local authorities from collaborating with ICE, up for a floor vote, despite strong support for the bill from immigrant rights groups and members of the state’s congressional delegation.

Grid upgrades, gas exports, and the war over renewable energy are all sending bills in one direction: up. Photos: Wmeinhart/Wikimedia Commons; ruivalesousa; Jupiterimages/Canva | Illustration: Leor Stylar
Electric bills in New York haven’t been this high for a decade, and they’re about to rise even more. Here’s why.
By Colin Kinniburgh

You may have noticed your energy bills going up recently. It’s not just you, and it’s about to get worse.

Electric bills in New York are the highest they’ve been in over a decade, even when taking inflation into account. More than a million households are at least two months behind on payments, owing utilities close to $2 billion. And record numbers of households had their electricity or gas shut off this spring, including more than 61,000 in May — the highest number the Public Utility Law Project (PULP), a decades-old consumer advocacy group, has ever seen.

Anxiety about unaffordable bills only mounted over the summer. Laurie Wheelock, PULP’s executive director, said this August was the group’s busiest month ever, with a surge in calls to its hotline. The top concern on people’s minds: rate hikes.

Utilities are successfully jacking up prices. At the same time, electricity demand is surging: New York, like many other states, is bringing new data centers, high-tech manufacturing, and other energy-hungry industries onto the grid, while also electrifying more home heating and transportation. And President Donald Trump’s onslaught of policies aimed at hindering renewables is only adding fuel to the fire.

Meanwhile, both the federal and state governments are eyeing deep cuts to assistance programs meant to help keep energy bills under control.

What’s behind the surging costs? Here’s what you need to know.

Copyright © New York Focus 2024, All rights reserved.
Staying Focused is compiled and written by Alex Arriaga
Contact Alex at alex@nysfocus.com

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