Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Race is on ... status of Detroit casino expansions

5.30.07

Casinos Race to Open New Digs

Joel J. Smith
The Detroit News

DETROIT -- In the race to open Detroit's first permanent casino, hotel and entertainment complex, the locally owned MotorCity Casino seems to have gained the edge over its closest competitor, MGM Grand Detroit.

MotorCity Casino, owned by Marian Ilitch, will swing the doors open on its enlarged gaming space June 7. MotorCity also has moved up the date on the ribbon-cutting for its 400-room deluxe hotel to September from late in the year.

Ilitch, vice chairwoman of Ilitch Holdings and wife of Little Caesars Pizza magnate Mike Ilitch, vowed at the casino's groundbreaking in 2005 that MotorCity would be the first of the city's three permanent casinos up and running. The entertainment, banquet and meeting rooms in the $275 million complex will open in the fourth quarter.

As the towering hotels of both MotorCity and MGM became part of Detroit's skyline, speculation has been rife about which of the multimillion-dollar permanent casino and entertainment complexes would open first. (Full Story)


MotorCity Casino
Opens:
New, expanded gaming area opens June 7; 17-story, 400-room hotel is slated to open in September.
Cost: $275 million
Project: Includes 100,000 square feet of gaming space, restaurants, convention/banquet space, 1,200-seat entertainment center and parking for 4,400 vehicles






Greektown Casino
Opens: September 2008
Cost: $200 million
Project: 30-story, 400-room hotel, an additional 30,000 square feet of gaming space, a ballroom, 1,200-seat entertainment center and a 3,200-car parking structure








MGM Grand Detroit
Opens:
Late 2007
Cost: $765 million
Project: MGM's art-deco-inspired complex will house a 17-story, 400-room hotel, 100,000 square feet of gaming space, meeting rooms, entertainment venue, restaurants and a 5,000-car garage.





Barstow casino deal has days to live

5.30.07

INDIAN GAMING: The governor's agreement must be OK'd by Thursday. The Big Lagoon tribe is hopeful.

By MICHELLE DeARMOND
The Press-Enterprise

A Northern California tribe's troubled bid to build a casino in Barstow will die this week unless Gov. Schwarzenegger and the tribe reach an agreement to extend the bid.

The Big Lagoon Rancheria, which sits in environmentally sensitive sequoia territory, agreed in August 2005 to abandon plans to build a casino on its reservation in Humboldt County. The tribe also agreed to drop a legal battle with the state over those plans.

In exchange, the governor signed a two-casino proposal for Big Lagoon and the impoverished Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla & Cupeno Indians of San Diego County to build in Barstow. Big Lagoon's agreement, however, expires Thursday if it doesn't have legislative and federal approval.

The Legislature has yet to approve the proposal in the face of strong opposition from powerful Southern California gaming tribes. Without a time extension, the deal is almost certainly dead.

Also, the U.S. Interior Department would have to approve turning a parcel of Barstow land into Big Lagoon reservation land by Thursday.

Members of the Big Lagoon tribe are weighing their options but might agree to extend their agreement with the state through mid-September if Schwarzenegger offers, said Jason Barnett, a spokesman for the tribe.

A spokeswoman for the governor said Tuesday she didn't have anything new to report about the Big Lagoon deal.

Barnett and the governor's spokeswoman, Sabrina Lockhart, said they expected to have some news later in the week.

"Obviously, things are taking longer than both sides anticipated it taking when they signed it," Barnett said, noting that the tribe still would like a casino in Barstow.

"I think we're optimistic that where there's a will there's a way."

Even if the Big Lagoon tribe and the governor's office agree to extend their accord, the casino proposal for San Bernardino County still faces difficulties in the Legislature. Lawmakers rejected the proposal last year, despite pleas by the tribes to let them pursue the opportunity for economic development.

Several Inland tribes testified against the proposal, saying it's wrong for tribes to travel hundreds of miles from their reservations to open casinos. Federal law prohibits so-called off-reservation gaming except in rare cases.

Big Lagoon and Los Coyotes representatives have argued that their opponents are actually contesting a pair of casinos along the route to Las Vegas because they might pose competition for Inland casinos.

They have accused those tribes of exerting excessive influence over lawmakers through campaign contributions.

Reach Michelle DeArmond at 951-368-9441 or mdearmond@PE.com.

http://www.pe.com/localnews/sbcounty/stories/PE_News_Local_D_barstow30.a31270.html


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Forbes profiled who's behind the Harsens Island Toll-Bridge proposal




The Ambassador Bridge is Detroit's lifeline to Canada. Sept. 11 turned it into a choke point and a security risk. The story of why it hasn't been fixed revolves around one man.

The Ambassador Bridge isn't owned by the U.S. or Canada--it is owned by one recalcitrant man: Manuel (Matty) Moroun. He controls the best monopoly you never heard of.

The Ambassador Bridge is a small but critical piece of Matty Moroun's transportation empire, which includes trucking concerns, logistics companies and customs brokerages, as well as real estate, banking and insurance interests. They're all under one umbrella, called CenTra. Here are the largest pieces. (Forbes Full Story)
  • Less-than-truckload shipping (Central Transport)
    Revenue: $400 million

  • Full-truckload shipping (Mason-Dixon, Universal Am-Can, others)*
    Revenue: $300 million

  • Freight coordination services (Logistics Insights)
    Revenue: $250 million

  • Ambassador Bridge
    Revenue: $60 million

  • Duty-free stores, gas station, other bridge-related income
    Revenue: $40 million

  • Insurance, banking, customs brokerage
    Revenue: unknown
*Doesn't include 40% stake in publicly traded PAM Transportation Services, with 2003 revenue of $294 million. Sources: CenTra; Forbes estimates.




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--The Verifiable Truth:

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Fox 2 News video clip previews MotorCity Casino expansion


The MotorCity Casino is putting the finishing touches on it's highly anticipated expansion. FOX 2 News has your sneak peak before the doors open to the public. Click the picture above and let Al Allen take you on a tour.


http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail?contentId=3341670&version=3&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1

MotorCity Casino unveils first part of $275 million expansion

5.30.07
MotorCity Casino shows off new flair

By HEATHER NEWMAN
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

High rollers, you’ve got a hot new place to hang out.

MotorCity Casino officially unveiled its new high rollers and Signature Club areas during a press tour, a high-tech and glitzy 60,000 square feet of gaming space that will go live June 7. The area is the first major opening in the casino’s $275- million permanent facility construction that is renovating its historic bread factory home and putting a skyscraper on the lot next door.

The opening next week is bad news for nonsmokers – the casino’s only nonsmoking floor will be closed June 6 as part of the ongoing renovations, and the new space allows smoking – but great news for everyone who wants to see just how over-the-top, Las Vegas-gorgeous a Detroit casino can be.

“It surpasses anything that I thought I would get excited about,” owner Marian Ilitch said. “We all had a vision and it became true and then some… I thought all casinos kind of look alike. But this casino doesn’t look alike. There are little pieces of Detroit all through the building.”

The high rollers area, which will be open to the public, features tables with $100-$5,000 limits and slots that allow players to bet hundreds of dollars a spin. The area has a "wow” feature everywhere you look. On the ceiling, thousands of individual LEDs swoop in curves designed by automotive guru Chip Foose, churning out computer-controlled geometric patterns.

That music is piped through a fully digital system so sensitive and intelligent that microphones hidden in the ceiling “listen” to the noise of patrons between songs and adjust the music volume accordingly – ramping up in the areas where sound is loudest to provide excitement and ambience during busy times, fading away during quiet times to avoid deafening patrons.

The music and the videos on screens – and there are dozens of screens ranging from individual panels on slots to flat screens on the wall to a giant curving flower of a floor-to-ceiling sculpture, made of curving metal screens also displaying videos – are controlled by a computer system and a VJ, broadcasting from the dual-booth setup in the casino’s Radio Bar.

The bar itself is worth a second look: two booths are tucked inside, one inhabited by guest DJs (the casino has made arrangements with a number of local stations to broadcast from there), the other by the casino’s own VJs. Many of the VJs will come from an arrangement with the Specs Howard School of Broadcast Arts.

In front of them is a curving wooden bar for patrons, and placed at the edges of the area are four giant columns lit from within by green bars designed to look like the digital volume display bars on a giant stereo equalizer – all of which respond, dynamically, to the music being played.

That music is piped through subwoofers tucked into the slot machine cabinets and tweeters hidden in their signs, and the overall result is surprisingly smooth and subtle. It’s definitely the best-sounding room in any of Detroit’s casinos to date.

The walls of the area are panels of bird's-eye maple and honed metal, and subtle little automotive touches abound. The wallpaper is an abstract take on a mural elsewhere in the casino that features a ’57 Cadillac grille, and a couple of royal-blue upholstered walls are covered with chrome discs reminiscent of baby-moon hubcaps. The lights in the new VIP valet parking area are taken directly from the taillight design of a 1950s Buick.

The carpeting is a mix of fire and water themes, with flames in red and gold competing in some areas with blue flames and blue bubbles. In the pit areas, thousands of two-to-four-foot acrylic tubes are suspended from the ceiling, tipped with frosted caps, and display automated patterns of colors – or even full videos. It’s a mesmerizing display that MotorCity Casino chief executive Gregg Solomon calls the casino’s take on a chandelier.

Real chandeliers made of globes of hundreds of pieces of twisted glass hang over the Signature Club area, which is reserved for those 1,500 or so gamers who spend the most time and money at the casino. Those patrons have their own restaurant – a small buffet that features diaphanous sheers, illuminated by more colored LEDs, lining the walls and contrasting heavy curtains of metal beads that divide up the dining floor.

In the Signature Club lounge area, twisting vortexes of air create intertwining lines of flame inside glass tubes lining the room, qualifying as possibly the most intricate fireplaces in the metro area.

On the outside, the casino’s expansion is the largest real-brick project in the country in the last two decades, Solomon said. Brick extends up almost half the building, topped with gorgeous swoops of stainless steel that part to show off the original peaks and brick detail of the 1916 Wagner Bakery building that most folks locally know as the Wonder Bread factory.

“We hope that we’ll continue to make bread,” he quipped.

The new heated VIP parking entrance for Signature Club members shows off especially intricate herringbone brickwork, combined with medallions based on the original building’s flourishes. (On a practical level, it also offers the casino’s best customers something the building has sorely lacked: a direct exit onto Grand River Avenue.)

A new nonsmoking poker room is dominated by the huge rust-colored smokestack that literally takes up a quarter of one wall, one of many original architectural elements the design team chose to keep. Other nonsmoking areas will return when the first floor of the original casino receives its renovation later this year.

That building is now connected seamlessly with the new skyscraper next door.
Most people won’t notice as they step into the new second-floor high rollers area that they’re actually leaving one building and entering the other.

The new design is based on automotive concept cars of the '40s and '50s, and the finished facility will include a display of those cars – along with five of Foose’s own customization projects, which are popularized on the TLC show “Overhaulin’.”

“We decided to do something completely new and completely Detroit,” Solomon said. “This casino has many, many firsts… We look at our gaming operation as a theater.”

Customers will notice practical updates as the casino completes its renovations. The restaurant spaces are being redone (including massive updates to the kitchens) throughout the casino, and a brand-new air-handling system will change out the air in the building every 10 minutes.

Contact HEATHER NEWMAN at 313-223-3336 or hnewman@freepress.com.


http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070529/BUSINESS06/70529039/1019

MotorCity's new gaming room set to open June 7

Todd McInturf / The Detroit News
A view of the main expansion area of the Motor City Casino with 500 slot machines; 45 gaming tables, and rows of lights in the ceiling. The new area will open to the public, June 7. An adjacent 400-room hotel is scheduled to open this fall.

MotorCity showcases new gaming facility expected to open June 7

Joel J. Smith / The Detroit News

DETROIT -- The Motor­City Casino showcased its new expanded gaming facil­ity today, becoming the first Detroit casino to complete at least a portion of its massive permanent ca­sino/hotel/ entertainment complex.


MotorCity has added an ad­ditional 25,000 square feet of gaming space, which it expects to open to the public June 7. The new space, which is one-third larger than the existing 75,000-square-foot facility, will al­low room for 600 additional slot machines. With the news space, the casino will boast about 3,100 machines

The new facility has an automotive theme with hub­caps, various car parts and other car photos and artwork spread throughout. Custom car designer Chip Foose was hired to help the design team.

A new state-of-the-art sound, light and video sys­tem will be installed throughout the casino.

Todd McInturf / The Detroit News

An artist's rendering of the new MotorCity Casino and Hotel.

Todd McInturf / The Detroit News

A view of the high-limit gaming area with slot machines and gaming tables. On the other side of the gold wall is The Signature Club Lounge.


Gregg Solomon, Motor­City's chief executive offi­cer, said plans call for the completion of the 400-room hotel, entertainment venue, new restaurants and meeting rooms later this year.


"I'm extremely excited over this," Marian Ilitch, owner of MotorCity, told reporters following a morning tour. "We all had a vision, and it came through and then some. We wanted a locally owned casino so we could give back to the community.


It's important to put our dollars back into the com­munity."

The casino is located on Grand River Avenue and the Lodge Freeway.


The MGM Grand Detroit Casino is expected to open its new ca­sino/hotel/entertainment complex by the end of the year.


Greektown Casino is expected to open in late 2008.


You can reach Joel J. Smith at (313) 222-2556 or jsmith@detnews.com.

http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070529/UPDATE/705290407

MotorCity Casino unveils new gaming room

5.29.07

A safe bet new MotorCity will impress
Its new look is looking good

BY JOHN GALLAGHER
FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

Among its stodgier critics, casino architecture is looked down upon as mere glitz and glitter.

But the new gaming room at Detroit's MotorCity Casino, which opens to the public next week as the first piece of a $275-million expansion, demonstrates casino architecture's two redeeming features.

First, with MotorCity's auto-themed swirls and lights and pizzazz, there's more architectural energy devoted to the smallest details than in almost any other field of design.

And second, MotorCity's lavish new facility shows that, unlike almost all other architectural endeavors, casinos have budgets expansive enough to indulge every whim.

True, all this creativity is aimed at separating players from their money. But as I saw last week during an exclusive Free Press tour of the new gaming room, MotorCity demonstrates that casino architecture can be remarkably creative -- as long as one doesn't mind being a bit overwhelmed.

Keying off Detroit's rich history of hod rods and muscle cars, the design of the new casino projects 1950s cruising iconography everywhere.

It's all part of what MotorCity Chief Executive Gregg Solomon calls the "future retro" look -- a deliberate attempt to echo Detroit's stylistic history while avoiding looking dated 10 years from now.

Wall displays mimic car upholstery. Ceiling fixtures look like chrome steering wheels or hubcaps. The flame motif -- omnipresent in carpeting and in the orange-tinted ceiling lights -- evokes the stylized flame decorations found on many hot rods.

Choosing an auto theme was just the beginning. Visitors will find an integration of audio, visual and lighting designs that probably has been done only in major theatrical venues.

Along the way, MotorCity tips its neon hat to its historic roots in a renovated 1916 bread factory. A lot of the exterior brick and terra cotta has been restored. And while much of the exterior will be covered in a metallic sheathing in months to come, enough of the original façade will remain to create a blend of old and new.

How MotorCity got its new look is instructive. There was, of course, a main interior designer, Genesis Associates of Santa Ana, Calif. Noted automotive designer Chip Foose contributed some of the wavy ceiling features. But everyone, from MotorCity's owner, Marian Ilitch, to the chief executive Solomon, got in on the day-to-day brainstorming.

What resulted was a multilayered, try-anything look. Decisions often had less to do with architectural theory than with gut judgments. Showing me around last week, Solomon explained numerous design decisions with a simple, "We thought it was a very cool look."

Any quibbles? Sure. Casinos tend to be isolated islands that contribute little to the pedestrian life of a city. After all, the whole point is to get people inside and keep them there.

But much the same could be said of the original Renaissance Center design (before General Motors corrected at least part of that problem). And it could be said of gated residential communities, or of the high-security government buildings in a post-9/11 world. Lack of pedestrian vitality is a broader problem created by many different types of buildings.

MotorCity's gaming room is just the first step toward what will become three permanent casinos in the city. The rest of MotorCity's campus, including a hotel, restaurants and meeting space, will open around November. MGM Grand's new Art Deco-styled casino will open about that same time. The expanded Greektown Casino opens about a year later.

That's a lot of casino architecture for one city to absorb. Many people no doubt will find it too much.

But in an age when architectural budgets are crimped, and design is often blandly conservative, and many architects count themselves lucky just to have a job, it's worth celebrating those rare architectural moments when anything goes.

Contact JOHN GALLAGHER at 313-222-5173 or jgallagher@freepress.com.

Tribe's casino pointman can't pinpoint location of proposed casino on map

Tribe’s casino development expert is unable to point out proposed casino site on large map after four years of negotiations with local, state and federal officials


Under sworn court testimony, the director of entitlement and development for a San Diego tribe (also a member of the tribe) is unable to point out the general location of his tribe’s proposed Barstow casino resort on a large land use map (4.5’ x 3’) of the City’s General Plan; this after four years of negotiations and site specific planning with local, state and federal officials.


Transcripts of sworn court deposition taken February 2, 2006, Kevin Siva represented that he was the person most knowledgeable about his tribe’s plans for a Barstow Casino.


Siva said,


I am a member of the Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla and Cupeno Indians. I am an elected representative on the committee that oversees the legislative decisions that the general council makes for the Los Coyotes Band of Indians. I am the project director for the proposed casino construction project in Barstow, California. And I'm the entitlements director for the government-to-government relationship between the Los Coyotes Band of Indians and the Bureau of Indian Affairs.


When asked if he was an officer of the Los Coyotes tribe, Siva responded,


“The tribal council for Los Coyotes consists of the general council. The general council is the legislative body that creates all the laws and policies of the reservation. The general council gives the authority to the spokesperson, who usually is the most knowledgeable in many of these areas to implement those decisions. And I am an elected official on a committee that represents what the general council has legislated.


However, throughout the two hour and forty minute deposition it became clear that Siva was unclear or unaware of significant facts surrounding the dual casino resort proposed by his tribe and partners Barwest LLC and the Big Lagoon Rancheria. This adds credibility to arguments that the Los Coyotes Tribe is merely fronting for a group of Detroit area casino syndicators and their Las Vegas business partners who are the real driving force behind a plan for two large Indian casino, side-by-side, anchoring a new mega resort in the Mojave Desert.


When Counsel asked,


“Do you recollect under the existing MSA with the City the size of the site that's designated as appropriate for casino development?


Siva replied,


“Yes. There is a footprint that is cited specifically in the MSA. And I believe -- I don't recall exactly what it is. It's either 20 or 25 acres.


The MSA approved by the City of Barstow specifically indicates the footprint is not to be more than 20 acres. The Compact negotiated with the state in Exhibit D specifically calls out three parcels totaling 23-acres – larger than what was approved by the City of Barstow at that point.


Then, most notably, when opposing Counsel pulled out a 4.5’ x 3’ copy of the Barstow General Plan Land Use Policy Map and asked Siva,


“Can you identify for me on this map, if you are able, where the land that the MSA [Municipal Services Agreement between the City of Barstow and Los Coyotes] describes and authorizes the casino to be built for Los Coyotes is located?


Siva replied,


“Quite frankly, not a clue.


Counsel then countered,


“Let's just do one more question on that then. If I were to ask you if you can tell me where this pink -- well, let's put it this way. The record will reflect that I am pointing to a pink area of the map that is about a 1 half inch wide and about an inch long that appears to be located between parcels -- or is in the upper left-hand corner of a parcel that is No. 22. And if I were to point -- as I am -- that to you, Mr. Siva, and ask you can you tell me where that parcel of land is located in any kind of common description, would you be able to do so?


Again Siva replied,


“Not even close. No, not a clue.


This deposition (February 2, 2006) followed more than two years of negotiations between the tribe and the City of Barstow to locate and acquire an appropriate site; and agree to the original Municipal Services Agreement (approved July 1, 2004) that specifies parcel numbers and restricts the tribe’s development to no more than a 20-acre parcel.


Those negotiations were followed by at least twelve months of negotiations with the Governor’s office for a tribal-state gaming compact (signed by Governor Schwarzenegger September 2005) that also specifies the size, description and mapped location of the parcels (Exhibit D) to be taken into trust on the tribe’s behalf for the purpose of establishing a gaming facility.


Moreover, documentation (the application) submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs requesting that land be taken into trust must include the description, location, chain of title, plat maps, various parcel specific studies and other clear details on the exact land to be considered or the application is deemed insufficient.


Complete Court Transcripts

NPR Reporter delivers half the story

as posted 5.29.07 by KQED's JohnMyers at Capitol Notes:

Two Casinos, One Problem

For almost two years, a pair of Indian tribes have watched their gaming agreements sit in limbo in the Legislature. And time may be running out.

On this morning's edition of The California Report, my story examines the status of the gaming agreement that would allow two tribes to open side-by-side casinos in the desert city of Barstow. Of course, neither of those tribes-- San Diego County's Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla and Cupeno Indians or Humboldt County's Big Lagoon Rancheria-- hails from Barstow.

And that's been the problem.

The gaming compact, signed by Governor Schwarzenegger in 2005, has been criticized as a precedent that would pave the way for additional off-reservation gaming in the state. And those same critics say it's simply not enough that the tribes, the governor, and Barstow city leaders all back the proposal.

Still, the two tribes have pushed on in their efforts to gain support for the deal in the Legislature... maintaining that their respective tribal lands aren't a good fit for casinos, and that a new site is crucial. In the case of Los Coyotes, the reservation is in a mountainous, remote region... away from almost any real roadway. And in Big Lagoon's case, the Barstow plan is the solution to a long running legal battle... with the state and environmental groups arguing that the coastal Humboldt reservation has too fragile of an ecosystem for a casino.

It's that legal battle that may threaten the deal in the short term.

Big Lagoon must decide in the next two days whether they want to extend the court settlement, and keep cajoling legislators for the Barstow deal. Chairman Virgil Moorehead said late last week he's not sure he wants to keep waiting.

Moorehead said he's particularly unhappy that while his agreement has sat in limbo for almost two years, gaming expansion deals for other tribes have been on a relatively fast track at the Capitol this spring. "We can't even get a hearing scheduled," he said.

The bill carrying the Barstow compacts is in the Senate, and Sen. Dean Florez (D-Shafter) says he remains concerned about the off-reservation gambling issue.If Big Lagoon walks away from the settlement of the environmental lawsuit, then it's likely his tribe's quest for a casino heads back to court.

Meantime, the people of Los Coyotes wonder whether this is what voters really intended when they approved Indian gaming. Francine Kupsch is a member of Los Coyotes whose economic struggles were the subject of one of those TV ads for Proposition 5 in 1998. Nine years after she appeared in that ad, she and her tribe are still waiting.

"We're still here, waiting to be heard," she said. "That's what we want. We want to be heard."

You can hear the story this morning on public radio stations statewide. Audio will be online later in the day.



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Swan song of summer (Metro Times Detroit)

Pulled from the August 2001 archives of the metrotimes

Swan song of summer :

RUMOR DEPT.
"Speaking of blights on the waterfront, a persistent rumor over the past five years has resurfaced once again: that the Ilitch folks are building a new ice arena to replace the aging, prematurely outdated blight on the water known as Joe Louis Arena, thereby allowing for the much-needed Cobo Hall expansion. Much of the speculation on where this new arena will be located has centered on the west of Woodward area behind the Fox et al, due in large part to the fact that Ilitch has amassed a considerable cache of property back there. But he also owns the old, decaying but once splendiferous United Artists theater, just off Grand Circus Park. The latest rumor has Ilitch tearing down the UA to build a new ersatz Olympia arena for the Red Wings, with possible involvement from GM (naming rights, anyone?). Well let me just put this rumor to bed ... for now at least ... as Al Sebastian of Ilitch Holdings has informed me, straight from Denise’s mouth, that there is “no truth at all” to the rumor, and they have no intention of building a new arena on the UA site “or anywhere else.” Forgive me if I’m a bit skeptical however ... it’s fairly common knowledge that the Red Wings are not staying put in JLA forever, so let’s just see how this all plays out."

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Grosse Pointe Neighbors have big plans for Harsens Island

click for larger view

Is it a coincidence that controversial figures Mike Malik and “Matty” Moroun own homes next door to one another in Grosse Pointe Shores (960 Lake Shore Road and 956 Lake Shore Road, respectively); and that both are actively pursuing significant complimentary development plans for Harsens Island at this particular time?


The Malik and Moroun properties sit across from Harsens Island on the shores of Lake St. Clair, 4-5 doors down from the home of William Clay Ford, Jr.

In April, the editor of the Harsens Island News learned that Grosse Pointe developer and casino syndicator Michael J. Malik, Sr. had plans to develop the 380-acres his Lucky 7 Development LLC (operating under the name Grande Pointe Development LLC) owns on Harsens Island. Malik proposes to build a residential community of 348 homes; focused around a man-made island and lagoon; with canal access to the North Channel of the St. Clair River. The canal feature would force a 1.5 mile reroute of North Channel Drive around and through the Lucky 7 Development project. Among other things, it is anticipated that Malik will need to drill and lay sewer lines across the floor of the St. Clair River’s North Channel for his new development. Malik had proposed a marina be built on the same site almost a decade ago.

Manuel J. “Matty” Moroun is a reclusive Grosse Pointe billionaire businessman whose empire extends to trucking companies (CenTra), duty-free shops, real estate firms and insurance suppliers. His holdings include the Detroit International Bridge Company and the Ambassador Bridge linking Detroit with Windsor, Ontario in Canada. In April, the editor of the Harsens Island News uncovered activity by Detroit International Bridge Company that is intended to win approvals to privately construct a toll-bridge spanning the North Channel of the St. Clair River and linking Harsens Island with Algonac near the existing ferry route.

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--The Verifiable Truth:

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Now Ilitches, Promoter refuse to talk to reporter they previously mislead

5.26.07


Ilitches buy Moose building
Downtown property is in area in which family is rumored to be considering building hockey arena.

Louis Aguilar / The Detroit News

The Ilitch family, owners of a downtown Detroit empire of professional sport teams and entertainment venues, have taken ownership of another empty building in an area of downtown being considered for a new home of the Ilitch-owned Detroit Red Wings.

In February, Atanas Ilitch, president of Ilitch Holding's Olympia Development LLC real estate arm, gained the deed for the empty Loyal Order of Moose building at Cass Avenue and Elizabeth Street along with John Kotlar, Ilitch Holdings vice-president, according to the Wayne County Register of Deeds.

Earlier this week, veteran music promoter Blair McGowan said he and fellow promoter Amir Daiza still owned the building and the Ilitches did not. Ilitch Holdings spokeswoman Karen Cullen said at the time she was unaware of the details of the building, a position she repeated Friday.

The warranty deed lists Moose Building LLC as the building owners. State records show the Atanas Ilitch and Kotlar are behind the Moose Building LLC, which the two formed in February.

McGowan did not return repeated phone calls Friday from The Detroit News. Daiza referred all questions back to McGowan.

The historic building is next to the former Chin Tiki, recently bought by Olympia for Ilitch Holdings, owners of the Little Caesars Pizza chain, the Red Wings, Detroit Tigers, Hockeytown Cafe and Fox Theatre.

The Moose lodge is three blocks west of the Fox Theatre headquarters of Ilitch Holdings in a blighted 15-block area the Ilitches view as a potential major hub of entertainment, sports and retail.

The Ilitches also recently won the right to renovate the city-owned Grand Army of Republic building, which is bounded by the three-way intersection of Cass, Grand River and West Adams. It's a block away from the Moose building.

The flurry of activity comes at a time when the Ilitch family is fast approaching a deadline on whether to build a hockey venue or renovate Joe Louis Arena.

The Ilitches' lease on the city-owned riverfront arena expires in 2009.

You can reach Louis Aguilar at (313) 222-2760 or laguilar@detnews.com.


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Posts at other webs & blogs ...

Friday, May 25, 2007

Ilitch agreement requires Moose building be preserved & renovated, doesn't allow relocation

A three page document entitled 'Restrictive Covenant and Development Memorandum' and attached to property at 2115 Cass Avenue, Detroit (historic Moose Lodge) was recorded by the the Wayne County Register of Deeds on February 12, 2007 (Instrument #207064258).

This agreement was signed by Blair McGowan for Anban, Inc. and Atanas Ilitch for Moose Building LLC.

The two paragraphs at the bottom of the first page read as follows:
"The date of execution of the Restrictive Covenant and Development Agreement was February 6, 2007 and its provisions run as a binding servitude with the Land for a period of at least five (5) years and possibly longer pursuant to the terms thereof."

"The Restrictive Covenant and Development Agreement, among other things, provides for the preservation and rehabilitation of the premises, without relocation, in a manner that preserves and recognizes certain historical, cultural and esthetic value and significance of the property and the building contained thereon."

It would appear that demolition or relocation of the building are not possibilities under these terms. However, the memorandum does not detail remedies applicable if the convenants are broken.


You may also want to review these posts:
--The Verifiable Truth:

Spin about Moose Lodge isn't truthful; reporter was mislead


NOTE: this story appeared in today's Detroit News but it appears representatives for the Ilitch Family (they formed Moose Building LLC on February 5, 2007) and the promoters who perviously owned Detroit's Moose Lodge Building weren't honest with reporter Louis Aguilar since documents filed February 12 and February 19 with the Wayne County Register of Deeds indicate the parties had entered into an agreement and then transferred title on the property to Moose Building LLC.


Ilitches may add to monopoly [have added]
Real estate arm eyes Moose Lodge, which may be another step toward new hockey arena.

Louis Aguilar / The Detroit News

The Ilitch family, owners of a downtown Detroit empire of professional sport teams and entertainment venues, continues to expand its control over a patch of land being considered for a new hockey arena.

The Ilitch's Olympia Development LLC real estate arm, which has already gained control of most of the land behind the Fox Theatre, is now turning its attention to the empty Loyal Order of Moose building at Cass Avenue and Elizabeth Street.

They haven't bought the building but appear poised to get a piece of the action if two veteran music promoters carry through on their promise of turning the building into a 1,500-capacity club and live music venue.

The historic building is next door to the former Chin Tiki, recently bought by Olympia for Ilitch Holdings, owners of the Little Caesars Pizza chain, the Red Wings, Detroit Tigers, Hockeytown Cafe and Fox Theatre. Now Olympia Development President Atanas Ilitch has formed Moose Building LLC with another Olympia executive.

Atanas Ilitch was unavailable for comment and a spokesman declined to say why Ilitch and John Kotlar, Ilitch Holdings' vice president of tax affairs, have formed a corporation named after a building they do not own. [Kotlar and Atanas Ilitch formed the company Feb 5, 2007]

The best explanation could be found in the first three rules of real estate: location, location, location.

The Moose lodge is three blocks west of the Fox Theatre headquarters of Ilitch Holdings, in a blighted 15-block area the Ilitches view as a potential major hub of entertainment, sports and retail.

Clubs like the Town Pump, Centaur and Park Bar are in the area, which spans the Fisher Freeway service drive to Grand Circus Park.

The Ilitches also recently won the right to renovate the city-owned Grand Army of Republic building, which is bounded by the three-way intersection of Cass, Grand River and West Adams. It's a block away from the Moose building.

All that activity has allowed the Ilitches to stitch together enough properties to create a nearly open four-block swath of land directly behind the Fox Theatre big enough to house a new hockey stadium.

The flurry of activity comes at a time when the Ilitch family is fast approaching a deadline on whether to build a hockey venue or renovate the Joe Louis Arena. The Ilitches' lease on the city-owned riverfront arena expires in 2009. Mike Ilitch, co-founder of the Little Caesars Pizza chain that started it all, has hinted he prefers building a new arena near the Fox Theatre.

One sports economist estimates a new facility would bring the Red Wings at least $10 million in additional revenue each year from naming rights and luxury box sales alone.

The Ilitches have not made a decision, said Ilitch Holdings spokeswoman Karen Cullen.

"I know what it looks like, but, believe me, stranger things have happened," Cullen said. "We're still exploring both a remodel of the Joe Louis Arena and a new site. We are looking at a variety of options."

The Loyal Order of Moose building is [was] owned by two prominent music promoters and club owners. Blair McGowan, one of the co-owners, said he was unaware Olympia Development had formed a corporation named after the building but seem unfazed by the most recent move by the Ilitches. [McGowan's company entered into an agreement with Moose Buliding LLC filed Feb. 2, 2007 witih Wayne County Register of Deeds]

"We've talked to them a lot about the building and our plans," said McGowan, whose family once owned and operated St. Andrew's Hall downtown. "We're independent operators. But they're the biggest players in the world of entertainment down here. So, well, there you have it. We work with many different people."

When asked if he and his partner, Amir Daiza, are considering selling the Moose to the Ilitches, McGowan replied:

"We will never put that building in jeopardy of being demolished. And we would not like to be in a position to stop them from putting up a new hockey arena. [an agreement the parties entered into is reportedly prohibits demolition of the Moose Lodge]

"What they are doing for Detroit is fabulous,"

Detroit News Staff Writer Robert Snell contributed to this story. You can reach Louis Aguilar at (313) 222-2760 or laguilar@detnews.com.
See a map of Downtown Detroit that plots more than 160 properties owned/controlled by the Ilitch Family and other key parcels centered in Foxtown and the area surrounding MotorCity Casino.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Labor's battle over casino agreements extends to Reservation hosting presidential debates

as posted 5.24.07 at The Roundup:




...Dan Morain writes that the fight over tribal compacts has entered the presidential race, as Democratic candidates are balking over a proposed debate at Morongo.

"Only two presidential candidates -- New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel -- have agreed to take part in the "Prez on the Rez" event planned for Aug. 23 at the Morongo casino-resort near Banning.

Tribal leaders suspect that labor unions are discouraging candidates from appearing until more worker concessions are incorporated into the compacts.

"Kalyn Free of the Indigenous Democratic Network, which is sponsoring the debate, said candidates' failure to attend could determine who Native Americans supported and how much the deep-pocket tribes spent in the campaign.

"'Tribal leaders are going to remember who came to 'Prez on the Rez' and, more importantly, who didn't,' Free said.

"In proposing a forum at Morongo, Free stepped into the middle of a years-long fight over efforts to organize casino workers. It comes as Morongo and four other Southern California tribes seek legislative approval to more than double the size of their casinos, an effort stalled in part because of labor opposition.

"Free said the top candidates had not responded because of pressure by a union, Unite Here, which is trying to organize casino workers at Morongo and elsewhere. The union denies seeking a boycott.

"'I'm aware,' said Jack Gribbon, the union's California political director, 'that there may be a Democratic presidential candidate or two who is concerned about the ongoing struggle in California over enforceable workers rights. However, to say that Unite Here has specifically asked that candidates not attend is not true.'"



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Ilitch has backed loosing sports teams and pizza, but casinos in Detroit? Forbes.com 10.09.06 ● Marian Ilitch #1 on "25 Most Powerful People" to Watch 2006” global gaming business o1.oo.o5 ● My Kingdom for a Casino Forbes 05.08.06 ● Big Lagoon’s casino dream awakens north coast journal 07.28.05 ● Shinnecocks launch legal claim to Hamptons land newsday.com 06.16.05 ● Ilitch Plans to Expand Casino Empire RGTonline.com 07.05.05 ● Ilitch outbids partners MichiganDaily.com 04.14.05 ● Ilitch enmeshed in NY casino dispute detnews.com 03.20.05 ● Marian Ilitch, high roller freep.com 03.20.05 ● MGM Mirage to Decide on Offer for Casino in Detroit rgtonline.com 04.16.05 ● Secret deal for MotorCity alleged freep.com 02.15.05 ● Los Coyotes get new developer desertdispatch.com 02.08.05 Detroit casino figure to finance Barstow project LasVegasSun.com 07.07.03 ● Indian Band trying to put casino in Barstow signonSanDiego.com 06.04.03 Pizza matriarch takes on casino roles detnews.com 10.23.02 ● Vanderbilt gets short straw in negotiations for a casino Lansing Journal 10.06.02 ● Indians aim to drive family from tribe in vicious dispute san diego union tribune 04.09.00 ●Malik owns 2000 Michigan Quarter Horse of the Year Michigan.gov 01.01.00 ● Detroit Team to run Michigan’s newest Indian casino detnews.com 05.23.99 Tiger ties tangle Marian Ilitch detnews.com 04.29.99 ● Three investors must sell their Detroit casino interests gamblingmagazine.com 04.25.99 ● Partners’ cash revived election; They say money was crucial to Prop-E detnews.com 04.25.99 Investors have troubled histories las vegas review journal 04.27.99 ● Investor served probation for domestic assault on 12 year old boy detnews.com 04.25.99 Can a pair win a jackpot?: local men hope to... crainsdetroit.com 03.17.97

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