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Long-awaited NYC casinos clear a giant hurdle and move one step closer to construction

2025-12-01 19:48
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Long-awaited NYC casinos clear a giant hurdle and move one step closer to construction

A board endorsed these projects, alongside a plan to upgrade Resorts World’s slots parlor in Queens

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Long-awaited NYC casinos clear a giant hurdle and move one step closer to construction

A board endorsed these projects, alongside a plan to upgrade Resorts World’s slots parlor in Queens

Philip MarceloMonday 01 December 2025 19:48 GMTVideo Player PlaceholderCloseCiti Field casino project controversyEvening Headlines

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New York City is poised for a significant expansion of its gambling landscape, as proposals for new casinos in the Bronx and adjacent to the New York Mets’ ballpark have been recommended for lucrative state licenses.

A key state gaming board endorsed these two projects on Monday, alongside a plan to upgrade Resorts World’s slots parlor in Queens, near John F. Kennedy Airport, into a full-scale casino offering table games and other amenities.

Notably, Bally's $4 billion casino proposal for the city-owned Ferry’s Point golf course means Donald Trump is poised for a significant financial windfall. The Rhode Island-based firm acquired the rights to operate the public green 18-hole course from the Trump organization in 2023, with an agreement to pay an additional $115 million should it secure a casino license.

The commission is authorized to license up to three casinos in the New York City area after voters approved a referendum back in 2013 opening the door to casino gambling across the state.The commission is authorized to license up to three casinos in the New York City area after voters approved a referendum back in 2013 opening the door to casino gambling across the state. (Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office via AP, File)

The recommendations now head to the state Gaming Commission, which is expected to formally issue the licenses before the end of the year, as the gambling revenues from the facilities are already factored into the state budget.

The commission is authorized to license up to three casinos in the New York City area after voters approved a referendum back in 2013 opening the door to casino gambling across the state.

Since then, four full casinos with table games have opened in New York, but all of them are located upstate, miles away from Manhattan. The state also has nine gambling halls offering slot machines and other electronic gambling machines, but no live table games.

The gaming board on Monday listed many community benefits promised by the proposals, from public safety investments to public transit and roadway improvements. They also noted the individual aspects of the plans that made them compelling, from the Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course included in Bally’s Bronx proposal to the Hard Rock casino’s potential to “unify an already vibrant” area of Queens anchored by Citifield.

A group of anti-casino protesters chanted “Shame on you! Shame on you!” as they were escorted out of the meeting at the CUNY Graduate Center in midtown.

The closely watched competition for a New York City license began with a crowded field, with some eight proposals in the running as recently as September.

But four of the high-profile plans failed to get the stamp of approval from local advisory boards, automatically knocking them out of contention.

Among the most notable was a Jay-Z-backed plan to build a Caesars Palace in Times Square, as well as two other resorts proposed in central Manhattan.

Then in October, MGM abruptly pulled out of the license sweepstakes, saying the “competitive and economic assumptions underpinning” their plans had changed. The Las Vegas casino giant had planned a major expansion of the Empire City Casino, a slots parlor located at the Yonkers Raceway north of Manhattan.

In the Bronx, Bally’s has proposed a $4 billion development on a parking lot and some practice greens at the city-owned Ferry’s Point golf course, which was previously run by Trump’s company.

In Queens, billionaire New York Mets owner Steve Cohen has proposed building a $8.1 billion Hard Rock casino on a parking lot of the professional baseball team’s CitiField. The complex would include a more than 5,000-seat performance venue, a 1,000-room hotel and retail and shopping space.

The Malaysia-based Resorts World, meanwhile, has proposed investing more than $5 billion into the slot parlor it operates at the Aqueduct Race Track near the John F. Kennedy International Airport, also in Queens.

The company wants to turn the so-called racino into a full-fledged casino, with traditional table games such as blackjack and poker, as well as hotel, dining and entertainment options.

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CasinosQueensNew YorkDonald TrumpNew York City

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