Draftnik wrote:bill from turtle creek wrote:Folks:
Is it possible that Rendell and OConnor et al are now pressuring the Pens to talk because they WANT them to jettison the Isle of Capri, ruining that plan, and therefore clearing the way even more for the Forest City plan? This came to me as I was listening to O'Connor ramble on stupidly.
It makes sense, doesn't it? They exert pressure both politically and from a public relations point of view to get the Pens to talk to them. This makes the Capri deal no longer as attractive if the Pens are detached from it. They try to put the Pens into a position whereby they have no choice but to talk to them, and Lemieux and company feel like they are between a rock and a hard place.
In return, Harrahs/Forest City agree quietly to cover any legal issues that arise from the Pens actions; they'll certainly be able to afford it. Rendell gets political cover, Onorato and OConnor are happy, the city gets an arena. The only loser in this scenario in the minds of the polticos is Capri, who they desperately want to have go away anyhow.
Thoughts?
This is plausible. I'd assume IoC has an ironclad contract with the Pens, so who knows. I'm at home right now and don't have the Pgh Bus Times in front of me, but if I remember correctly IoC had a bond rating of BB- or something like that. It is a negative rating. Harrah's was BBB which is a solid or neutral rating at worst. The other guy was B+ or something like that which is the worst of the 3. The whole casino issue will boil down to these ratings because there is no way IoC can fund and arena and a new casino based on their current financial status. Unless they have some mystery white knight out there with deep pockets and/or borrowing capacity their bid is doomed.
I'm sorry, but at this point this means very little. IoC's funding for the arena is already underwritten by a large Canadian bank, (CSBC? Sorry, can't remember the name) so once they would be awarded the slots license the Pens get a check for $290 million. Also, IoC is large enough that they aren't going out of business anytime soon so once the casino would be built that is the last thing anyone should worry about with IoC. The casino actually being profitable in this region would be a more pressing concern, but there is NO indication that is even a worry.
All of this information is just a ploy and reasons Rendell and O'Connor will give for IoC to not get the slots license. I left Onorato out of this, because I think he is the one that may actually be able to get this done. I say this for two reasons:
1) He is not truly a member of this 'old guard' of democratics that has a strangle hold on Pittsburgh politics. He is younger and has more insight to the problems Pittsburgh faces.
2) He is up for re-election in 20? months. So if the Pens DO leave it will have happened about 4 - 6 months before the November election. Also the decision for them to leave would have even been made before that which could give him a potential challenge going into the primaries.
Obviously #2 is the biggest reason of the two and to be honest is great timing for the Pens because if the Pens leave it will have been on Onorato's watch and he will the first one up for re-election that someone can blame. I think Onorato realizes that at this point. Any thoughts?