News
November 6, 2008
Greenbrier voters approve gambling at resort
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A small majority of Greenbrier County voters approved a referendum to allow guests at The Greenbrier resort to play video lottery and table games.

With all 30 precincts reporting, voters favored the referendum by a count of 6,683 votes for and 6,317 against.

"It is an economic development issue," County Commissioner Brad Tuckwiller said before all the votes were counted. He favors the referendum.

He's talked to county commissioners in Kanawha and Ohio counties, "and they're hiring people" with table games, he said.

"I sure would like to be in that position," he said.

Unions favor the referendum, and fear the economic anxiety brought by a struggling economy. They hope to spur more revenue at The Greenbrier amid a long-running labor dispute with management.

The Greenbrier management has remained quiet on the issue, and no one even knows if they would create a casino. 

Some area ministers, such as the Rev. Mark Flynn of Lewisburg, oppose gambling and say it leads to crime, bankruptcy and divorce.

"It looks as if it's going to pass, which I think is a sad thing," Flynn said before the final results. "Since the 1980s I've fought every effort to expand gambling. We've won some and we've lost some. <t40>...<t$> I'm afraid there are other people who have lost who just don't know they have lost.

"I do think the neighborhood video slot parlors are worse than casinos," he said. Flynn said he's told some local and state politicians that neighborhood parlors need to go. The politicians tell Flynn that if casinos open, they'd close the neighborhood parlors.

"I plan to remind them what they said," Flynn said.

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