A panel of state and city officials has voted down a proposal by rapper Jay-Z and other backers to open a casino in New York's Times Square District

A panel of state and city officials has voted down a proposal by rapper Jay-Z and other backers to open a casino in New York's Times Square District

A well-financed campaign to build a casino in the heart of New York's theater district collapsed Wednesday as a government-appointed panel voted down the proposal.

Opposition to the project was led by community groups who said a casino would lure unsavory people and theater interests who argued it would cut into Broadway's business.

The Caesars Palace Times Square project, a venture whose sponsors include rap musician and entrepreneur Jay-Z's company Roc Nation, failed to clear a key hurdle at the Community Advisory Committee. 

The CAC, which is composed of representatives of state and local officials, voted down the proposed $5.4 billion project by 4-2.  

City Council Member Erik Bottcher said he voted no after "countless" conversations with constituents.

"This is not a decision I took lightly," Bottcher, who had been considered a swing vote on the proposal, said in an Instagram post.

"All economic development opportunities deserve strong consideration. I believe casinos must clear a particularly high bar, requiring a uniquely strong degree of community buy-in before being sited in a neighborhood," he added.

"Despite extensive outreach by the applicants, that level of support has not materialized."

The vote follows two rowdy public meetings at which the CAC heard from dozens of backers and opponents of the casino. 

Supporters of the project included construction unions, neighboring restaurants and business groups that viewed the casino project as a source of additional customers.

Other Caesars supporters included the Reverend Al Sharpton, whose organization was poised to oversee a new $15 million civil rights museum financed by the casino coalition if the Times Square proposal had been built.

But Broadway League President Jason Laks, who led the opposition, praised CAC members "who looked at the facts, listened to the residents, and stood up for this neighborhood and the theater community." 

"This was a vote to protect the magic of Broadway for the one hundred thousand New Yorkers who depend on it for their livelihoods, and for the tens of millions who come from around the world to experience it," Laks said in a statement. "A casino can go anywhere, but Broadway only lives here."

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Originally published on doc.afp.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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