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Issue 3 Proposed Constitutional Amendment to Amend the Constitution to Allow for One Casino Each In Cincinnati, Cleveland,Columbus, and Toledo and Distribute to All Ohio Counties A Tax on the Casinos State of Ohio Consitutional Amendment - Majority Approval Required
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Information shown below: Summary | Arguments | | ||||
Proposed by Initiative Petition To adopt Section 6 to Article XV of the Constitution of the State of Ohio This proposed amendment would: 1. Authorize only one casino facility at a specifically designated location within each of the cities of Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo. 2. Levy a fixed tax of 33% of gross casino revenue received by each casino operator of the four casino facilities. 3. Distribute the casino tax as follows:
5. Permit approved types of casino gaming authorized by Michigan, West Virginia, Indiana, and Pennsylvania as of January 1, 2009 or games subsequently authorized by those states. 6. Authorize the casinos to operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, at the discretion of the casino operator and require that the casino facilities shall be subject to all state and local laws and provisions related to health and building codes, but that no local zoning, land use laws, subdivision regulations or similar provisions shall prohibit the development or operation of the casinos at the designated sites. 7. Create the Ohio casino control commission which will license and regulate casino operators, management companies retained by such casino operators, key employees, gaming-related vendors, and all gaming authorized by this constitutional provision. A "YES" vote means you approve of amending the Ohio Constitution to permit one casino each in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo. A "NO" vote means you disapprove of amending the Ohio Constitution to permit one casino each in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo. A majority YES vote is required for the amendment to be adopted. SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE APPROVED? YES NO
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Official Information Secretary of State
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Arguments For Issue 3 | Arguments Against Issue 3 |
Proponents of the proposed amendment argue: 1. Thirty-eight states -- including Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, and Pennsylvania -- have casino gambling. 2. By authorizing casinos in Ohio, the profits could benefit our state rather than other states. 3. Counties, public school districts, and many cities will receive tax revenue generated by the casinos, and each can decide how to best spend its money. 4. The casinos will create 34,000 new jobs in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, and Toledo. 5. The casinos will stimulate the economy by adding restaurants, hotels and ancillary businesses.
| Opponents of the proposed amendment argue: 1. The Ohio general revenue fund, which supports basic services for Ohioans, will get $0 from the gross casino receipts tax. 2. Ohio lottery profits, currently dedicated to education, may decrease because people will gamble at the casinos instead of playing the lottery. 3. Ohioans may spend money at the casinos they would have spent at other existing Ohio businesses such as restaurants, movies, or sports events, adversely impacting those businesses. 4. The number of gambling addicts in Ohio would increase, and the tax receipts dedicated to providing treatment for addicts could be insufficient. 5. The proposed amendment could be construed to mean that all games allowed at the casinos can be played only at the casinos, eliminating church-festival poker games and casino nights sponsored by charitable groups.
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