Campaign for casino in Norfolk, Virginia is heating up

Virginia opened its doors to casinos and sports gambling earlier this year and set forth establishing how the local markets could possibly work. The idea has been to allow five casinos – in Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond, all areas that are considered in need of economic stimulus – as long as the local communities approved. With the Pamunkey Indian Tribe clearly hopeful to be able to build a casino in Norfolk, and with elections only two months away, it’s digging in and increasing its public campaigns in order to drum up support from area residents. The tribe is getting some additional help, as Norfolk’s mayor, Kenneth Alexander, is lending his name to the campaign, as well.

The “All In Norfolk” campaign is now in full swing, hoping to gather enough votes when the measure appears on this November’s ballot. Only a simply majority vote is needed for approval, and getting assistance from the mayor, as well as Virginia Delegate Jay Jones, should prove beneficial for the cause. The campaign officially got underway this past Monday and both Alexander and Jones were on hand in support. Jones asserted during the launch, “I’ve been a supporter of this project since it was first presented to me two years ago. I’m proud to be ‘All-In’ on a project that will bring not just jobs — but career opportunities — to this community. But we can’t take all of this for granted. We need to get out and vote ‘Yes’ on November 3rd.”

Should the project be approved following November 3, the Pamunkey want to take 13.4 acres of land east of the Harbor Park baseball stadium and turn it into a complex that would include a casino, a 300-key hotel, a spa, entertainment areas, a sportsbook and more. The tribe is ready to invest as much as $500 million to make the dream a reality, but it’s up to the local residents to make the final decision when they take the polls on or before November 3.

It’s expected that the casino would help the area pick up as much as $51 million each year that can be sued for public schools, as well as another $25 million for Norfolk to add to its city budget. The tribe will pay $10 million for the property, and the money will be used specifically to renovate two high schools in the area, Maury and Booker T. Washington.