PA Gambling Guide: Harrisburg-Hershey Area Is A Sweet Spot

For a little taste of everything, check out Central Pennsylvania. You’ll find:

  • City living, with a small-town feel, in the state’s capital city.
  • Acres of farmland nearby.
  • A craft brew scene so intense that a community college offers a nine-month course leading to an internship with a local brewer and a certificate in brewing science.
  • A sense of history, from colonial style architecture to the site of Lincoln’s Gettysburg address.

“It’s a great place to live,” says Lawrance Binda, editor-in-chief and co-founder of The Burg, a community magazine available in print and online.

“There’s a lot of variety of types of living you can have, from city to small town to country,” adds Binda, who lived in New York City and Washington, D.C. before moving to Harrisburg about 10 years ago. “And (it’s) not expensive. Sometimes, I’m surprised that more people don’t live here.”

Get to know Harrisburg

Harrisburg lies between Pennsylvania’s two major cities – 110 miles west of Philadelphia and 205 miles east of Pittsburgh. Baltimore is 80 miles south, and New York City is 170 miles northeast.

The region includes Hershey, hometown of the chocolate magnate who developed a worldwide snack company; Gettysburg, site of the Civil War’s bloodiest battle; Carlisle, home to the U.S. Army War College; and a slice of Amish country, where many farm families still adhere to an 1800s lifestyle.

Central Pennsylvania offers a unique appeal to anyone looking to move to the state to take advantage of the impending launch of a legal online poker and other casino games.

The state approved full-fledged Internet gaming late last year, and most of the 12-land based casinos are expected to launch online operations this year. Pennsylvania joins New Jersey, Delaware and Nevada as the only states with legal online casino gaming. It is by far the most populous of the four, which should lead to a good variety of poker offerings. Online gamblers must be in the state to play. You don’t have to be a resident, but for players thinking about moving, this is a quick guide to what you’ll find in and around Harrisburg.

The casino scene

Reflecting the lack of urban centers between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, Central Pennsylvania has only one land-based casino: Hollywood at Penn National, which is just outside Harrisburg: 777 Hollywood Blvd., Grantville, PA 17028.

Hollywood has a 17-table poker room, 58 other table games, and 2,317 slot machines, according to the Gaming Control Board’s January report. Hollywood also has a thoroughbred race track.

Maryland Live! Casino in Baltimore is about two hours from Harrisburg. In January, Hollywood’s operator, Mountainview Thoroughbred Racing Association, paid $50.1 million for a license to build a satellite casino about 50 miles south of Harrisburg and about 20 miles from the Maryland border. Hollywood outbid other casinos for the first satellite license even though it had sued the state over the law allowing the smaller casinos. The suit, which is pending in federal court, says that because Hollywood is the only casino in its section of the state, it is less protected from competition than other casinos are.

Living in Central Pennsylvania

Harrisburg has 49,160 residents, according to 2016 Census estimates; about 550,00 people live in the three-county metro area. Sperling’s Best Places says Harrisburg’s cost of living is about 15 percent below the national average; the Tax Foundation says $100 spent in Harrisburg has the purchasing power of $103 spent elsewhere.

  • Housing costs: Zillow.com says the median home value in Harrisburg is $71,600. The median rent is $872 in the city is $872 per month, compared with a median of $1,150 throughout the metro area. For a neighborhood guide, check out this, compiled by WebPageFX, an Internet marketing agency based in Harrisburg.
  • Food: A slice of shoofly pie is practically mandatory on a trip to Amish Country. Made with molasses and brown sugar and frequently topped with whipped cream, it’s sure to satisfy any sweet tooth. It supposedly got its name because the molasses and brown sugar attracted flies as the pie cooled, forcing cooks to have to shoo them away. Another treat is the Stroopie, short for the Dutch “stroopwafel:” a cinnamon cookie made on a waffle iron and containing a layer of homemade caramel inside.
  • Schools: Penn State has its Milton S. Hershey Medical Center College of Medicine in Hershey, its Dickinson Law School in Carlisle and a branch campus in Harrisburg. The main Penn State campus is in State College, about 90 miles from Harrisburg. Dickinson College in Carlisle, chartered in 1793 as the first college in the newly recognized United States, has about 2,300 students and is one of the top producers of Fulbright scholars.
  • Weather: Summers can be hot and muggy, while winters can be cold and snowy. Binda says Harrisburg area winters tend to be milder than those in Pittsburgh.
  • Getting around: More than 90 percent of Harrisburg workers drive, although Capital Area Transport runs bus service in the city and to outlying areas. Walkscore.com gives Harrisburg a “very walkable” score of 73 out of 100.
  • Major employers: Not surprisingly, the government – both state and federal – is the largest employer in Pennsylvania’s capital city. Penn State’s Hershey Medical Center, with 11,145 employees, is next on the list, according to the Capital Region Economic Development Corp. Hershey Co. is another major employer, and Amazon has several fulfillment centers in Carlisle.

Things to do in Central Pennsylvania besides gambling

  • Sports: The Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League are the Washington Capitals’ top farm team, and the Harrisburg Senators are a Double-A affiliate of MLB’s Washington Nationals. Binda says residents’ allegiances to nationally known teams are about evenly split between those in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
  • History: The Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center, on the grounds of the battle that changed the course of the Civil War, includes a mammoth circular “Cyclorama” of scenes from the fight. The capitol in Harrisburg, built in 1906 to replace one destroyed by fire, is filled with hand-painted murals and other artwork, including stained glass, statuary and mosaic tiles. It’s topped by a 272-foot dome.
  • Culture: The Harrisburg Symphony, formed with the help of the Julliard Foundation of New York City in 1930, performs seven “masterworks” concerts of classical music and four pop concerts each year. The Antique Automobile Club of America (AACA) museum in Hershey has more than 150 vehicles, including an 1895 Chicago Motor Benton Harbor, a 1935 Autocar Atlantic Tank Truck, and a pair of rare 1917 Pierce Arrows.

Miscellaneous

  • Taxes: The city wage tax is 2 percent for residents – a 1.5 percent city tax and 0.5 percent school tax; non-residents who work in the city pay a local income tax set by their municipality, typically 1 percent. The local wage is in addition to the state’s 3.07 percent income tax. The sales tax is the state-set 6 percent, a point less than in Pittsburgh’s Allegheny County and two points less than in Philadelphia; food and clothing are exempt from sales tax.
  • 3rd in the Burg: A variety of Harrisburg galleries, restaurants, bars and other venues celebrate the arts in on the third Friday of each month. The “3rd in the Burg” series, sponsored by The Burg magazine, features exhibits, musical and theatrical performances, comedy and lectures, plus restaurant and bar specials. A free shuttle van takes festival-goers to sites throughout Downtown and Midtown.
  • Eating fresh: Harrisburg’s Broad Street Market, founded in 1860, is the country’s oldest continuously operated farmers market. It is open Thursday through Saturday, featuring almost 40 vendors of local-origin produce, meats, baked goods and fresh meals.
  • Where there’s a will: Harrisburg became Pennsylvania’s third capital city in 1812, following the original choice of Philadelphia and then Lancaster in 1799. Binda says the will of John Harris Jr., the son of the city’s founder, set aside four acres for the commonwealth if Harrisburg was named the capital. Harris Jr. died in 1791.

For more on the PA gambling scene, be sure to read our other guides:

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Poker Industry PRO: iPoker Positioned for European Shared Liquidity as Unibet and Betclic Receive French Authorization

While neither operator is in Spain, iPoker may move ahead with a Spanish-French shared liquidity network following skins’ approvals.

Betclic Everest and Unibet (under its subsidiary SPS Betting France) have been approved by the French regulator to offer cross-border shared liquidity. This could pave the way for iPoker to share liquidity between its French and Spanish networks, and move towards a launch in Portugal.

The missives, published late last week by ARJEL, authorize both sites to share their online poker liquidity with operators licensed in jurisdictions that signed the July accord, namely Italy, Spain and Portugal.

Read the full article on pokerfuse →

Poker Industry PRO: UKGC Recommends Default Deposit Limits in Online Gaming

Social gaming, player fund protection, dormant account fees, and withdrawal restrictions all under scrutiny.

The UK gambling regulator has recommended significant new consumer protection mechanisms over the regulated online gambling industry in a wide-ranging review of the gambling market in the UK.

The focus of the report is on its recommendations over the controversial fixed-odds betting terminals. However, the review explores many other parts of the regulated market, and online gaming comes under particular scrutiny.

Read the full article on pokerfuse →

Poker Industry PRO: PokerStars and Unibet Tout Online Series Success

The newly rebranded Turbo Series and the debut Unibet Online Series both exceed expectation.

Both online series from operators PokerStars and Unibet—The Turbo Series and Unibet Online Series (UOS) respectively—are being heralded as successes with both comfortably exceeding their prize pools.

Running over a two-week period, UOS First Edition guaranteed €300,000 over a total of 84 tournaments, split over 28 events, each with three separate buy-in tiers: Nano, low and high stakes. Unibet paid out €384,971 in total prize pool money and only had €9,217 in overlays. However, the €100,000 main event narrowly missed out on its guarantee.

Read the full article on pokerfuse →

Adam Laxalt Is Running For NV Governor And Hates Online Gambling

In September of last year, 20 different Attorneys General from states across the union filed briefs in favor of New Jersey in the state’s Supreme Court sports betting case. Despite being the only state with fully regulated sports betting, Nevada was not one of them.

That is fine, maybe the state wanted to preserve its status as the only place where casino sports wagering takes place. It has other gambling-related advantages over other states too. For example, Nevada is one of three states with regulated online gambling.

But when it came to protecting that industry, the very same AG opted not to do so. Instead, in 2016, he was one of 10 state AGs who sent a letter to President Donald Trump’s transition team urging the new administration to revisit the Department of Justice’s opinion on the Federal Wire Act.

That Attorney General is Nevada’s Adam Laxalt. And now he is the frontrunner to be the Republican candidate for Nevada Governor.

Laxalt a rare anti-gambling Nevada lawmaker

The state’s current leader, Gov. Brian Sandoval, is term-limited and cannot run for re-election. Like Laxalt, Sandoval is a member of the Republican party. Unlike Laxalt, expanding online gambling was one of Sandoval’s top priorities during his time in office.

When Laxalt signed that 2016 letter encouraging the DOJ to reconsider its narrow opinion of the Wire Act, he allegedly drew Sandoval’s ire. By encouraging a wider interpretation of the Wire Act, Laxalt is effectively urging the federal government to deem the online poker and sports betting happening in Nevada illegal.

Such an interpretation would shut down the existing online gambling industries in Delaware and New Jersey. It would affect the forthcoming Pennsylvania iGaming industry as well.

Look no further than Adelson to explain Laxalt’s stance

Laxalt is not the only leader in Nevada who stands in stark contrast to most others in the gaming industry. Sands Corp CEO Sheldon Adelson is also ardently against online gambling. He is also one of the top political donors to both Trump and Laxalt.

Dan Schwartz, another GOP contender for Governor, frequently points to Laxalt’s position in Adelson’s pocket when campaigning. Schwartz is currently the State Treasurer. He is considered a bit of a maverick compared to other GOP lawmakers, with views on both sides of the political spectrum.

While it is clear where Laxalt stands on the subject of online casinos, it is not clear where the rest of the field stands. Given that neither Schwartz nor Democratic frontrunner Steve Sisolak ever mention the subject, it seems they are okay with the online poker status quo.

The deadline to file as a candidate was Friday. Now the race is about to get serious. There are numerous contenders in both primaries, but with the heft of Adelson behind him, online players in Nevada should probably start worrying about Laxalt.

Photo by David Calvert / Stringer

 

 

 

 

 

 

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When Is a Poker Tournament Structure Too Good?

Poker tournament structures have advanced to the stage where aside from a select few players, minimal complaints are heard. The tournament has to end at some point, and last weekend at Parx Casino in Bensalem, PA, the structure of the Big Stax 500 event was too good to allow for that to happen. Dan DaConti and Ryan Eriquizzo battled until close to 10 a.m. for a first-place prize totaling less than $100,000.

Where does the balance end between offering late-stage play and keeping players for an ungodly hour to finish out a tournament? The answer lies in the middle.

Bang for the buck

The nature of poker is for players to never be in full agreement over what makes for a quality poker tournament structure. Longer levels? More starting chips? The distance between the two points is bridged by an agreement over shorter days and a better hourly rate.

The majority of “main events” are three days, with Day 3 wrapping up sometime before midnight. World Poker Tour tournaments last up to six days but with prizes of over $1 million up for grabs at times, the added days make sense.

The Big Stax 500 has no reason to include 90-minute levels other than for vanity. Most WPT events have 90-minute levels in the late stages of the tournament, a time that befits a $3,500 buy-in.

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No Need to Give the Pros an Edge

The Parx Big Stax structure is famous for 90-minute levels on Day 3 which sound great in theory but carry a severe downside. Recreational players think they have a chance in a “better structure” but are at a severe downside against the pros who benefit from more hands in a longer sample.

Take the Parx 300, for example. Justin Liberto, Kevin Grabel, and Vinny Pahuja played three-handed for over eight hours until they decided to chop past 8:00 am. All three of those players owned at least one Parx Big Stax chop participation or outright win to their name prior to the event and managed to outlast a field of 2,267 entrants.

DaConti is a more accomplished non-professional than most with multiple final tables to his name.

The average recreational player doesn’t have a prayer of outplaying any of those three for that extended period of time. Shorten the levels, increase the variance, and watch more recs win moving forward.

Chris Moneymaker convinced an entire nation they too could win at poker. A small buy-in doesn’t always equal parity and Parx has proven that. Joe Palma won back-to-back Parx 300s in 2017. Grabel won the 300 and 500 in the same series in 2016.

The World Poker Tour is famous for 60-minute levels at their final tables, a cutback from the 75 or 90 that are in play leading up to six-handed play. Season XVI is an empirical testament to shorter levels benefitting the recreationals and less experienced as time after time, a final table full of pros have been brought down. Look no further than Paul Petraglia winning in Jacksonville. The more money that is in circulation among recs, the better off the long-term future of poker is.

What is the right answer?

Parx has the right to run their tournaments however they would like and it is clear that the market isn’t ready to give up the 21-hour Day 3s just yet. The question for Parx becomes: do they protect the recs from themselves and shorten Day 3 or do they predict that they will have thousands upon thousands turn out for years come?

It’s not an easy answer from a business perspective. Turnouts out in Parx events don’t appear to be in danger but this is new ground. Marathons are part of poker tournaments but playing until 10 am should not be.

The quickest way to keep money moving is to get players in and out the door at a reasonable hour. That’s the logical first step.

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After Labeling Company A “Criminal Element”, AGA Adds PokerStars To Board

The US casino industry’s premier national trade group has added six new companies as Board-level members. Including an online gaming giant that was once a bitter rival.

The American Gaming Association (AGA) announced this week announced the following six companies are all joining its Board of Directors:

  • BMM Testlabs
  • Choctaw Casinos and Resorts
  • Golden Entertainment
  • GVC Holdings PLC
  • Paddy Power Betfair
  • The Stars Group

The Stars Group is the owner of PokerStars, the world’s largest online poker site. According to the AGA, The Stars Group is a leading provider of technology-based products and services in the global gaming and interactive entertainment industries. It also owns the PokerStars Casino, BetStars, and Full Tilt brands through its Stars Interactive Group gaming division.

The Canadian-based company is formerly known as Amaya Inc., Amaya Gaming Group Inc., and Rational Group.

The Stars Group’s addition to the AGA Board of Directors is notable because the AGA once tried to block its entry into the Atlantic City casino market. In fact, the AGA did so arguing that PokerStars operated as a criminal enterprise when it remained open to US players following the passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006.

PokerStars and The Atlantic Club Casino Hotel

PokerStars entered into an agreement to purchase The Atlantic Club Casino Hotel for $15 million in December 2012. It is suspected the move was an effort to get a foot in the door of the about-to-open New Jersey online gambling industry.

Legislation passed by the New Jersey Assembly and Senate during the same month included regulations that would require online gambling site operators to have a connection to a brick and mortar Atlantic City casino. In February 2013, a revised bill including these regulations passed and was signed into law by then-Governor Chris Christie.

In the interim, PokerStars made an application for an Interim Casino Authorization with the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement. The AGA tried to block the issuance of the license filing a brief with the Division of Gaming Enforcement and Casino Control Commission.

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The integrity of the gaming industry

The brief claimed issuing PokerStars a casino license of any kind would compromise the integrity of the gaming industry. It claimed PokerStars is a business built on deceit, chicanery and “the systematic flouting of U.S. law.”

The brief also stated PokerStars operated as a criminal enterprise:

“Any action allowing PokerStars to be licensed would send a damaging message to the world of gaming, and to the world beyond gaming, that companies that engage in chronic lawbreaking are welcome in the licensed gaming business. That message would dramatically undermine public confidence in gaming regulation and could cripple the industry’s public image.”

PokerStars and a number of state lawmakers claimed AGA member Caesars Entertainment was behind the brief in an effort to protect its interests in the Atlantic City casino and New Jersey online gambling markets.

A decision on the license was expected by the end of April 2013, but it was delayed. In the interim, Atlantic Club Casino Hotel sent PokerStars a termination letter, claiming PokerStars had missed a deadline to purchase the property.

PokerStars filed a lawsuit. However, in May 2013 a Superior Court judge ruled PokerStars’ deal to purchase the Atlantic Club Casino Hotel was dead.

The hotel and casino closed in January 2014 and remains shuttered. Caesars Entertainment eventually bought it. However, Caesars sold the property to current owners TJM Properties in May 2014 for $13.5 million.

PokerStars launches in NJ

PokerStars launched the PokerStars NJ poker and casino site in May 2016. It operates under the Resorts Casino Hotel‘s internet gaming license.

Two other new AGA board members, GVC Holdings PLC and Paddy Power Betfair, also operate New Jersey online gambling sites.

AGA president and CEO Geoff Freeman said the addition of all six new board members speaks to the organization’s diversity:

“More than ever before, AGA’s diverse membership reflects the broad interests of the casino gaming industry. Adding these six industry leaders will help our ability to serve as an effective advocate for the industry as a whole, and we’re excited to add their expertise to our Board.”

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Rocker’s Kind Heaven Attraction To Feature Virtual Monkey Wrestling

A rock star, a film producer, and a casino and hospitality giant are getting together to build a $100 million Southeast Asian-themed attraction at The Linq hotel, casino and shopping center on the Las Vegas Strip.

Kind Heaven is a joint venture by:

  • Caesars Entertainment
  • Former Walden Media and Miramax Films executive Cary Granat‘s Immersive Artistry entertainment company
  • Jane’s Addiction and Porno for Pyros frontman, and Lollapalooza music festival creator, Perry Farrell

The group hopes to launch the new venture by August 2019.

The Singapore and Bangkok street market-styled attraction will include 100,000 square feet of food, retail, and live entertainment. It’s going up across the street from Caesars Palace, and will sit between Harrah’s Las Vegas Hotel and Casino and Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel and Casino.

Additionally, it will be part of the $500 million The Linq Promenade shopping, dining, and entertainment district. This area already includes the world’s tallest observation wheel, The High Roller.

Virtual monkey wrestling and more

In addition to a variety of restaurant, retail, and live entertainment offerings, Kind Heaven will include virtual monkey wrestling patrons can bet on for prizes, artist holograms, and an indoor forest.

Immersive Artistry is the company behind the Game for Life exhibit at the Pro Football Hall of Fame that includes Joe Namath and Vince Lombardi holograms. Additionally, plans are in the works to build similar Kind Heaven attractions in Russia and China.

There are no band bookings yet. However, Farrell will take on the role of curator for all bands and musicians at Kind Heaven.

The price of tickets for Kind Heaven is up in the air as well. However, a plan is in place to keep the attraction cashless.

Patrons will wear a payment tracking device while inside. Additionally, Kind Heaven will be among the only places on the Las Vegas Strip to accept digital currencies, including Bitcoin.

Kind Heaven will be open to people of all ages from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. local time. However, it will close for three hours at that time and reopen for people 21 and over at 8 p.m.

Ultimately, the project will employ as many as 670 people.

A Linq to the past

Of course, the Asian theme of the new attraction will be a link back to The Linq’s past.

Caesars Entertainment’s The Linq hotel, casino and shopping promenade originally opened in 1959. At the time its name was the Flamingo Capri. The property added a casino in 1972. Plus, construction of the Imperial Palace Tower hotel finished in 1977.

The entire resort became the Asian-themed Imperial Palace in 1979.

Four more hotel towers sprung up in the 1980s. In 2012, Caesars renamed the property The Quad, dropping the Asian theme. In 2014, after a $223 million renovation, it became The Linq.

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