Monday, March 15th, 2010

Seattle Times: Kirkland considers annexation, keeping Casino Caribbean open

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seattletimesannexation

The Seattle Times has produced this piece on the Caribbean casino and how Kirkland is trying to grandfather it in to help pay for annexation:

By Nicole Tsong
Seattle Times Eastside reporter
The Casino Caribbean sits on the edge of Kirkland in unincorporated King County. There, the kitschy, palm-bedecked cardroom can do business, unlike in the city, which bans cardroom gambling.

But as Kirkland considers absorbing the Kingsgate neighborhood that includes the casino as part of an annexation, the city also has asked the state legislature to grandfather the casino in and allow it to remain open. No new cardrooms would be allowed.

But a casino is not exactly in keeping with Kirkland’s image as a well-to-do suburb with a quaint, downtown waterfront.

“What’s tackier than a casino?” said Kirkland resident Deirdre Johnson, who lives in South Rose Hill and is upset over the potential annexation. “We’re Kirkland, for God’s sake.”

The casino owner, through a spokesman, declined to comment on the issue.

City officials say the council wants the choice to keep the casino — and its revenue. If taxed at 20 percent as allowed under city ordinance, the city could get $500,000 to $1 million yearly in taxes that would help with annexation, said assistant city manager Marilynne Beard. The business is now taxed by King County.

“It obviously helps the financial situation if we allow them to continue to operate,” she said. “It’s not an insignificant amount of money and would help provide services to the area.”

The Times reporter spoke with Councilmember Mary-Alyce Burleigh as well as some other Kirkland citizens:

The casino has been just about a mile from the Kirkland boundary since 2005 and was first proposed in 2004, when annexation was already being discussed. At the time, then-mayor Mary-Alyce Burleigh said she did not support gambling in Kirkland. Burleigh, now a City Council member, said it’s still not her preference and she is opposed to new card rooms.

But she said she hasn’t heard of any issues at the Caribbean. She also feels the city has an obligation to go forward with annexation, though would like to make sure the city does not become dependent on the casino revenue, she said.

Bea Nahon, treasurer of the group Citizens for a Vibrant Kirkland, which opposes annexation, said she’d like to have the city discuss gambling more.

“In the past, the City Council has said no to gambling,” she said. “At every opportunity they’ve said, ‘No, we’re not allowing gambling in Kirkland.’ And now maybe they will.”

Jim McElwee, who also is the chair of the Kirkland Alliance of Neighborhoods, pointed out that Kirkland banned cardrooms in 1999.

“Personally, I don’t want any casinos in my community. I’ve drawn my line at the bingo parlor,” he said. “If our community values say we prefer not to have casinos and yet we allow them, I think that’s being hypocritical.”

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