More Reasons Not to Build a Casino at Gettysburg

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I agree totally with Tanya Wagner above. I can also relate to the ghost town imagry, however, we have a zillion dollar name here: not likely to occur if we, pardon the pun, play the cards right! The conversations of WHAT to do vs just saying no have abounded since DAY 1. Jobs are very important; even if you remove the bias' against gambling from the moral standpoint, we would STILL be lopsided economically through further dependence on disposable dollars, entertainment dollars which in these times is a pretty flaky. Worse, the target demographic for this type of casino happens to fit our entire countywide 21 and over population and I'd submit the population of the majority of the bordering Maryland Counties. The gambling industry does present opportunity for people to do harm to themselves and those dependent upon them or close to them. I believe we can develop this area gently and profitably with non-tourism related employment and tax collection opportunities. Let us make better what we have! A couple of million would provide the Eisenhower Inn and Conference Center with needed infrastructure replacements, a revamp of amenities and get them well on their way to being a remarkable, beautiful, competitive and profitable family and couples business/corporate resort...without a casino. Without making Gettysburg a place that some people will revile because that's where daddy or mommy blew the mortgage payment after a few cocktails and a whim. I want jobs for Adams County and Cumberland Township....but not at the expense of the potential lot by lot destruction of our little neighborhood - the area formerly known as the Village of Greenmount. Commercialize gently for the long term.. no high density mish mash ticky tacky. Kind of a gateway community premise on all roads leading to this battlefield and lovely town known as Gettysburg with a balance of beneficial and responsible businesses that work in harmony with residential and agricultural life. I can see physical structures with architectural designs and materials/land use that enhance the natural beauty and rural feel of the area with harm to none. Profit, opportunity and intrisic benefit for all and dignity for our battlefield. We can break molds here, together, and set the example for other towns/areas high profile or anywhere USA. I live here, a 1/2 block away from the entrance - this is my home, dinky and handhewn as it is but its ours. I don't own a mansion or a yacht...my home isn't protected by NPS land like Mr. Levans. I'll be working until I take the final dirt nap. I speak out not just for the battlefield but for regular folks who get pounded out like burgers in the face of aggressive development: sell out or be squeezed out - give up and shut up.

Stephanie Mendenhall of PA 9:13AM September 29, 2010

You people scare me, movie stars, yea they have a retirement plan to live on. Let people come see the history cause that is all gettysburg is going to be if there is no growth it is going to turn into a ghost town. What are you people afraid of? Why is it so hard for you people to understand what is needed there, oh I know cause you don't live there, thats why !!! You dont have to be a resident of Pa, what the hell is that, so who cares about the human beings that live there, you people discuss me......a bunch of people that probably have been to gettysburg once in their lives and feel they can speak on behalf of everyone. If you want to do and respect the land do something about the dirt thats already there,oh I forgot that wont make national TV......

pat of PA 11:31PM September 28, 2010

Excellent writing. Could there be a worse place for a casino? O Yes- Pearl Harbor OR Lexington Green would be about as bad. There are sacred places to a society. And these places are not for gambling and the ancillary activities that accompany this - such as alcohol fueled drivers and "escort services". Gettysburg is special and must be preserved. Read my article at www.vvmf.org.

Jan Craig Scruggs, Esq., President,

Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund

Washington DC

PurpleHeart of MD 1:39PM September 25, 2010

One doesn' t have to be a history buff or have any concern about saving our precious historic sites for future generations or care about honoring the sacrifices made there to be convinced this is a travesty of gargantuan proportions. One simply has to understand predatory developers and how they work to snooker a gullible public, and a basic knowledge about how a regressive, incompatible enterprise like gambling can destroy a vibrant heritage tourism economy. What these priceless places need is a buffer preventing such inappropriate development. Without it, we'll have a casino at Gettysbirg, and a go-car track or a water park right outside the Flight 93 site (which is just now being built on rural land in Shanksville, PA). If the township and county supervisors out there are as naive and vulnerable to financial inducements as those in Adams County, the vultures are probably already circling, ready to pounce on their unwitting prey.Wake up, people!

Tanya Wagner of PA 9:06AM September 25, 2010

Mr. Farrell, thank you so much for your editorial remarks. The opposition to the casino (nocasinogettysburg.org) has said from the beginning of this struggle that Gettysburg will lose it's trademark brand as America's Hallowed Ground - the place where America and Americans saved the nation and won our new birth of freedom. That beautiful, sacred trust that was handed down to us by our ancestors will be ruined, and it will take generations to restore it's sanctity.

Please, help stop this casino! This is the second time this investor (David LeVan) has tried to bring a casino to Gettysburg!

ANY person who is sickened by this ridiculous idea of a casino so near a national treasure can submit a written statement to the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board. You do not have to be a resident of Pennsylvania. Your opinion counts! www.speakforthefallen.org.

Violet Clark of TN 8:03PM September 24, 2010

Where is liberal logic.

I agree NO to both...

Bill Hedges of MO 1:30PM September 24, 2010

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John A. Farrell

John A. Farrell

John Aloysius Farrell is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. An award-winning Washington reporter, he has written for The Boston Globe and The Denver Post and is the author of Tip O’Neill and the Democratic Century and an upcoming biography of the great American defense attorney, Clarence Darrow.

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