PHILADELPHIA A synagogue and two schools near the site of a
proposed casino at Broad and Callowhill Streets are taking action to block the
project.
Congregation Rodeph Shalom, Friends Select School, and the
Mathematics, Civics and Sciences Charter School filed a "petition to
intervene" Thursday with the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Commission
opposing the proposed Provence Casino.
The 424,000-square-feet project would include a casino,
concert hall, restaurants, nightclub, and event and meeting space at the former
home of The Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News. It would also have 3,000
slot machines and automated table games, and 150 table games.
In their petition, the institutions said the Provence,
proposed by developer Bart Blatstein's Tower Investments, would be incompatible
with a synagogue and schools.
"Most fundamentally, you don't put a casino within a
few blocks of where thousands of kids are going to school and hundreds of
people are going to pray. It's just a bad mix," said lawyer Larry Spector,
who filed the petition.
Mathematics, Civics and Sciences is across Broad from the
site. Rodeph Shalom, at Broad and Mount Vernon Streets, is two blocks away, and
Friends Select, on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, is within three blocks. Also,
the casino would be next to School District of Philadelphia headquarters.
The petition notes that none of the four other proposed
casino sites in Philadelphia is located so close to schools and a house of
worship.
Tower Investments spokesman Frank Keel said, "We're
puzzled" by the petition. Tower and Blatstein "have met with more
civic leaders and community groups than all of the other casino applicants
combined."
The $700 million Provence project "has been extremely
well received," Keel said.
Keel added that the company has "hired Allied Barton,
the nation's largest security firm, to devise a significant security plan"
that would cover the site and several surrounding blocks.
Provence is vying with four other projects - Market8 in
Center City and three in South Philadelphia, Casino Revolution, Hollywood
Casino, and Live! Hotel and Casino - for the city's remaining gaming license.
The Gaming Control Commission will hold hearings in January on all five
proposals. The petition will be presented at those hearings.
"The Tower site will create traffic, parking, and
security problems that will jeopardize safe access to the petitioners' school
and places of worship," the petition stated.
Dena Herrin, president of Rodeph Shalom, said traffic would
be a key problem.
"We are very concerned about the possible impact of the
casino on our neighborhood," Herrin said. "In particular, we are very
worried about the traffic situation and I think it will have a negative impact
on residential development in the area."
Herrin noted that the synagogue recently broke ground for a
$15 million expansion.
Keel said Tower was in the process of mitigating any traffic
problems and had offered to pay for the coalition's own traffic study.
Spector said it was important to file the petition before
late January, when suitability hearings are scheduled for the five casino
applicants.
Veronica Joyner, founder of Mathematics, Civics and
Sciences, said a casino at the proposed site would be incompatible with the
community.
"To bring gambling, drinking, and the clientele that
comes with that is not conducive to community schools and family living,"
Joyner said.
Source: Philly.com
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