ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - A casino workers union in
Atlantic City defied a company-imposed deadline Monday to withdraw its appeal
of a court-ordered, cost-cutting package.
The deadline passed as the showdown over the future of
the Trump Taj Mahal casino entered what could be its final week.
Local 54 of the Unite-HERE union ignored the deadline
imposed last week by Trump Entertainment Resorts to withdraw its appeal of a
bankruptcy court order that terminated the union contract with Taj Mahal
workers. The Oct. 17 order eliminated health insurance and the pension plan for
the casino's workers.
Neither side would discuss the deadline's expiration or
what it might mean for the casino's future or the jobs of its 3,000 workers.
Taj Mahal is scheduled to close at 6 a.m. Saturday.
In a letter Thursday to union president Bob McDevitt,
Trump Entertainment CEO Robert Griffin wrote: "If you have not agreed to
drop the appeal by the close of business on Monday Dec. 15 then we'll know that
you have rejected us again."
The company is hoping to hand itself over to billionaire
investor Carl Icahn, who has promised to pump $100 million into the casino but
only if the union drops its appeal and only in return for substantial tax
breaks from the city and state.
A financial stabilization package for Atlantic City's
eight casinos and for the city's municipal finances is making its way through
the state legislature, and could receive final votes as early as Thursday - two
days before the scheduled shutdown of the casino.
The centerpiece of the package is a bill exempting the
casinos from property taxes for 15 years. They would make collective payments
in lieu of taxes of $150 million a year for the first two years, then $120
million for the next 13 years, assuming gambling revenue remains within certain
levels.
Other aspects would increase school aid for Atlantic City
and help pay off its more than $250 million of municipal debt.
Source: Philly.com
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