[QUOTE=Bonanza;946457]First of all, it is not the state that had anything to do with gaming going to a particular area; it was either a county thing or definitive area within a county. Once gaming was voted into an area, there were far more plusses than negatives.
Sorry, Bonanza! The State had everything to do with it! It was a state-wide referendum that decided gambling specifically in Atlantic City and was NOT a local or a county "thing"!
From your favorite reference site:
"In 1974, New Jersey voters voted against legalizing casino gambling statewide, but two years later approved a new referendum which legalized casinos, but restricted them to Atlantic City.[10][11] At that time, Nevada was the only state with legal casino gambling. Resorts Atlantic City was the first casino to open in 1978.[12] As part of the state's budget showdown in 2006, gambling in Atlantic City's casinos and at racetracks in the state were forced to close after it was determined that the official monitors from the New Jersey Casino Control Commission were essential and New Jersey law stated that gambling establishments could not legally operate without state oversight. The closures cost the state an estimated $1.3 million in casino revenues in addition to the loss of state taxes collected on casino employee wages"
[Gambling in New Jersey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia'
And from an historical perspective piece:
The History of A.C.’s Gaming Decline | The Save Jersey Blog
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Not sure if I have free time...or if I just forgot everything I was supposed to do!
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