This document analyzes the potential economic impacts of three proposed gaming facilities in the South Central gaming zone of Kansas. It examines both the construction impacts and operating impacts that could result from the proposals. For construction impacts, it models the economic output, employment, and wages that would be generated during construction in 2010. It finds the largest impacts would come from the Sumner Resorts/Harrah's proposal. For operating impacts, it models the economic activity from facility operations beginning in 2011, again finding the largest impacts from Sumner Resorts/Harrah's. It also discusses possible competitive impacts on existing businesses from new gaming facilities.
This document analyzes the potential economic impacts of three proposed gaming facilities in Sumner County, Kansas. It examines both the construction impacts from building the facilities in 2010 and the operating impacts during the first full year of operations in 2011. For construction, the largest project, Sumner Resorts/Harrah's, is estimated to generate $458.9 million in total economic output, support 4,380 jobs, and provide $179.1 million in wages for Kansans. For operations in 2011, Sumner Resorts/Harrah's is projected to produce $1.1 billion in total economic output, support over 5,000 jobs, and provide $230 million in wages. The analysis also considers potential
This document provides an overview of Saint Lucia's economy in 3 sentences:
The document summarizes economic data and indicators for Saint Lucia, acknowledges that some figures are preliminary, and thanks public and private sector contributors. It includes 58 tables and graphs on topics like GDP growth, tourism, construction, manufacturing, agriculture, prices, government finances, trade, population, and education. The document appears to be an annual economic review report for Saint Lucia.
Colliers International Vietnam
Quarterly Knowledge Report for an economic overview and analysis on the Residence, Serviced Apartment, Office, Retail, Condominium, Villa/Townhouse and Industry Real Estate market in Vietnam.
A report titled “Economic Assessment Report for the Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on New York State’s Oil, Gas, and Solution Mining Regulatory Program,” commissioned by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and researched and written by Ecology and Environment Engineering, P.C.
This document provides a profile of Tampa, Florida with information on population, housing, demographics, economy, and comparisons to other regions. Some key points:
1) Between 1990 and 2003, Tampa's land area increased 7% to 116.1 square miles due to annexation. As of 2006, the city contained 126,515 property parcels.
2) Tampa's population grew 13% between 1990 and 2000, with most growth occurring in northwest Tampa. The population is aging, with the median age rising to 33.4 years.
3) Housing units increased 18% between 1990 and 2000 to outpace population growth. The majority of units are owner-occupied single family homes, though rentals are
This document is the statistical appendix of the Economic Survey 2021-22. It contains tables of economic indicators related to national income and production, budgetary transactions, monetary trends, prices, balance of payments, foreign trade, external assistance, and human development indicators. The tables provide data on key indicators such as GDP, inflation, exports, imports, exchange rates, and more.
Colliers International Vietnam
Quarterly Knowledge Report for an economic overview and analysis on the Residence, Serviced Apartment, Office, Retail, Condominium, Villa/Townhouse and Industry Real Estate market in Vietnam.
Compendium working group on u.s. investment in africamahwikizi
This document provides introductory observations from the Chair of the Working Group on U.S. Investment in Africa. It notes that the experts in the Working Group represent the vanguard views on this topic. While most parties want increased U.S. private investment in Africa, the official U.S. vision and aid programs have changed little since 1985 and shut out private investment. The document argues the debate must be fought at the edges of Washington to overcome entrenched interests and outdated views. The strategic consequences are significant for both Africa and broader U.S. global position.
This document analyzes the potential economic impacts of three proposed gaming facilities in Sumner County, Kansas. It examines both the construction impacts from building the facilities in 2010 and the operating impacts during the first full year of operations in 2011. For construction, the largest project, Sumner Resorts/Harrah's, is estimated to generate $458.9 million in total economic output, support 4,380 jobs, and provide $179.1 million in wages for Kansans. For operations in 2011, Sumner Resorts/Harrah's is projected to produce $1.1 billion in total economic output, support over 5,000 jobs, and provide $230 million in wages. The analysis also considers potential
This document provides an overview of Saint Lucia's economy in 3 sentences:
The document summarizes economic data and indicators for Saint Lucia, acknowledges that some figures are preliminary, and thanks public and private sector contributors. It includes 58 tables and graphs on topics like GDP growth, tourism, construction, manufacturing, agriculture, prices, government finances, trade, population, and education. The document appears to be an annual economic review report for Saint Lucia.
Colliers International Vietnam
Quarterly Knowledge Report for an economic overview and analysis on the Residence, Serviced Apartment, Office, Retail, Condominium, Villa/Townhouse and Industry Real Estate market in Vietnam.
A report titled “Economic Assessment Report for the Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on New York State’s Oil, Gas, and Solution Mining Regulatory Program,” commissioned by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and researched and written by Ecology and Environment Engineering, P.C.
This document provides a profile of Tampa, Florida with information on population, housing, demographics, economy, and comparisons to other regions. Some key points:
1) Between 1990 and 2003, Tampa's land area increased 7% to 116.1 square miles due to annexation. As of 2006, the city contained 126,515 property parcels.
2) Tampa's population grew 13% between 1990 and 2000, with most growth occurring in northwest Tampa. The population is aging, with the median age rising to 33.4 years.
3) Housing units increased 18% between 1990 and 2000 to outpace population growth. The majority of units are owner-occupied single family homes, though rentals are
This document is the statistical appendix of the Economic Survey 2021-22. It contains tables of economic indicators related to national income and production, budgetary transactions, monetary trends, prices, balance of payments, foreign trade, external assistance, and human development indicators. The tables provide data on key indicators such as GDP, inflation, exports, imports, exchange rates, and more.
Colliers International Vietnam
Quarterly Knowledge Report for an economic overview and analysis on the Residence, Serviced Apartment, Office, Retail, Condominium, Villa/Townhouse and Industry Real Estate market in Vietnam.
Compendium working group on u.s. investment in africamahwikizi
This document provides introductory observations from the Chair of the Working Group on U.S. Investment in Africa. It notes that the experts in the Working Group represent the vanguard views on this topic. While most parties want increased U.S. private investment in Africa, the official U.S. vision and aid programs have changed little since 1985 and shut out private investment. The document argues the debate must be fought at the edges of Washington to overcome entrenched interests and outdated views. The strategic consequences are significant for both Africa and broader U.S. global position.
This document provides guidance on preparing annual reports on Form 10-K that must be filed with the SEC by publicly held companies. It discusses the general rules and requirements for Form 10-K filings, including when the report is due, electronic filing requirements, XBRL tagging, signatures, and content that must be included. It also covers the disclosure item requirements for Part I, Part II, and Item 7 (Management's Discussion and Analysis) of Form 10-K. Additional sections provide guidance on financial statements, parent company information, financial schedules, notification of late filings, requirements for smaller reporting companies, and an example Form 10-K.
At EY Professional Practice we developed a helpful guide to applying Article 11 of Regulation S-X in preparing pro-forma financial information. Refer to it for registration statements and current reports filed with the SEC.
This document presents the final report on the impact assessment of the plan assistance provided to the Forum of Regulators by the Ministry of Power during India's 11th Five-Year Plan period (2008-2012). The report assesses the studies undertaken and capacity building programs conducted by the Forum's secretariat during this period. It describes the Forum's role, outlines the report's objectives and methodology, which included designing questionnaires and collecting data from electricity regulatory commissions. The methodology also involved developing an evaluation framework and analytical structure to assess the studies and programs. The analysis section then evaluates each study and capacity building program based on this framework, presenting scores and insights. In conclusion, the report finds that the studies and programs had varying levels of impact and
TOD Overlay Zone Land Use Framework Plan 11-25-15peterdandb
This document provides a land use framework plan to guide future transit-oriented development around the Palmdale Transportation Center and future Palmdale Multimodal Station in Palmdale, California. The key recommendations are to create a vibrant downtown area around the future station with mixed-use development, increase housing and jobs within walking distance of transit to support sustainable lifestyles, and ensure good multimodal access and public spaces around the station. The plan aims to foster complete communities, engage stakeholders, and provide a positive vision for Palmdale's future.
This document provides an economic overview of the West Kootenay Boundary region of British Columbia. It analyzes population, business, employment, income, and economic dependency data from 1991-2018. Key findings include steady population growth, an aging population, a shift from goods-producing to service-based industries, and high economic dependency in some local health areas. The report also discusses challenges from trends in demographics, peak oil, and climate change.
Pre site map for Financial Planning Companies. One of the first steps in the Process of building your website is the Information Architecture phase.(site-mapping)
Umdoni Community Based Planning (CBP) Ward 4 Example Anthony Rippon
This document presents a community-based plan for Ward 4 in the Umdoni Local Municipality. It begins with an introduction and background to the project. It describes the objectives, scope, locality and ward boundaries. It then details the 5-stage process used to develop the plan, which included preparation, information gathering, analysis, reconciliation and planning. The plan presents a policy framework, situation analysis of demographics, services and facilities. It identifies economic activities and priority community needs. A strategic framework is outlined with a vision, goals and strategies. Finally, an implementation plan is provided with action tables to address priority projects and challenges.
This document provides a conceptual framework and recommendations for pricing water and wastewater services in Amman, Jordan and developing a pricing model. It finds that current pricing does not meet objectives of financial viability, economic efficiency, or fully targeting social goals. It recommends adopting a multi-year strategy to transition tariffs to a financial reference price of 1.42 JD/m3 to improve cost recovery for Miyahuna and WAJ. It also recommends better targeting subsidies to poor consumers through a solidarity charge on non-poor users or linking subsidies to land value as a proxy for income. The document includes an analysis of costs, revenues, subsidy options and a pricing model to evaluate tariffs.
This document outlines the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Open Government Plan. It discusses DOE's efforts to increase transparency, participation, and collaboration through flagship initiatives like OpenEI and ScienceEducation.gov. The plan also details DOE's approach to open government, including governance, timelines, and performance measures. It provides information on DOE's transparency efforts regarding data, information, and FOIA requests. Finally, it discusses how DOE encourages public participation and collaboration both online and through events.
Prediction of economical recession with the signal approach, and the turkey caseDeniz Özgür Tiryaki
This document is a term project submitted by Deniz Özgür Tiryaki to Istanbul University's Institute of Business Administration for a Master of Business Administration degree. The project aims to develop a model for predicting economic recessions in Turkey using the signal approach. It analyzes 9 macroeconomic indicators related to the 2008 recession in Turkey. The document reviews definitions of financial crises and indicators. It then applies the signal approach to each indicator and develops a combined crisis index to predict the 2008 recession. The results suggest the combined index may help predict recessions.
This document provides a project report on the study of the telecom sector in India. It includes an executive summary and 7 chapters that analyze various aspects of the global and Indian telecom industry.
The introduction provides an overview of the telecom sector in India, including its beginning, regulatory framework, scope, evolution, and role in the Indian economy. Subsequent chapters review literature, analyze the global scenario, examine the current Indian scenario, provide analytical frameworks including trends, company analyses, and discuss the future outlook. Key topics covered include major players, subscriber growth, technologies, pricing strategies, financial performance, and projections. The report utilizes a variety of data, charts, and tables to present the findings.
This document outlines the Income Tax Rules of 1984 in Bangladesh. It provides definitions for key terms used in the rules. It details requirements for various types of professionals including doctors, lawyers, accountants, auditors, architects and engineers to maintain case registers, payment books and receipt books to record income and expenses related to their profession. It also covers rules related to tax deduction at source, tax collection, filing of returns, refunds, recognition of associations, and other procedural aspects of income tax administration. The document provides forms and rules for a wide range of income tax related compliance requirements.
VT Fiscal Year Ended 2017 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report http://spotlight.vermont.gov/
Financial Transparency for Vermont Tax Payers to see why they are always ignored about Tax Relief, Tax Reform, Term Limits and more.
This document discusses long-term sources of financing. It covers topics such as securities, bonds, bond characteristics and types, bond market value, preferred shares, preferred share market value, and common stock market value. The document provides an overview of different long-term financing instruments and how their market values are determined.
This document discusses various tax planning considerations and opportunities for businesses to reduce their tax liability, especially around year-end. It covers strategies for all businesses, as well as specific strategies for partnerships, LLCs, S corporations, and C corporations. Some opportunities discussed include deferring income to 2010 if tax rates will be lower, choosing between cash and accrual accounting methods, handling advance payments, and accounting for inventories.
The document contains configuration steps for setting up various parameters in an Oracle Treasury Management system, including:
1. Configuring audit events, groups, authorized currencies, bank signing authorities, bond issues, brokerage categories/rates, currency details, holidays, and limits.
2. Setting up counterparty and company profiles, deals types/limits, GL accounts, journals, lookups, market data, payments, portfolios, rates, reconciliation, settlements, taxes and users.
3. It provides the menu paths for accessing and configuring each of these treasury parameters and reference data in the system.
This document provides an agricultural land conversion study for a proposed 751.35-acre Tulare Motor Sports Complex project in Tulare County, California. The project site contains primarily prime farmland and farmland of statewide importance that is currently used for agricultural crop production. Approximately 418 acres of the project site are under Williamson Act contracts. The study finds that conversion of the agricultural land to the proposed motor sports complex uses would result in a significant impact under CEQA. The Land Evaluation and Site Assessment model calculates a score of 85.6 points, exceeding the threshold of significance. While the loss of agricultural land is part of an overall trend in the region, the significant impact would require mitigation measures and a statement of
This document contains the 1999 financial statements of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited. It includes the profit and loss accounts, balance sheets, statements of changes in shareholders' equity, and notes to the financial statements. The profit and loss accounts show the bank earned an operating profit after tax of $1.48 billion in 1999. The balance sheets show the bank had total assets of $149 billion as of September 30, 1999, including loans and advances of $104 billion. The statements of changes in shareholders' equity show transactions that affected shareholders' equity accounts throughout the year.
The document summarizes the key points from a meeting of the KRGC Facilities Review Board on October 26-27, 2009 in Topeka, Kansas. It discusses the economic impact analysis conducted for proposed gaming facilities in Sumner County and Wyandotte County, including impacts from construction and operations. For operations, it analyzes impacts under three scenarios: Phase I development, an alternative minimum, and full build-out. It also explains how net gaming revenue was calculated based on import substitution and exports estimated in other studies.
Global Gaming KS, LLC presented to the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board in Topeka, Kansas on December 1, 2010. The presentation outlined flaws in the market analysis and estimates of other applicants, discussed Global Gaming's conservative development plans, and emphasized their financial capability, management experience, commitment to the Exit 19 location, and plans to support the Sumner County community. Global Gaming argued they are the best choice for the gaming license.
The document summarizes gaming revenue projections presented by Will Cummings to the Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board for casinos proposed in the South-Central gaming zone of Kansas. Cummings presented lower projections than the casino proponents, forecasting $202 million in revenue for Harrah's, $151 million for Marvel, and $143 million for Penn, compared to the proponents' higher estimates. The differences were largely due to Cummings using a gravity model based on spending decreasing with distance from a casino, while proponents assumed higher spending from areas further away.
This document provides guidance on preparing annual reports on Form 10-K that must be filed with the SEC by publicly held companies. It discusses the general rules and requirements for Form 10-K filings, including when the report is due, electronic filing requirements, XBRL tagging, signatures, and content that must be included. It also covers the disclosure item requirements for Part I, Part II, and Item 7 (Management's Discussion and Analysis) of Form 10-K. Additional sections provide guidance on financial statements, parent company information, financial schedules, notification of late filings, requirements for smaller reporting companies, and an example Form 10-K.
At EY Professional Practice we developed a helpful guide to applying Article 11 of Regulation S-X in preparing pro-forma financial information. Refer to it for registration statements and current reports filed with the SEC.
This document presents the final report on the impact assessment of the plan assistance provided to the Forum of Regulators by the Ministry of Power during India's 11th Five-Year Plan period (2008-2012). The report assesses the studies undertaken and capacity building programs conducted by the Forum's secretariat during this period. It describes the Forum's role, outlines the report's objectives and methodology, which included designing questionnaires and collecting data from electricity regulatory commissions. The methodology also involved developing an evaluation framework and analytical structure to assess the studies and programs. The analysis section then evaluates each study and capacity building program based on this framework, presenting scores and insights. In conclusion, the report finds that the studies and programs had varying levels of impact and
TOD Overlay Zone Land Use Framework Plan 11-25-15peterdandb
This document provides a land use framework plan to guide future transit-oriented development around the Palmdale Transportation Center and future Palmdale Multimodal Station in Palmdale, California. The key recommendations are to create a vibrant downtown area around the future station with mixed-use development, increase housing and jobs within walking distance of transit to support sustainable lifestyles, and ensure good multimodal access and public spaces around the station. The plan aims to foster complete communities, engage stakeholders, and provide a positive vision for Palmdale's future.
This document provides an economic overview of the West Kootenay Boundary region of British Columbia. It analyzes population, business, employment, income, and economic dependency data from 1991-2018. Key findings include steady population growth, an aging population, a shift from goods-producing to service-based industries, and high economic dependency in some local health areas. The report also discusses challenges from trends in demographics, peak oil, and climate change.
Pre site map for Financial Planning Companies. One of the first steps in the Process of building your website is the Information Architecture phase.(site-mapping)
Umdoni Community Based Planning (CBP) Ward 4 Example Anthony Rippon
This document presents a community-based plan for Ward 4 in the Umdoni Local Municipality. It begins with an introduction and background to the project. It describes the objectives, scope, locality and ward boundaries. It then details the 5-stage process used to develop the plan, which included preparation, information gathering, analysis, reconciliation and planning. The plan presents a policy framework, situation analysis of demographics, services and facilities. It identifies economic activities and priority community needs. A strategic framework is outlined with a vision, goals and strategies. Finally, an implementation plan is provided with action tables to address priority projects and challenges.
This document provides a conceptual framework and recommendations for pricing water and wastewater services in Amman, Jordan and developing a pricing model. It finds that current pricing does not meet objectives of financial viability, economic efficiency, or fully targeting social goals. It recommends adopting a multi-year strategy to transition tariffs to a financial reference price of 1.42 JD/m3 to improve cost recovery for Miyahuna and WAJ. It also recommends better targeting subsidies to poor consumers through a solidarity charge on non-poor users or linking subsidies to land value as a proxy for income. The document includes an analysis of costs, revenues, subsidy options and a pricing model to evaluate tariffs.
This document outlines the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Open Government Plan. It discusses DOE's efforts to increase transparency, participation, and collaboration through flagship initiatives like OpenEI and ScienceEducation.gov. The plan also details DOE's approach to open government, including governance, timelines, and performance measures. It provides information on DOE's transparency efforts regarding data, information, and FOIA requests. Finally, it discusses how DOE encourages public participation and collaboration both online and through events.
Prediction of economical recession with the signal approach, and the turkey caseDeniz Özgür Tiryaki
This document is a term project submitted by Deniz Özgür Tiryaki to Istanbul University's Institute of Business Administration for a Master of Business Administration degree. The project aims to develop a model for predicting economic recessions in Turkey using the signal approach. It analyzes 9 macroeconomic indicators related to the 2008 recession in Turkey. The document reviews definitions of financial crises and indicators. It then applies the signal approach to each indicator and develops a combined crisis index to predict the 2008 recession. The results suggest the combined index may help predict recessions.
This document provides a project report on the study of the telecom sector in India. It includes an executive summary and 7 chapters that analyze various aspects of the global and Indian telecom industry.
The introduction provides an overview of the telecom sector in India, including its beginning, regulatory framework, scope, evolution, and role in the Indian economy. Subsequent chapters review literature, analyze the global scenario, examine the current Indian scenario, provide analytical frameworks including trends, company analyses, and discuss the future outlook. Key topics covered include major players, subscriber growth, technologies, pricing strategies, financial performance, and projections. The report utilizes a variety of data, charts, and tables to present the findings.
This document outlines the Income Tax Rules of 1984 in Bangladesh. It provides definitions for key terms used in the rules. It details requirements for various types of professionals including doctors, lawyers, accountants, auditors, architects and engineers to maintain case registers, payment books and receipt books to record income and expenses related to their profession. It also covers rules related to tax deduction at source, tax collection, filing of returns, refunds, recognition of associations, and other procedural aspects of income tax administration. The document provides forms and rules for a wide range of income tax related compliance requirements.
VT Fiscal Year Ended 2017 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report http://spotlight.vermont.gov/
Financial Transparency for Vermont Tax Payers to see why they are always ignored about Tax Relief, Tax Reform, Term Limits and more.
This document discusses long-term sources of financing. It covers topics such as securities, bonds, bond characteristics and types, bond market value, preferred shares, preferred share market value, and common stock market value. The document provides an overview of different long-term financing instruments and how their market values are determined.
This document discusses various tax planning considerations and opportunities for businesses to reduce their tax liability, especially around year-end. It covers strategies for all businesses, as well as specific strategies for partnerships, LLCs, S corporations, and C corporations. Some opportunities discussed include deferring income to 2010 if tax rates will be lower, choosing between cash and accrual accounting methods, handling advance payments, and accounting for inventories.
The document contains configuration steps for setting up various parameters in an Oracle Treasury Management system, including:
1. Configuring audit events, groups, authorized currencies, bank signing authorities, bond issues, brokerage categories/rates, currency details, holidays, and limits.
2. Setting up counterparty and company profiles, deals types/limits, GL accounts, journals, lookups, market data, payments, portfolios, rates, reconciliation, settlements, taxes and users.
3. It provides the menu paths for accessing and configuring each of these treasury parameters and reference data in the system.
This document provides an agricultural land conversion study for a proposed 751.35-acre Tulare Motor Sports Complex project in Tulare County, California. The project site contains primarily prime farmland and farmland of statewide importance that is currently used for agricultural crop production. Approximately 418 acres of the project site are under Williamson Act contracts. The study finds that conversion of the agricultural land to the proposed motor sports complex uses would result in a significant impact under CEQA. The Land Evaluation and Site Assessment model calculates a score of 85.6 points, exceeding the threshold of significance. While the loss of agricultural land is part of an overall trend in the region, the significant impact would require mitigation measures and a statement of
This document contains the 1999 financial statements of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited. It includes the profit and loss accounts, balance sheets, statements of changes in shareholders' equity, and notes to the financial statements. The profit and loss accounts show the bank earned an operating profit after tax of $1.48 billion in 1999. The balance sheets show the bank had total assets of $149 billion as of September 30, 1999, including loans and advances of $104 billion. The statements of changes in shareholders' equity show transactions that affected shareholders' equity accounts throughout the year.
The document summarizes the key points from a meeting of the KRGC Facilities Review Board on October 26-27, 2009 in Topeka, Kansas. It discusses the economic impact analysis conducted for proposed gaming facilities in Sumner County and Wyandotte County, including impacts from construction and operations. For operations, it analyzes impacts under three scenarios: Phase I development, an alternative minimum, and full build-out. It also explains how net gaming revenue was calculated based on import substitution and exports estimated in other studies.
Global Gaming KS, LLC presented to the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board in Topeka, Kansas on December 1, 2010. The presentation outlined flaws in the market analysis and estimates of other applicants, discussed Global Gaming's conservative development plans, and emphasized their financial capability, management experience, commitment to the Exit 19 location, and plans to support the Sumner County community. Global Gaming argued they are the best choice for the gaming license.
The document summarizes gaming revenue projections presented by Will Cummings to the Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board for casinos proposed in the South-Central gaming zone of Kansas. Cummings presented lower projections than the casino proponents, forecasting $202 million in revenue for Harrah's, $151 million for Marvel, and $143 million for Penn, compared to the proponents' higher estimates. The differences were largely due to Cummings using a gravity model based on spending decreasing with distance from a casino, while proponents assumed higher spending from areas further away.
Global Gaming KS, LLC presented to the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board on October 28, 2010 in Wellington, Sumner County, Kansas. They proposed developing the WinSpirit Casino at Exit 19 off I-35 in Sumner County. The presentation outlined Global Gaming's strategic partners, the advantages of the proposed site, and plans for the WinSpirit Casino development including amenities, infrastructure, and construction timelines. Global Gaming believes their experience operating I-35 casinos, financial backing, and management expertise will ensure the success of the project and drive sustainable revenues for Kansas.
The document provides a market assessment for two potential gaming facility locations in Kansas, examining demographic data and market potential within 30, 60, and 100 mile radii. It analyzes population characteristics like age, race, education, income, and propensity to participate in various entertainment activities. Existing amenities in the areas like hotels, conventions, entertainment, outdoor recreation, and golf are also reviewed. The analysis aims to evaluate each location's ability to maximize revenues, promote tourism, and benefit Kansas as outlined in the state's gaming legislation.
The document analyzes gaming revenue and visit projections for two proposed casinos in South Central Kansas - Global Gaming's WinSpirit casino and Peninsula Gaming's Kansas Star casino. Wells Gaming Research customized proprietary models to project revenues and visits for each casino over multiple phases of development, accounting for existing and planned competition. Their projections show WinSpirit with higher revenues and visits initially, but Kansas Star surpassing it once fully built out. The addition of a 1,000 slot Wyandotte tribal casino would significantly reduce projections for both facilities by 17-43% according to the analysis.
The document provides a review and comparison of the ancillary development proposals of two applicants - Global Gaming Solutions (GGS) and Peninsula Gaming Partners (PGP) - for a gaming license in the South Central Zone of Kansas. It finds that both proposals involve investing $280-285 million to develop regional entertainment destinations relying largely on local gamers within 100 miles. While PGP forecasts higher gaming demand and revenue, GGS proposes comparable gaming capacity with lower projected spending per visitor. The review also compares the applicants' proposals for dining, bars, entertainment, hotels, retail, and parking, finding differences in concepts, capacity, and projected performance.
The document compares the two applicants - Global Gaming Solutions and Peninsula Gaming - for a casino license in Sumner County, Kansas. It finds several similarities between the applicants' histories and operations, including their regional presence in Oklahoma/Iowa-Louisiana and target audiences. It also examines the facilities and "sweeteners" offered by each applicant. The document provides details on the existing casinos operated by each company and notes some advantages and disadvantages of both applicants. It considers factors like experience, financial capability, and potential impacts of travel time differences between proposed sites.
The document provides information on the proposed Kansas Star casino and resort project, including:
1) Presentations from the CEO and other executives on the company's experience and plans for the economic benefits, amenities, and community impact of the project.
2) Analyses from consultants showing the projected tourism, economic, and fiscal impacts including hundreds of jobs and millions in annual spending and tax revenues.
3) Details on the design and plans for the equestrian center, entertainment facilities, and other attractions aimed at making it a regional destination.
This document analyzes the potential economic impacts of proposed gaming facilities in the Southeast Zone of Kansas. It examines both the construction impacts from building the facilities in 2010 and the operating impacts during the first full year of operations in 2011. For the Penn Cherokee proposal, construction is estimated to generate over $81 million in economic output, support 775 jobs, and contribute $32 million in wages to the Kansas economy. Annual operations are projected to produce over $235 million in economic output, support over 2,100 jobs with $76 million in wages. Non-gaming competitive impacts on existing businesses in the region are also considered.
This report analyzes the electronic computer market in China, discussing the size of the market, hot areas, and top 10 companies. It examines the market share in terms of leading companies, foreign enterprises, and regional markets. It also analyzes imports and exports of electronic computer products, including major trading partners and domestic destinations. The report concludes with key statistics on the Chinese electronic computer industry.
This report analyzes the tractor market in China, including:
1. The size of the Chinese tractor market based on sales revenue and output from 2008-2010.
2. The top regional markets in China for tractor sales and production.
3. The top 10 companies in the Chinese tractor industry by sales revenue and market share.
4. The market structure and shares of the Chinese tractor market among domestic companies, foreign companies, and imports.
Thank you for your interest in our report. To complete your order, please visit http://www.allchinareports.com or contact our sales representative at Service@allchinareports.com or by phone at +86 10 68324716. We accept payment by credit card and wire transfer. Once payment is received, we will email you a PDF copy of the full report within 3 business days. Please let me know if you have any other questions!
The document is a market report on the electronic parts market in China from Beijing Zeefer Consulting Ltd. dated February 2012. It provides an overview of the size and structure of China's electronic parts market, including key statistics on market size, production volumes, import/export trends, and profiles of the top 10 companies. It also analyzes market shares and concentrations by region, ownership type, and imported vs domestic products. The report finds that Guangdong, Jiangsu and Zhejiang are major production hubs and that foreign firms accounted for around 47% of companies in 2010, though their market share has been
The document is a market report on China's electrician machinery equipment market. It discusses the size of the market, hot areas, top 10 companies, import/export trends, and market share. It provides data and analysis on sales revenue, imports/exports, leading companies, and the concentration of the market. The report aims to give an overview of the development and current situation of China's electrician machinery equipment industry.
This document is an annual report published by the Information and Communication Technology Association of Jordan (int@j) that provides statistics and information on Jordan's ICT & ITES industry for the year 2011. It includes key metrics on sector revenue, employment, exports and investment. Some of the major findings covered are that the IT sector revenue grew from JOD 160 million in 2000 to JOD 1.1 billion in 2011, IT & ITES exports totaled JOD 418 million in 2011 with major export countries being Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and the sector employed over 25,000 people in 2011 with Jordanians representing 71% of the workforce.
This document provides an economic brief and outlook for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in 2011. It finds that while the UAE economy experienced a contraction in 2009 due to the global financial crisis, the recovery is now gaining strength. Growth will depend on the pace of the global recovery and the slowdown in the real estate sector. Both Abu Dhabi and Dubai contribute significantly to GDP, through oil production and infrastructure spending in Abu Dhabi and trade and business in Dubai. The document examines sectors like GDP, public finance, banking, and population trends to analyze the UAE economy.
The document is a market report on China's electronic components market. It provides an overview of the size and structure of the market, identifies hot areas in China, and analyzes the top 10 companies. It also examines trends in imports/exports and market share among different types of companies. The report uses data analysis and industry research to present the current state and development of China's electronic components industry.
This report analyzes the tractor market in China, including:
1. The size of the Chinese tractor market based on sales revenue and domestic output from 2008-2010.
2. The top regional markets (hot areas) in China for tractor sales and production.
3. The top 10 enterprises in the Chinese tractor industry by sales revenue and market share.
4. The market structure and shares in China by enterprise type (domestic, foreign, private vs. state-owned), imports, and region.
This report analyzes the tractor market in China, including:
1. The size of the Chinese tractor market based on sales revenue, output, and market analysis from 2008-2010.
2. The top regions in China for tractor production and import.
3. Analysis of the top 10 enterprises in the Chinese tractor industry by sales revenue, market share, and employees.
4. Market share and structure of the Chinese tractor market by enterprise type, import share, and region.
The document discusses the oil and gas sector in Vietnam, which is seen as an area of opportunity. Vietnam has oil and gas reserves of 270-500 million tons of oil and 1.3 trillion cubic meters of natural gas. The oil and gas sector involves several international companies and state-owned firms. While there are opportunities in exploration and production, the sector also faces challenges such as aging infrastructure and disputes over offshore areas. Overall, the oil and gas industry in Vietnam has potential for growth but requires continued investment and resolution of issues to be fully realized.
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This group of experienced regional casino developers and operators proposes to build Kansas Crossing casino and hotel in southeast Kansas. The development is expected to generate $69 million in initial construction spending, create hundreds of jobs, and generate $10 million annually for state and local governments through taxes. As the largest entertainment venue in the region, Kansas Crossing aims to boost tourism by attracting out-of-state visitors and partnering with local organizations to promote southeast Kansas.
This document summarizes Douglas Walker's presentation on forecasting economic impacts and competitive impacts of casinos in southeast Kansas. Some key points:
- Walker estimates that a new casino would result in a 9.9% increase in employment, 3.4% increase in average weekly wages, and 1.7% increase in the number of establishments in the county. Crawford County is estimated to see larger gains due to its larger population.
- 14 casinos in northeast Oklahoma located within 25 miles of the Kansas border could competitively impact the proposed southeast Kansas casinos. Walker uses a model of competition among Missouri casinos to analyze these competitive effects.
- Location and distance between casinos may impact competition based on Hot
The document provides an analysis of the potential fiscal impacts of three proposed gaming facilities - Camptown Casino, Kansas Crossing Casino, and Castle Rock Casino - in southeast Kansas. It summarizes the methodology used, including adjustments made to the revenue estimates provided by the applicants. Revenue estimates over 5 years are provided for the state of Kansas, local counties and cities, school districts, and other impacted entities. Estimated costs to local and state governments to provide services to each facility are also summarized. The analysis finds differences between the revenue and cost estimates provided by EEC and the original numbers submitted by the applicants.
Civic Economics (Dan Houston, Matt Cunningham)krgc
The document analyzes the potential economic impacts of three proposed gaming facility projects in Kansas: Camptown, Kansas Crossing, and Castle Rock. It finds that Castle Rock would have the largest economic impact during construction, supporting over 900 jobs and contributing $134.2 million to total economic output. During operations in 2019, Castle Rock is estimated to support 584 jobs and contribute $72.9 million to economic output, more than the other two proposals. The analysis examines impacts from construction spending, facility operations, gaming revenues, and local resident spending.
Union Gaming Analytics was commissioned by the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board to evaluate three applicants for a gaming license in southeast Kansas. The analysis included projections for gross gaming revenue, visitation numbers, tax revenue, and economic impacts for each applicant. The methodology involved examining demographic data within drive time radii of the proposed sites, establishing a theoretical gaming market, and applying proprietary capture rates to project revenues and visitation from local, near-local, and regional populations. Consultants then evaluated the economic and fiscal impacts, amenities, and financial suitability of each applicant.
The document analyzes and evaluates the financial suitability of three applicants for a gaming license in Southeast Kansas: Frontenac Development, Castle Rock Casino Resort, and Kansas Crossing Casino. For each applicant, it summarizes the ownership structure, project budget, proposed financing sources, and Union Gaming's analysis and conclusion on their financial viability and ability to fund the projects. While Frontenac and Kansas Crossing were deemed sufficiently capitalized, Castle Rock's ability to obtain the required debt financing was called into question due to uncertainties around land valuation and high projected leverage.
The three proposed casino projects in Kansas Southeast Zone are similar in their Phase 1 concepts, having a minimum critical mass to win the bid but also achieve initial success. Camptown and Kansas Crossing propose smaller local casinos, while Castle Rock proposes a larger regional destination. All have similar potential for Phase 1 success despite different strengths and weaknesses. The key decision is whether to prefer two smaller local casinos or one larger regional casino. The regional casino has the greatest revenue potential but also the least room for error. The owner/team's ability to adapt may be more important than initial plans. However, the tax rate difference between Kansas and Oklahoma gives Oklahoma casinos an advantage in any marketing war.
This document provides an overview and analysis of projections for new casinos proposed in southeastern Kansas. It discusses the use of gravity models to project gaming revenues and financial performance based on location, size, competition and other factors. Specifically, it examines how spending declines with distance from a casino based on players' club and other data. Bigger casinos are generally better due to economies of scale. The presentation compares various existing casinos' "power ratings" which reflect their overall attractiveness based on revenues adjusted for location.
Camptown Casino will be located in Frontenac, Kansas. It will include 750 slot machines, 20 table games, a 62-room hotel, and Gilley's Saloon entertainment venue. Phil Ruffin, an experienced casino operator, will personally finance the $84 million project. It is projected to create 300 jobs and attract nearly 1 million visitors annually from Missouri, Kansas, and other nearby states. Camptown aims to open sooner than competing proposals and will donate $50,000 annually to the local school district.
2015 LGFRB Presentation Castle Rock Casino Resort krgc
This document provides details about the proposed Castle Rock Casino Resort development project. It outlines the developers, architects, management company, contractors, and legal consultants involved. It also provides information on the size and amenities of the casino, hotel, meeting space, and other facilities. Projected revenues, taxes, employment, and visitation are presented. The management and development experience of the casino operator, American Casino and Entertainment Company, is summarized.
Global Gaming KS, LLC presented to the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board on their proposal for a gaming facility. They argued that their selected Exit 19 site is clean with infrastructure, has community support, and avoids legal issues. Their planned 260,000 square foot facility with hotel would open fully within 14 months. While an interim facility lacks appeal, their permanent destination-quality development would include restaurants, entertainment, and gaming expansion over time. They believe revenue differences between Exit 19 and 33 sites are negligible and addressed counterarguments.
The document discusses two proposed casino projects in Kansas - Kansas Star and WinSpirit. Kansas Star promises to invest $260 million, build amenities sooner including a 100,000 square foot event center and $25 million equestrian complex, and generate more gaming revenue, taxes, and jobs for the state. It argues Kansas Star's management team has more experience building and operating successful casino projects on time and on budget and will spend more on advertising to drive higher revenue. The document positions Kansas Star as the best and most lucrative choice for Kansas.
The document discusses the benefits of meditation for reducing stress and anxiety. Regular meditation practice can calm the mind and help prevent worrying thoughts. Meditation lowers stress levels in the body by reducing blood pressure and cortisol levels.
Dean Macomber summarizes his analysis of Global Gaming's proposal for a race track as a tourism generator. He finds that Global's projections of attracting a "Big Event" with 50,000-100,000 visitors are speculative given the limited number of comparable racing events and competition from existing tracks. Their projections of smaller events generating the remaining 50,000 visitors also seem aggressive. In contrast, an equestrian center like Peninsula proposes could attract equine, entertainment, and convention events more reliably as a tourism generator.
peninsula plans meet or exceed drainage standardskrgc
The document is a letter from Christopher Young, a civil engineering consultant, to the chairman of the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board regarding a proposed drainage system for a proposed Kansas Star Casino development. Young serves as the City Engineer for Mulvane, Kansas and has reviewed drainage plans submitted by the developer. He concludes that the proposed drainage improvements, including a detention pond facility, will meet or exceed the City of Mulvane's stormwater drainage policy by having outflow rates less than existing conditions for 2-, 5-, 10-, and 100-year storm events.
This document is a response from Cummings Associates to submissions from Global Gaming Solutions regarding revenue projections and the effects of distance on revenues. Cummings disagrees with some of Global Gaming's assertions, such as that the revenue differential between two proposed casino sites is mostly due to attractiveness rather than distance. Cummings also argues that survey data is not an accurate predictor of economic behavior like casino spending. Overall, Cummings believes distance has a larger impact on revenues than Global Gaming suggests, based on Cummings' analysis of casino performance data from multiple markets.
The memorandum summarizes a request from the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board for additional information about two competing casino applications in Kansas. Specifically, it provides details about 1) drainage and flooding issues at the proposed sites, 2) local approvals and endorsements for the sites, and 3) the experience of one applicant, Peninsula Gaming, with regulatory bodies in other states where criminal charges have been filed against the company and its executives related to campaign contributions. It concludes that the significant risks associated with approving Peninsula's application, including possible disqualification or inability to finance the project, outweigh any potential benefits over the other applicant, Global.
The marketing plan outlines a soft opening period followed by a grand opening 90 days later for a new casino in Sumner County, Kansas. The $1 million budget will be used for advertising, promotions, and community events to generate awareness and excitement. Key objectives include building a local player base within 100 miles, attracting travelers on Interstate 35, and establishing the casino as a new entertainment destination through gaming, restaurants, a hotel, and live entertainment events.
1. Contains CORRECTED Page 18
KANSAS RACING AND GAMING COMMISSION
LOTTERY GAMING FACILITY REVIEW BOARD
ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES
SOUTH CENTRAL ZONE (SUMNER COUNTY)
JULY 2008
2. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................................................................. 3
CONSTRUCTION IMPACTS ............................................................................................................................................................... 4
Excluded Items................................................................................................................................................................................. 4
Auxiliary Development...................................................................................................................................................................... 4
Impact Reporting .............................................................................................................................................................................. 5
Chart 1: Applicant Submissions and Model Inputs ................................................................................................................................................ 6
Chart 2: Construction Impact Summary Chart....................................................................................................................................................... 7
Chart 3: Marvel Construction Economic Output ................................................................................................................................................... 8
Chart 4: Marvel Construction Employment........................................................................................................................................................... 9
Chart 5: Marvel Construction Wages................................................................................................................................................................... 10
Chart 6: Penn Sumner Construction Economic Output ....................................................................................................................................... 11
Chart 7: Penn Sumner Construction Employment............................................................................................................................................... 12
Chart 8: Penn Sumner Construction Wages......................................................................................................................................................... 13
Chart 9: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Construction Economic Output.................................................................................................................... 14
Chart 10: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Construction Employment.......................................................................................................................... 15
Chart 11: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Construction Wages ................................................................................................................................... 16
OPERATING IMPACTS..................................................................................................................................................................... 17
Gaming Revenue and Operational Scale:....................................................................................................................................... 17
Chart 12: Revenue Forecast Adjustments ........................................................................................................................................................... 18
3. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 2
Total Impacts and Net Impacts: ...................................................................................................................................................... 19
Chart 13: Net Revenues in Kansas ....................................................................................................................................................................... 20
Final Input Modifications................................................................................................................................................................. 21
Chart 14: Applicant Submission and Model Input ............................................................................................................................................... 22
Impact Reporting ............................................................................................................................................................................ 23
Chart 15: Operating Impacts Summary Chart...................................................................................................................................................... 24
Chart 16: Marvel Gaming Operation Economic Output ...................................................................................................................................... 25
Chart 17: Marvel Gaming Operation Employment.............................................................................................................................................. 26
Chart 18: Marvel Gaming Operation Wages........................................................................................................................................................ 27
Chart 19: Penn Sumner Operation Economic Output.......................................................................................................................................... 28
Chart 20: Penn Sumner Operation Employment ................................................................................................................................................. 29
Chart 21: Penn Sumner Operation Wages........................................................................................................................................................... 30
Chart 22: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Operation Economic Output ...................................................................................................................... 31
Chart 23: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Operation Employment.............................................................................................................................. 32
Chart 24: Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s Operation Wages........................................................................................................................................ 33
NON-GAMING COMPETITIVE IMPACTS.......................................................................................................................................... 34
Gaming Impact on Budgeting ......................................................................................................................................................... 34
Non-Gaming Competition for Non-Gaming Dollars ......................................................................................................................... 34
Chart 25: South Central Zone Demographics....................................................................................................................................................... 35
Chart 26: Retail Supply and Demand ................................................................................................................................................................... 37
Chart 27: County Business Patterns..................................................................................................................................................................... 38
Chart 28: Existing Daily-Fee Golf Courses............................................................................................................................................................ 39
4. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 3
INTRODUCTION
Civic Economics is pleased to present the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission and the Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board
with this economic impact analysis of the competing proposals for the South Central Gaming Zone. Fiscal impacts, covering benefits
and costs to governmental bodies, are being prepared separately by Meridian Business Advisors.
Civic Economics utilizes IMPLAN, a product of the Minnesota Implan Group and an industry-standard tool for evaluating the impact
of economic activities. Given the Board’s statewide mandate, Civic Economics used Kansas as the operative study area and applied
multipliers and other data from IMPLAN’s Local Area Data File for the state rather than for smaller jurisdictions such as counties.
Therefore, all impacts reported on the pages that follow are impacts on the State of Kansas.
Economic impacts analyses were conducted for two wholly separate phases of each proposal.
Construction Impacts cover the development of Phase I of each proposal, including planning and design and actual
construction of all facilities required by the applicant’s contract with the Kansas Lottery Commission. Expenditures were
assumed to occur entirely within 2010.
Operating Impacts cover the first full year of operation. Because all applicants propose to open complete Phase I facilities in
mid- to late- 2010, operating impacts were prepared for the year 2011.
The report concludes with a discussion of the competitive impacts on existing businesses in the South Central Zone.
5. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 4
CONSTRUCTION IMPACTS
The construction phase of each proposed facility will generate substantial but temporary economic activity related to designing and
building the gaming facilities and associated infrastructure. In each case, Civic Economics assumed that all expenditures would take
place in the year 2010 for the simple reason that applicant submissions did not allow a more time specific analysis.
Inputs were derived from the Performance Templates submitted to the KRGC in June 2008. Where specific and verifiable deviations
in development proposals were identified, inputs were changed accordingly. In the South Central Zone, this occurred only with
regard to ancillary developments committed as part of the Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s proposal.
The economic impact of any construction project is, as one might assume, driven primarily by the total expenditure on the facility.
However, impacts will vary depending on the type of expenditure and the likelihood that such expenditures will be made in Kansas.
For this analysis, Civic Economics consistently applied the Local Coefficients provided by IMPLAN, as these provide a credible
estimate of local spending for each type of expenditure. It should be noted, though, that conscientious project managers with
supportive clients can substantially increase the use of local contractors and suppliers. Therefore, the impacts described below may
be seen as conservative.
Notes:
Excluded Items: Taking our lead from the analysts accustomed to working with gaming facilities, Furniture Fixtures & Equipment
(FFE), Floor & Wall Coverings, and Gaming Equipment were not included in the impact inputs for any applicant. These items are
quite specialized in the gaming industry and thus will come primarily from out of state.
Auxiliary Development: The Sumner Resorts/Harrah’s proposal includes an ancillary development across the Kansas Turnpike
to be developed by a Kansas partner to include 109 hotel rooms, a small retail building, RV parking, and residential spaces.
These have been included in the construction impact analysis because they are included in the contract with the Lottery.
However, it should be noted that such developments are likely to occur in close proximity to other Sumner County proposals, as
well, wholly independent of the gaming contract.
6. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 5
Impact Reporting
The economic impacts are comprised of three separate categories. Each category is analyzed separately from one another in
IMPLAN.
Economic Output is the total production or sales derived from the project. For this study, the total construction costs and
casino revenue are the basis for output.
Employment is the total number of Kansans employed both on a full and part time basis in a given industry.
Wages is the amount of salaries and benefits paid to Kansas employees.
For each of the categories listed above a direct effect, indirect effect, and induced effect has been calculated.
Direct effects capture the initial impact created. For construction impacts, this is based on the amount spent in each of a
variety of categories in site preparation and facilities design and development. In this analysis, these were provided by the
applicants.
Indirect effects are additional impacts derived from businesses providing products or services to the selected industries. This
can be restaurants purchasing supplies, the casino hiring a security firm, or the hotel purchasing advertising from a local radio
station. Those are all examples of indirect effects.
Induced effects are the result of increased household spending due to the direct and indirect effects. Employees of firms
directly or indirectly affected by the project are buying new cars, homes, and groceries locally and this is detailed in the
indirect effects.
7. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 6
Chart 1: Applicant Submissions and Model Inputs
Applicant Submission Category IMPLAN Category Applied Notes
Buildings
Construction of commercial and institutional
buildings
Land None
Land purchases are not factored into
economic impacts
Land improvements, excluding
landscaping
Other new construction
Landscaping Other new construction
Soft Costs, i.e. engineering, architectural,
development fees
Architectural and engineering services
Financing costs None
Financing costs were not factored into the
economic impacts
Public sector infrastructure
Split evenly with Highway, street, bridge, tunnel
construction and Water, sewer, and pipeline
Rolling stock Motor vehicle and parts dealers
Furniture, fixtures and equipment None
Assumed purchases would be made out
of state
Floor and wall treatments None
Assumed purchases would be made out
of state
Gaming equipment None
Assumed purchases would be made out
of state
APPLICANT SUBMISSION AND MODEL INPUT CORRESPONDENCE
CONSTRUCTION ECONOMIC IMPACT ANALYSIS
8. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 7
Chart 2: Construction Impact Summary Chart
Direct Indirect Induced Total Relative Impacts
ECONOMIC OUTPUT
Marvel Gaming 199.4$ 63.7$ 87.1$ 350.2$
Penn Sumner LLC 152.9$ 49.6$ 66.8$ 269.3$
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 261.6$ 84.5$ 112.7$ 458.9$
EMPLOYMENT
Marvel Gaming 2,064 500 811 3,375
Penn Sumner LLC 1,554 385 622 2,561
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 2,674 657 1,050 4,380
WAGES
Marvel Gaming 90.7$ 21.7$ 26.1$ 138.5$
Penn Sumner LLC 69.3$ 16.8$ 20.0$ 106.1$
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 116.8$ 28.6$ 33.7$ 179.1$
Source: Applicant Submissions, IMPLAN, Civic Economics
Total revenues associated with construction ($ Millions, 2007 Dollars)
Total workers, including full-time and part-time
Total wages paid to workers identified above ($ Millions, 2007 Dollars)
CONSTRUCTION IMPACTS SUMMARY
SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
18. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 17
OPERATING IMPACTS
This section of this report analyzes the economic impacts to be generated by each proposal in the first full year of operation, which is
2011 for all proposals. As with construction, economic impacts were calculated for the entire state of Kansas using the IMPLAN
model.
Notes:
Gaming Revenue and Operational Scale: As requested by the Board, all applicants provided a detailed spreadsheet
looking forward into several years of operations. In all cases, these sheets proceeded from an estimate of the gaming
revenue to be earned at each facility, as estimated by the applicants. For this exercise, though, Civic Economics was asked
to evaluate impacts based on the gaming revenue forecast by the Board’s own consultants, Wells Gaming and Cummings &
Associates. In the South Central Zone, these estimates were lower than the applicants had put forward, as illustrated in
Chart 11 on the following page. Consequently, the economic impact of gaming activities relied on these lower revenue
figures as an input into the model.
This analysis also assumes that, in general, non-gaming activities in proposed facilities would change in proportion with the
gaming revenues, which was in this case a reduction. Chart 11 also illustrates those reductions in revenue.
Finally, our partners in this process, Probe Strategic Solutions, applied their specific expertise in the gaming industry to
review and forecast revenues associated with hotel operations at those facilities offering one. In their opinion, reduced
gaming revenue will not be reflected in reduced hotel occupancy as operators seek to fill rooms in order to provide casino
patrons. Hotel revenues at the three attached luxury properties are based on an average daily rate of $118.97 and 90%
occupancy. For the two ancillary, mid-market hotels proposed by Sumner Resorts, revenues are based on an average daily
rate of $87.82 and 80% occupancy. In addition, this “revenue” measure is intended to guide the model by presenting market
values to rooms that are frequently provided at reduced rates or free to gaming customers.
19. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 18
Chart 12: Revenue Forecast Adjustments
Marvel Penn Sumner
Sumner
Resorts/Harrah's
Estimated gaming revenue: Applicant 236,895,000$ $ 158,044,873 252,359,000$
Estimated gaming revenue: Wells 134,991,402$ 122,612,240$ 198,835,894$
Estimated gaming revenue: Cummings 130,200,000$ 123,500,000$ 174,200,000$
Average of Wells & Cummings 132,595,701$ 123,056,120$ 186,517,947$
Ratio of Wells/Cummings to Applicant 0.5597 0.7786 0.7391
Marvel Penn Sumner
Sumner
Resorts/Harrah's
Hotel Revenue 11,880,820$ 13,678,576$ 11,711,541$
Food Revenue 7,919,528$ 5,906,574$ 22,398,355$
Retail Revenue 1,049,370$ 2,681,550$ n/a
Other Revenue 3,368,416$ 3,997,593$ 2,527,714$
CORRECTED CHART 080719
REVENUE FORECASTS, 2011
SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE (IN 2007 Dollars)
GAMING REVENUE PROJECTIONS
ADJUSTED NON-GAMING REVENUE PROJECTIONS
SOURCE: Applicant Submissions, Wells Gaming and Cummings & Assoc., Probe Strategic Solutions, Civic
Economics
20. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 19
Total Impacts and Net Impacts: The layman might expect an economic impact analysis to quantify the output, employment,
and wages of the totality of a proposed facility, which in this case would be built from total projected gaming revenues.
However, such an analysis would substantially overstate the true economic impact the facility will have on the State of
Kansas as it would, by design, incorporate the impact of money simply redirected from one local activity to another. The true
economic impact of a facility is based on a more meaningful number, the net impact.
In this case, net economic impact identifies only that economic activity that is truly new to the jurisdiction. This new activity is
made up of two components:
a. Export Revenue: This refers to the portion of gaming revenues derived from non-Kansas visitors that would not,
absent the proposed casino, have occurred in Kansas. This revenue is truly new to Kansas as out-of-state visitors
spend money in the state they would not have otherwise spent.
b. Import Substitution Revenue: This refers to the portion of gaming revenues derived from Kansas residents that
would, absent the proposed casino, have occurred outside of Kansas. Again, this revenue is truly new to Kansas as
Kansas residents repatriate out-of-state casino spending with in-state casino spending.
c. Redirected Local Activity: The remainder of gaming revenue not accounted for above is not included in the net
economic impact analysis, because it reflects casino spending by Kansans that would not otherwise have occurred in
any casino. This revenue is not new to Kansas because it represents a diversion of other Kansas household income
that previously went to innumerable alternative discretionary activities. However, there is a definite fiscal advantage to
this activity in the form of additional taxes generated. These fiscal impacts are detailed in the report provided by
Meridian Business Advisors.
These values were calculated from the reports of Wells and Cummings. Chart 12 on the following page summarizes the
calculation of net new gaming revenues used to calculate net economic impact. It should be noted, and is reflected in this
chart, that Wells and Cummings prepared and reported these calculations by different approaches; this chart reflects the
detail available from each.
21. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 20
Chart 13: Net Revenues in Kansas
Marvel Gaming Penn Sumner
Sumner
Resorts/Harrah's
Wells
Estimated Gaming Revenue 134,991,402$ 122,612,240$ 198,835,894$
Estimated Gaming Export
Estimated Gaming Import Substitution
Net or New Revenue 75,199,538$ 64,439,443$ 109,229,495$
Cummings
Estimated Gaming Revenue 130,200,000$ 123,500,000$ 174,200,000$
Estimated Gaming Export 14,900,000$ 12,400,000$ 8,200,000$
Estimated Gaming Import Substitution 47,600,000$ 42,800,000$ 50,700,000$
Net or New Revenue 62,500,000$ 55,200,000$ 58,900,000$
Average Net Revenue 68,849,769$ 59,819,722$ 84,064,748$
Net as a % of Gaming Revenue 51.0% 48.8% 42.3%
EXPORT AND IMPORT SUBSTITUTION IN KANSAS CASINOS, 2011
SOUTH CENTRAL ZONE
Wells methodology did not allow a breakdown of these values
SOURCE: Wells, Cummings, Civic Economics
22. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 21
Final Input Modifications: In order to provide fair and equitable treatment of all applicants, Civic Economics determined to run the
same model, with the same modifications, for each application. While necessary to the task at hand, this required some modest
modifications and adaptations from the data provided by the applicants.
Among these adjustments, those for employment and labor were the most challenging. IMPLAN is designed to estimate wages and
employment based on industry averages in the study jurisdiction. However, given the limited and nontraditional form of casino
gaming in Kansas currently, it was not surprising that the Local Area Data Set estimated both total employment and wages
substantially lower than what was indicated by the applicants. Upon careful analysis of the applicant submissions for both the
Southeast and South Central Zones, it became apparent that we could not confidently apply the applicants’ own values directly into
the model; the ranges were simply too extreme and belied a somewhat haphazard completion of the submission templates by some
applicants.
In order to correct for the inherently low
productivity and wage numbers in the
model, Civic Economics instead applied
the average of all four applicants for each
in worker productivity and wages, as
shown at right:
We recognize that this approach produces outcomes that indicate all operate with the same level of labor intensity. In particular, it
would appear to penalize Marvel Gaming which has made a strong case that the on-site presence of management personnel and its
significantly higher offering of table games make it a particularly labor-intensive operation. However, had we simply used the values
provided in the applications that unfairness would have been made substantially more pronounced, so we leave it to the applicants to
make that case again.
Category
Harmonized
Value
Notes
Revenue per employee 146,960$ Using an average of all casino applications
Wages per employee 33,540$ Using an average of all casino applications
APPLICANT SUBMISSION MODIFICATIONS
OPERATION ECONOMIC IMPACT ANALYSIS
23. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 22
Chart 14: Applicant Submission and Model Input
Performance Template Category IMPLAN Category Notes
Estimated gaming revenue
Other amusement, gambling, and recreation
industries
Modified first in terms of total revenue
produced as estimated by Wells' and
Cummings' reports. Also adjusted to only
account for import substitution and export
effects.
Hotel revenue Hotels and motels, inlcuding casino hotels
Modified by Probe Strategic Solutions to
represent the average revenues and
occupancy rates for the region
Food revenue Food services and drinking places
Modified to represent the same proportion
of gaming revenue the casinos presented
before the gaming revenue was modified
by Wells and Cummings
Retail revenue Miscellaneous store retailers
Modified to represent the same proportion
of gaming revenue the casinos presented
before the gaming revenue was modified
by Wells and Cummings
Other revenue Miscellaneous store retailers
Modified to represent the same proportion
of gaming revenue the casinos presented
before the gaming revenue was modified
by Wells and Cummings
APPLICANT SUBMISSION AND MODEL INPUT CORRESPONDENCE
OPERATION ECONOMIC IMPACT ANALYSIS
24. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 23
Impact Reporting
The economic impacts are comprised of three separate categories. Each category is analyzed separately from one another in
IMPLAN.
Economic Output is the total production or sales derived from the project. For this study, inputs are based upon projected
gaming and non-gaming revenues.
Employment is the total number of Kansans employed both full and part time in a given industry.
Wages is the amount of salaries and benefits paid to Kansas employees.
For each of the categories listed above a direct effect, indirect effect, and induced effect has been calculated.
Direct effects capture the initial impact created in Kansas.
Indirect effects are additional impacts derived from businesses providing products or services to the selected industries. This
can be restaurants purchasing supplies, the casino hiring a security firm, or the hotel purchasing advertising from a local radio
station. Those are all examples of indirect effects.
Induced effects are the result of increased household spending due to the direct and indirect effects. Employees of firms
directly or indirectly affected by the project are buying new cars, homes, and groceries locally and this is detailed in the
indirect effects.
25. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 24
Chart 15: Operating Impacts Summary Chart
Direct Indirect Induced Total Relative Impacts
ECONOMIC OUTPUT
Marvel Gaming 72.8$ 33.4$ 22.8$ 129.0$
Penn Sumner LLC 66.6$ 29.6$ 21.3$ 117.5$
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 95.7$ 44.2$ 29.8$ 169.7$
EMPLOYMENT
Marvel Gaming 762 292 217 1,271
Penn Sumner LLC 764 259 203 1,225
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 1,042 379 283 1,704
WAGES
Marvel Gaming 19.3$ 10.2$ 6.8$ 36.4$
Penn Sumner LLC 18.5$ 9.1$ 6.4$ 33.9$
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 25.2$ 13.3$ 8.9$ 47.4$
OPERATING IMPACTS SUMMARY, 2011
SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Total revenues associated with construction ($ Millions, 2007 Dollars)
Total workers, including full-time and part-time
Total wages paid to workers identified above ($ Millions, 2007 Dollars)
Source: Applicant Submissions, IMPLAN, Civic Economics
35. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 34
NON-GAMING COMPETITIVE IMPACTS
Civic Economics was asked to address the issue of cannibalization of existing business with regard to the non-gaming amenities at
the proposed gaming facilities.
Gaming Impact on Budgeting
Before delving into the specific amenities offered by each applicant, a note about gaming revenues is appropriate. In the discussion
of Net Economic Impact above, the significant values of Import
Substitution and Export Revenues were described and
calculated. In addition, it was suggested that the remaining
gaming revenues would represent new gaming spending in lieu
of other household spending choices. The additional gaming
spending beyond Import Substitution and Export Revenue in
the South Central Zone is as follows:
It is beyond the scope of this study to evaluate the choices Kansas residents will make in determining how to make room in the
household budget for this substantial additional gaming spending. However, it is likely that in a typical household increased gaming
spending will be diverted from other leisure and entertainment pursuits.
Non-Gaming Competition for Non-Gaming Dollars
For this analysis, Civic Economics was asked to focus on the competition between existing businesses in the area of a proposed
gaming facility and the non-gaming amenities proposed for development along with the gaming facility.
The relevant area for consideration is the Wichita MSA, including Sumner, Sedgwick, Butler, and Harvey Counties. As shown in the
chart below, the Wichita area is best characterized as more solidly middle class than the state as a whole, presumably due to the
extensive aircraft industry. As a result, though the average household income is slightly below the statewide average, the median is
somewhat above it.
Marvel Gaming 63,745,932$
Penn Sumner 63,236,399$
Sumner Resorts/Harrah's 102,453,200$
Source: Wells, Cummings, Civic Economics
NEW GAMING SPENDING BY KANSANS
SOUTH CENTRAL REGION (2007 Dollars)
36. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 35
Chart 25: South Central Zone Demographics
Population
2012 Projection 603,280 2,811,082
2007 Estimate 591,356 2,768,030
Change 11,924 43,052
2007 Households by Household Income 228,932 1,075,666
Income Less than $15,000 26,783 11.7% 132,759 12.3%
Income $15,000 - $24,999 25,762 11.3% 124,454 11.6%
Income $25,000 - $34,999 27,897 12.2% 132,106 12.3%
Income $35,000 - $49,999 39,478 17.2% 184,004 17.1%
Income $50,000 - $74,999 49,654 21.7% 222,421 20.7%
Income $75,000 - $99,999 28,618 12.5% 125,535 11.7%
Income $100,000 - $149,999 21,995 9.6% 103,031 9.6%
Income $150,000 - $249,999 6,307 2.8% 36,223 3.4%
Income $250,000 - $499,999 1,733 0.8% 10,873 1.0%
Income $500,000 and over 705 0.3% 4,260 0.4%
2007 Est. Average Household Income 59,782$ 61,115
2007 Est. Median Household Income 47,928$ 47,107
2007 Est. Per Capita Income 23,391$ 24,102
Source: Claritas
SE Zone State of Kansas
SOUTHEAST ZONE, FOUR-COUNTY DEMOGRAPHICS
2007 DATA
37. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 36
The following excerpt from Chart 12 Summarizes the
anticipated non-gaming revenue to be expected at each of
the three proposed facilities:
In the case of both food & beverage and hotel revenue
projections, it is expected that the actual out of pocket
spend by visitors will be roughly half, with the remainder
being provided as “comps” (complimentary offerings) by
the casino management. Some degree of comps are also
to be expected in retail and other revenue, as well.
Charts 26 and 27 on the following pages explore further
the current state of competitive businesses in the Wichita MSA.
The overriding fact in this analysis of regional competition is that the proposed casino sites are a substantial distance from the
population center of Wichita and its suburbs. Therefore, for a typical resident considering the evening’s dining and/or drinking
options, distance will provide a real disincentive to making casual nongaming trips down the turnpike.
By contrast, residents of either Wellington or Mulvane will face far lower obstacles to a meal or other outing at the casino. At either
site, then, local businesses in direct competition with non-gaming amenities will feel real pressure. Over time, however, the loss of
customers to casino options will be made up by the arrival of new residents seeking to live close to casino jobs. If officials in either
community are able to accommodate residential growth and protect the health of existing business districts, firms doing business
there should fare well despite the presence of a massive competitor just down the road.
Marvel Penn Sumner
Sumner
Resorts/Harrah's
Hotel Revenue 11,880,820$ 13,678,576$ 11,711,541$
Food Revenue 7,919,528$ 5,906,574$ 22,398,355$
Retail Revenue 1,049,370$ 2,681,550$ n/a
Other Revenue 3,368,416$ 3,997,593$ 2,527,714$
ADJUSTED NON-GAMING REVENUE PROJECTIONS
SOURCE: Applicant Submissions, Wells Gaming and Cummings & Assoc., Probe
Strategic Solutions, Civic Economics
REVENUE FORECASTS, 2011
SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE (IN 2007 Dollars)
38. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 37
Chart 26: Retail Supply and Demand
Among the food, beverage, and retail segments to be impacted by a new casino in Sumner County, only Limited Service Eating
Places (including fast food, buffets, etc.) face an already saturated market. It is likely, however, that a strong supply of such
restaurants reflects an unusually high local preference for fast food. More importantly, the significant driving distance from most of
the area population to the proposed sites further alleviates any concern about cannibalization here. Civic Economics visited both
Mulvane and Wellington and found it highly likely that local restaurants will face significant competition from a casino at either site.
Demand Supply Available Market
Foodservice and Drinking Places-722 777,904,314$ 821,671,023$ (43,766,709)
Full-Service Restaurants-7221 350,851,276$ 346,757,000$ 4,094,276
Limited-Service Eating Places-7222 332,573,085$ 412,086,010$ (79,512,925)
Special Foodservices-7223 64,248,591$ 40,352,010$ 23,896,581
Drinking Places -Alcoholic Beverages-7224 30,231,362$ 22,476,003$ 7,755,359
Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores-448 423,209,607$ 339,010,944$ 84,198,663
Jewelry, Luggage, Leather Goods Stores-4483 59,124,053$ 55,572,013$ 3,552,040
Book Stores and News Dealers-45121 37,153,790$ 44,308,001$ (7,154,211)
Florists-4531 18,305,757$ 11,811,983$ 6,493,774
Gift, Novelty and Souvenir Stores-45322 44,338,179$ 31,690,966$ 12,647,213
Source: Claritas
RETAIL SUPPLY AND DEMAND
SOUTH CENTRAL REGION, WICHITA MSA (2007)
39. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 38
Chart 27: County Business Patterns
The Census Bureau’s County Business Patterns database provides another look at the regional concentration of various business
types in comparison with national averages. In 2005, the most recent year for which data was available, the Wichita area was
blessed with abundant drinking places and limited service restaurants. In addition, the area is just above the national average in golf
courses and country clubs (see below) and full service restaurants.
Most significantly, the area is, by this statistical measure, underserved by amusement-oriented businesses and hotels.
Civic Economics has not attempted to measure the hotel market opportunities for proposed casinos. Despite the distance from
Wichita’s business centers, however, the proposed meeting facilities will likely compete aggressively for small meetings with the
Wichita Marriott and Hyatt Regency.
Estab-
lishments
Approximate
Employees
7224 Drinking places (alcoholic beverages) 121 1750 2.51
7222 Limited-service eating places 563 17500 2.25
71391 Golf courses & country clubs 23 750 1.24
722110 Full-service restaurants 398 9336 1.09
7112 Spectator sports 10 219 0.96
7212 RV (recreational vehicle) parks & recreational camps 6 60 0.81
713 Amusement, gambling, & recreation industries 132 1750 0.63
72111 Hotels (except casino hotels) & motels 94 1750 0.63
Source: US Census Bureau, County Business Patterns
Wichita MSA
WICHITA MSA, 2005 DATA
COUNTY BUSINESS PATTERNS FOR COMPETITIVE SECTORS
Regional Concentration
40. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PROPOSED GAMING FACILITIES, SOUTH CENTRAL GAMING ZONE
Civic Economics 39
Chart 28: Existing Daily-Fee Golf Courses
Finally, the prospect of a new and upmarket daily fee golf course at the Mulvane exit has raised some local concern. One applicant
proposes to invest in an existing municipal course to alleviate that concern, but a review of the area golf market suggests that a new
course at Harrah’s, with daily fees in the range of $50 or greater, will find little comparable competition in the region.
Course Name Holes Type Fee Location
Auburn Hills 18 Municipal 36$ 443 S 135th St W, 67235
Braeburn GC 18 Daily Fee 30$ 4201 E 21st St N 67208
Echo Hills 18 Daily Fee 32$ 800 E 53rd St N 67219
Hidden Lakes 18 Daily Fee 36$ 6020 S Greenwich Rd 67037
LW Clapp Memorial 18 Municipal 30$ 4611 E Harry St 67218
Macdonald 18 Municipal 40$ 840 N Yale Ave 67208
Pine Bay 9 Daily Fee 22$ 6615 S Grove St 67216
Sierra Hills 18 Daily Fee 27$ 13420 E Pawnee St 67230
Sim Park 18 Municipal 28$ 2020 W. Murdock 67203
Tex Colsolver 18 Municipal 40$ 1931 S. Tyler 67209
Wellington GC 18 Municipal 27$ 1500 W. Harvey Ave., 67152
Source: Golflink.com and individual course websites
WICHITA AREA DAILY-FEE GOLF COURSES