NATIONJ/IORLD- #Niagara looks to ,win big NIAGARA FALLS, Ontario (AP) - Its front door just 100 yards from the U.S. border, Casino Niagara opens today a, lid expectations it will rake in more money than any Las Vegas gaming hall. Predictions of 9,000 new jobs and more visitors to a city already flush with tourism have Canadian officials crowing about the four-story, $118 mil- lion casino, created out of a flagging shopping mall. On the American side of the falls, however, politicians, academics, clergy and business leaders are wary of their new neighbor. Although some antici- pate beneficial spinoffs, many are brac- ing for another blow to a local economy where growth must be detected with a magnifying glass, "I see these casinos as giant, money-sucking machines," said the Rev. Patrick Warren, a Presbyterian minister and chair of a grass-roots group called Citizens Concerned About Casinos in Niagara Falls, N.Y. "Every dollar put in a slot machine is a dollar not spent at a restaurant or a bowling alley." There's little doubt the casino's biggest winner will be its owner, the Ontario provincial government. Through its Ontario Casino Corp., the Oovernment will collect a 20-percent tax on up-front earnings, then take all prof- its beyond expenses and the cut given to the Navegante Group, the Las Vegas- based operating company. Navegante's share will include a percentage of the games and depend dn the number of vis- itors and total casino revenue. Dominic Alfieri, president of Ontario Casino Corp., estimates it will total $4.4 million to $7.4 million the first year. The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 9, 1996 - 7A Sec. of Treasury calls inflation figures inaccurate The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Clinton admin- istration officials and congressional Republicans yesterday endorsed a Senate advisory panel's conclusions that government statistics overstate inflation, opening the door to a discus- sion that could lead to lower cost-of-liv- ing adjustments for federal benefit pro- grams and boost prospects for a bal- anced budget deal. Appearing yesterday on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press," Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin praised the work of the commission of five economists led by former Bush adviser Michael Boskin. Rubin said the commission's report had helped highlight widely recognized AP PHOTO Niagara Falls Mayor Wayne Thomson checks out a slot machine at the new $118 million facility in Niagara Falls, Canada. The complex Is scheduled to open its doors to the public today. sary to balance the budget by 2002, the zero-deficit target year. Still, having expressed a tentative, mutual willingness to explore fixing the CPI, politicians from both camps yesterday said they had few ideas about how that effort should proceed. "OK, so now we both say they aren't going to attack each other on this," a senior White House aide said yester- day. "The big question now is. 'What's the next step?' " One thing congressional leaders and the White House seemed to agree on was the need to counter perceptions that they see tinkering with the CPI as a fis- cal "quick fix" that spares them from making tough tax and spending choices to balance the budget. "This should not be approached as a budget issue," Senate Budget ould mnot Committee Chair Pete ched as Domenici (R- N.M.), said on Ssl, ue"Late Edition." "What we all ete Domenici need is a CPI R-N.M. that reflects inflation as accu- rately as possi- At least one official is so confident of Casino Niagara's success he's made a private wager. Navegante president Larry Woolf has told Alfieri that if Casino Niagara fails to equal the gross revenue produced by any single Las Vegas casino, he'll give Wayne Thomson, mayor of Canada's Niagara Falls, says the casino is trigger- ing major economic growth. Casino and construction jobs are plentiful, hotels are expanding and companies are lining up to create new tourist attractions, he said. With t o u r i s m Alfieri his expensive wrist- watch. "I don't itI see these expect to be casinos winning that watch." Alfieri moneys) said. Experts say m chine Alfieri may be right. If Casino - The Rev Niagara makes Ga; as much as pre- dicted, about $480 million a year, it will be on the same scale as Las Vegas resorts such as the MGM Grand Hotel and the Mirage. as giant, iucking~ g, becoming a year-round industry, the number of visi- tors may increase from 12 million to as many as 20 million, he pre- Some leaders in western New York share Thomson's upbeat outlook. Jo Fisher, president of the Niagara Falls, N.Y., Visitors and Convention Bureau, said the casino would prove a major attraction on both sides of the border. Convention bookings are up to 57 from 41 at this time last year, she noted. Twenty miles to the south, however, Buffalo Mayor Anthony Masiello is more skeptical. He cites Casino Windsor, which Ontario opened just across from Detroit in 1994. Eighty per- cent of that casino's patrons come from the United States. "A lot of the money came over the bridge from Detroit to the casino in Windsor, and a lot of the problems went back over the bridge to Detroit," Masiello asserted. Academics who have studied other casinos say Masiello's fears are well- founded. inadequacies in index, the mea- sure used to adjust federal benefit pay- ments and income tax rates to offset infla- tion. R u b i n promised that White House e c o n o m i s t s the consumer price "This S be approm a budgeti - Sen. P+ . imi Patrick Warren dicted. bling opponent "I can't think of anything else that would have stimulated this kind of interest, this kind of development, the kind of optimistic spirit that exists in the city today," Thomson said. SEMESTER $29 SPRING BREAK PACKAGE. SPRING BREAK '97 headquarters! Fun & BREAK WORK Boardwalk Beach Resort - Panama City's sun in Florida tropics. Biggest pool deck and Starting pay rate: Spring Break headquarters. Only $29 per best parties. Deluxe room from only $75 (4-5 $10.25 person. Restrictions apply 1-800-224-4853. students per room). For information call $AAA! Cancun & Jamaica Spring Break Desert Inn Resort, Daytona Beach, Florida. e full & part time openings S ecials! 7 Nights Air & Hotel From $399! 800/826-1711. would work closely with outside experts in figuring out how to fix the index. "I think Boskin had it exactly right," Rubin said. "He's put out the report and now we have to let the experts digest that report and get a sense of whether there is a broad-based agreement around the country on changes that should be made." On CNN's "Late Edition," White House budget director Franklin Raines said the administration would work with Congress to study the Boskin commission's recommendations in an "expeditious way." Republican leaders called those sen- timents constructive, but reiterated warnings that they would make no move to revise the CPI unless the administration takes the lead. "The ball's in the president's hands," said House Budget Committee Chair John .Kasich (R- Ohio), who followed Rubin on NBC. "If he wants to make the CPI more accurate, Republicans will be there to support him. But if he doesn't want to do it, we're going to probably be out there criticizing him for not wanting to get this right. But we're just not going to walk out there by ourselves." In its report to the Senate Finance Committee last week, the Boskin com- mission estimated that the CPI exagger- ates yearly inflation by 1.1 percentage points. Correcting an error of that size could reduce by hundreds of billions of dollars the total spending cuts neces- ble," Rubin said. In their other comments, however, Clinton officials and GOP leaders yes- terday hinted at how difficult it may prove to reach a budget agreement without the help of a CPI correction. For example, Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.), and Kasich said any budget plan should include a reduction in the tax rate on capital gains-profit from the sale of assets. Rubin said a capital gains cut "would not be a priority that I or, much more importantly, the president would have," although he said the subject was likely to be "one of the items that we will have to have in our ultimate negotiations." Separately, Lott, speaking on "Fox News Sunday," chided Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan for ques- tioning in a speech last week whether bullish sentiment on Wall Street has gotten out of hand - a remark that triggered a decline in stock prices. "You know, I've always been a little nervous about the Fed, quite frankly," Lott said. "I try not to be a Fed-basher, but I sometimes think they focus too much on one side of the equation, rather than a broader basket of things. And I'm a little nervous about the degree of independence they have." Lott also said, "I think interest rates should be lower, even than what they -are, certainly." 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