buildup
Senior Member
aklay: What would be examples of crimes inside a casino?
If you believe that casinos cause negative effects to communities (I don't), then, basically, by saying 'no' to a casino downtown, you are willing to shunt those problems onto somebody else.
As good a working definition of Nimbyism as ever I've heard. Meaning it's utterly commonplace.
My final point in this matter is that casinos already exist in Ontario and a casino is coming to somewhere in the GTA, whether we like it or not. If you believe that casinos cause negative effects to communities (I don't), then, basically, by saying 'no' to a casino downtown, you are willing to shunt those problems onto somebody else.
Agreed... and if we are going to get a casino it belongs in this part of downtown where it is accessible to tourists and away from any established neighbourhood (relatively speaking).
We're talking about the area immediately adjacent to the CN Tower/Convention Centre/Aquarium. There is already enormous tourist infrastructure here with lots of hotels etc. You can't live in or near this precinct and expect that any and all future development will be halted unless approved by you. Again, this is crass nimbyism at its worst.
... and it doesn't help your case to mince words about what constitutes an established neighbourhood. You know very well what is meant by this. This area though is zoned mixed-use/commercial and is prime for the very type of development being proposed, casino or no.
I still have yet to see evidence that violent crime - the kind that affects innocent bystanders and lowers property values - rises significantly in neighbourhoods after a casino opens. Not crime perpetrated inside a casino, but out on the streets.
The Melbourne example cited doesn't suggest anything about crime rising in downtown Melbourne, as a whole, following the opening of the casino.
My final point in this matter is that casinos already exist in Ontario and a casino is coming to somewhere in the GTA, whether we like it or not. If you believe that casinos cause negative effects to communities (I don't), then, basically, by saying 'no' to a casino downtown, you are willing to shunt those problems onto somebody else.
Agreed... and if we are going to get a casino it belongs in this part of downtown where it is accessible to tourists and away from any established neighbourhood (relatively speaking).
We're talking about the area immediately adjacent to the CN Tower/Convention Centre/Aquarium. There is already enormous tourist infrastructure here with lots of hotels etc. You can't live in or near this precinct and expect that any and all future development will be halted unless approved by you. Again, this is crass nimbyism at its worst.
... and it doesn't help your case to mince words about what constitutes an established neighbourhood. You know very well what is meant by this. This area though is zoned mixed-use/commercial and is prime for the very type of development being proposed, casino or no.