CASINO DECLINE | Showboat closes after 27 years in Atlantic City

Demonstrators hold a rally at an Atlantic City, N.J. park before marching on the Boardwalk to protest the closing of the Showboat Casino Hotel

Demonstrators hold a rally at an Atlantic City, N.J. park before marching on the Boardwalk to protest the closing of the Showboat Casino Hotel

The show is over for the Showboat Casino Hotel in Atlantic City.
The Mardi Gras-themed casino shut down Sunday after 27 years on the Boardwalk. It was one of three casinos closing within the next two weeks as Atlantic City deals with the impact of increasing competition from casinos in neighboring states. Revel was to begin a two-day closing yesterday, and Trump Plaza is closing Sept. 16.
Atlantic City began the year with 12 casinos, but before summer is over it will be down to eight. Nearly 8,000 casino workers will have lost their jobs.
One of the final songs piped in over the Showboat’s loudspeakers: Queen’s “Another One Bites The Dust.”
“We’re all feeling a little betrayed,” Showboat cook Curtis Wade said. “We’re all walking around in a fog today. We worked really hard to try to keep it operating, and we’re still profitable. We still don’t understand why we were the one targeted to close, and nobody has given us an answer on that. There are too many jobs being pushed out of Atlantic City due to corporate greed.”
Wade will be among the thousands of workers showing up at the Atlantic City Convention Center tomorrow for a mass unemployment filing.
The Showboat’s owner, Caesars Entertainment, closed the still-profitable casino to reduce the number of casinos in Atlantic City, which has been struggling with plunging revenue and increased competition in the saturated northeastern U.S. casino market.
The Showboat stopped admitting new customers at 3 p.m. Sunday. At 4 p.m., security guards emerged to tape to the glass doors paper signs that read, “Closed.”
Inside the casino, recordings urged customers to patronize Caesars Entertainment’s three remaining casinos in Atlantic City: Caesars, Harrah’s and Bally’s.
Caesars Entertainment CEO Gary Loveman wrote in a letter to employees that the Showboat has been in business in Atlantic City for 27 years and Caesars was proud to operate it for 16 of those years.
“I want to thank the Showboat Atlantic City team for their dedication, professionalism, and commitment to our guests — both throughout the years and especially over the past several weeks,” he wrote.
Ruth Ann Joyce, who worked at Showboat as a bartender since the day it opened on March 30, 1987, was bitter on its last day.
“For 36 years (Atlantic City’s casinos) were the cash cow,” she said. “Now you’re just going to kick us to the curb?”
She urged potential buyers to take a chance on the Showboat — as long as Caesars doesn’t put the same kind of deed restriction prohibiting a new owner from running it as a casino as it has with two recent sales of former casino properties.
Outside the Showboat, a security guard who had been preventing would-be customers from entering was greeted by a longtime customer who came to say goodbye and ask how the guard was doing.
“I got a job at ShopRite,” the guard replied.
More than 470 of the Showboat’s 2,000-plus workers are transferring to other casinos the company owns in New Jersey or in other states.
The Showboat was designed as a New Orleans-style riverboat casino with a Mardi Gras theme. It even had a bowling alley for visitors who needed a break from the slot machines and table games.
Kurt Williams, of Seaville, was a young boy when his family took him to the Showboat soon after it opened.
“There was a fun vibe to the Showboat, especially for a wide-eyed young kid like me at the time, and it was the only resort in town that had a bowling alley,” he said. “It’s really a shame all these resorts are going belly up, and I feel awful for the surrounding communities and the families it will affect.” AP

Wayne Parry, Atlantic City
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