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Gaming board postpones vote on revoking Foxwoods license

HARRISBURG - For enforcement lawyers with the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board, the Foxwoods Casino project in South Philadelphia should be judged on what it is today: broke and overdue.

HARRISBURG - For enforcement lawyers with the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board, the Foxwoods Casino project in South Philadelphia should be judged on what it is today: broke and overdue.

"Here's the bottom line," said Dale Miller, the board's deputy chief enforcement counsel. "There's a vacant lot on Columbus Boulevard that doesn't have a casino on it."

But Stephen A. Cozen, a lawyer representing Foxwoods, urged the seven commissioners to focus on what the project could become: a thriving partnership with Harrah's Entertainment Inc., open for business in 20 months.

Local investors have "the wherewithal to continue operating and secure financing, and the development skills to complete the project," Cozen said.

After more than two hours of testimony Wednesday on whether to revoke the Foxwoods license or give partners more time to make a casino materialize, the board opted to postpone a decision until its next meeting, Nov. 18.

Gaming board chairman Gregory Fajt acknowledged that the Foxwoods partners had a new plan in the works. But he added, "We're not going to stall the revocation process based on a plan we know nothing about."

On Tuesday, the original Foxwoods group - called Philadelphia Entertainment and Development Partners (PEDP) - announced that it was teaming up with Harrah's to finance, build, and operate a casino on Columbus Boulevard, between Tasker and Reed Streets.

Since April, lawyers representing the board have contended the project was financially unfit and unable to meet the terms of its existing license: to have 1,500 slot machines operational by May 29, 2011.

"They absolutely can't do it," Miller said at the Wednesday hearing.

But Cozen said state law allowed the investor group to file for an extension until Dec. 31, 2012.