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Meadowlands Casino Back on the Drawing Board

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

East Rutherford NJ, amid the momentum for a new casino in New York City in the coming years, the notion of a casino in the Meadowlands appears increasingly plausible. Jeff Gural, the owner of Meadowlands Racetrack in East Rutherford, is eyeing a revival of the idea, with an estimated price tag of up to $2 billion.

Continue reading Meadowlands Casino Back on the Drawing Board

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Xanadu Still Nothing More than and Eyesore

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Men Not at Work at Troubled Mall Development

Feb 2, 2017 · by Ilya Marritz

The half-built American Dream mall in New Jersey’s Meadowlands has yet again missed a target date to secure construction financing, raising fresh questions about the developer’s ability to complete the project.

On December 8th, developer Don Ghermezian told WNYC all the money is teed up  — nearly $2.7 billion dollars to complete work on the 90-acre mall near Met Life Stadium. The money is to be raised through tax-free municipal bonds and through private borrowing.

“I anticipate that prior to the Christmas holiday the public will know fully about the commitment on the financing,” Ghermezian said.

But Christmas came and went. Then a company spokesman said early January was more likely. Now it’s February, and there’s still no news of how the Ghermezians’ company, Triple Five, will pay to make a retail and entertainment pleasure dome out of the eyesore on state-owned land next to the New Jersey Turnpike.

https://www.wnyc.org/story/men-not-work-troubled-mall-development/

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After years of Squandering Billions Identity crisis for NJ sports authority

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 “Jim” McGreevey’s Xanadu 

After years of Squandering Billions Identity crisis for NJ sports authority

JUNE 28, 2014, 11:48 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 2014, 11:51 PM
BY JOHN BRENNAN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

With its finances in the red and its role sharply curtailed, questions are being raised about the long-term future of the agency that put New Jersey on the map of big-time sports.

But no matter what its fate, the hard truth is that the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, which once netted tens of millions of dollars annually from The Meadowlands Racetrack and Giants Stadium, will likely be a lingering financial liability for state taxpayers.

A series of decisions by officials over time have left it marooned, with significant structural costs and little means to pay for them other than dipping into the state treasury. The agency continues along, its prime attractions now in private hands, sagging under obligations undertaken during more flush times and with a payroll that — while pared significantly — still includes executives with some of the highest salaries in state government.

“There are certain obligations entered into by prior administrations that we’re going to be living with for the next 25 years,” said Wayne Hasenbalg, who makes $225,000 as president of the authority. “Some of these costs we inherited — even if the authority went away today — are still going to be somebody’s obligations.”

Among those obligations are long-term pension costs for retired workers, more than $6 million in annual payments due to East Rutherford as the host town of the Meadowlands Sports Complex and $4 million per year toward operating costs of the state Racing Commission.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/identity-crisis-for-nj-sports-authority-1.1043202#sthash.Ddvgl4c0.dpuf