What happens when a city stakes its future on gambling? This is a question that New Yorkers should be asking with the Big Apple poised to open three casinos, two in Queens and one in the Bronx. The first casino is expected to open in the spring. It’s also a question I remember circulating around my much smaller hometown of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. In 2007, my senior year of high school, the city council voted by a one-vote margin to allow a Sands Casino, or what at the time was the Sands Casino (it has since been sold).
I remember driving home for Christmas a few years later from college to see the giant, garish, Fitzgeraldian Sands sign adorning a large crane on the dead factory where my grandfathers and great-grandparents had worked. I remember thinking that something had been desecrated in the name of economic growth and tax revenue. A decade and a half later, Bethlehem — one of the oldest communities in the United States — has not been significantly improved by the meagre financial runoff from the casino. It has been sold to different conglomerates several times after Sands initially moved in and then discovered that it was not nearly as profitable as had been hoped.
The only meaningful improvement I could identify in the town is a nature trail that the casino funded on the opposite side of the Lehigh River as part of its initial agreement with the city. What I have noticed, conversely, is a pointlessness and tackiness to all the development that has grown up around the casino. It also stuck with me that the city has continued to cut down old trees and knock down old buildings and homes, and that year by year something of its character has been lost. This is to say nothing of the general degeneracy that the casino attracts and the prostitution which is rampant in the hotel complexes attached to the casino.
New York City is a far more complex organism than Bethlehem, but no less delicate. On the one hand, the New York casinos will likely kill much of the business of Pennsylvania’s casinos in places like Bethlehem, so that might be a good thing for Pennsylvanians. But the expansion of gambling in New York signals a full-on conversion of the city’s economy from a productive one to a purely symbolic vapour economy, in which the city itself is a shell for transactions between the rich and the desperate in equal turn.
The casinos will be pitched as an easy and productive way of redeeming fallow land, just as they were in Bethlehem. But as with the case of my hometown, the practical, economic and spiritual counterpoint remains unstated. Namely, isn’t there a better way to use fallow land, and isn’t there a better way to imagine — or not to imagine, but to incentivise economic activity? What the Faustian bargain with casinos really points to is that city planners and developers can’t or won’t incentivise gainful forms of employment and productivity.
According to the New York Times, Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is sceptical but non-committal about the casinos. Given the themes of his campaign, however, he ought to be more sceptical, as casinos tend to siphon revenue from the outer-borough working class, while feeding addiction. It’s surprising that the casinos were not a larger target in his campaign, except for the fact that they’re a preferred mechanism for raising revenue among technocratic, centrist Democrats at the state level. What can’t be discounted is that casinos are popular with ordinary people before they actually experience the deleterious effects brought upon their neighbourhoods.



