A planned casino in Prince George’s County in the US state of Maryland could have significantly more slot machines than were authorised by the state legislature when it opens in 2016.
Legislation passed last year by the General Assembly limited the size of a Prince George’s location to 3,000 slot machines. But that does not appear to be an “absolute maximum,” according to Robert T Fontaine, a lawyer from the Attorney General’s office who represents a state commission that picks Maryland casino locations.
That’s because another provision in Maryland gambling law gives the Location Commission the authority to award up to 4,750 machines to a casino if it’s in the public interest.
“It is my view that the Location Commission is not prohibited from awarding more than 3,000 machines to the Prince George’s County operation licensee,” Fontaine said.
Three companies are vying for the licence to build and operate a casino in a western swath of Prince George’s. Two of them put in bids in May for facilities with more than 3,000 slot machines, in addition to an array of Las Vegas-style table games, such as blackjack and roulette.
MGM Resorts is angling to build a casino with 3,600 slot machines adjacent to National Harbor, the 300-acre mini-city on the banks of the Potomac River. And the owners of Pennsylvania's Parx Casino have proposed an even larger facility further south in Fort Washington with the maximum 4,750 machines.
Penn National Gaming, meanwhile, has said it wants to build a 3,000-machine casino at Rosecroft Raceway, also in Fort Washington. The Location Commission has started evaluating the three proposals, with the hope of making a decision by the end of the year.
Maryland Live, the largest of the state’s four operating casinos, had a full complement of 4,750 slot machines until recently. That number decreased to 4,314 in order for the casino to make room for 122 table games in April.
Table games were authorised in the same law last year that allowed a new casino in Prince George’s. Slots were first authorised by Maryland voters in a 2008 referendum.