Gilley says Country Crossing facing crossroads
Published: January 3, 2009
Updated: January 4, 2009
Investors have made developer Ronnie Gilley an offer he wants to refuse – to move Country Crossing to casino-friendly Mississippi.
Gilley says he’s committed to keeping the project in Houston County, but investors are nervous about a recent anti-gambling task force created by Gov. Bob Riley.
“We’re 100 percent committed to Houston County,” Gilley said in an exclusive interview with the Eagle Saturday. “There’s no intent of moving the project.”
However, Gilley is leaving his options out there on the table since Riley called a press conference last Monday to announce the creation of an anti-gambling task force, as a response to a recent increase in bingo halls which house casino-like electronic slot machines that are forbidden under state law.
Many entertainment establishments assert their machines are legal under local charity bingo amendments, but the state Supreme Court ruled two years ago that slot machines and slot-like machines are banned by the state Constitution. Questions have arisen regarding the legality of electronic bingo machines and whether local amendments that allow paper bingo apply to electronic bingo. Electronic bingo differs from electronic slot machines in that bingo players compete against one another, where slots players compete against the house.
Some more recent Country Crossing investors reacted to Riley’s announcement by pulling their support, but Gilley said the initial investors remain committed to do the project – regardless of where it has to go.
“I’ve got partners who are furious (with the governor’s action),” he said. “Nothing more could have been done before we started (this project), to clarify state law on bingo. The Attorney Generals’ opinions are clear. We are operating within the parameters of what the Constitution allows.”
The Mississippi offer came from gaming and real estate investor Rick Carter, a Dothan native. Carter said he had considered investing in the Country Crossing project in Dothan, but reconsidered after Riley’s announcement of the task force.
“He’s (Riley) destroying the economic development of Dothan, Alabama, and that’s a sad thing,“ Carter said.
Carter said he has offered to let Gilley develop Country Crossing on property he owns adjacent to a casino in Mississippi or on other property in the state. Gilley identified the casino as the Island View Casino Resort in Gulfport.
Gilley has said he is confident in the legality of electronic bingo in Houston County, and he would like clarification of the governor’s intent.
“If his (Riley’s) intention is to close illegal operations in the state of Alabama –- great,“ Gilley said. “There’s an abundance of illegal operations now. If his intent is to close down electronic bingo, there’s plenty of court cases declaring electronic bingo legal.“
Gilley has already made a major commitment to bringing Country Crossing to Houston County. In October, he bought 375 acres off Highway 231 South at a price of $19.84 million, or about $53,000 per acre.
He estimated the current investment in the project is around $45 million, and said George Jones, a recent Kennedy Center honoree, is committed to building a $9 million Possum Holler dinner theatre.
“What the governor has done, it’s like someone saying they are going to put in a $70 million resort hotel and halfway into construction, the governor says resort hotels are illegal. People may think that’s not a good comparison, but comparing bingo and crystal meth is not a good comparison either.”
After Gilley announced the project last February, a group of loca ministers, mainly Baptist, and area businessmen, came out in opposition to the electronic bingo component, saying it would bring crime and addiction into the community. A number of those business interests are staunch Republicans and considered Riley supporters who usually push for more economic development in the state.
The Country Crossing project is primarily an entertainment venue, but Gilley said the only way the project is doable financially is alongside a funding mechanism like electronic charitable bingo.
“The reality of it is that the entertainment component of it is going to suffer for three to five years,“ Gilley said. “After three to five years, entertainment will outpace the bingo. You have to have a build-up stage. No one’s going to speculate on entertainment in the existing environment.“
The Country Crossing project has been touted as a potential economic powerhouse for Houston County that could provide more than 1,000 jobs and millions of dollars in tax revenue and donations to charity from bingo proceeds. Gilley has pledged a minimum of $2 million in bingo proceeds will go to charities each year.
Gilley said it will go – somewhere.
“The people in Mississippi have followed this project from the beginning. This project would work in the Panhandle of Florida where there has been an offer to give us land. It would work on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi,” he said.
Gilley said he has also been contacted by gambling interests in south Florida and in Kansas City, regarding locating Country Crossing there.
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Reader Reactions
To daphne: Thank you and I do understand.I have a son and a beautiful 5 year old granddarling for whom I have the same concerns. To RONNIE GILLEY: I had the pleasure of delivering building supplies for almost 3 years, until the building suppy company I worked for closed in March, 2005, to your jobsites,office and even your home. I admire your visions both in the Enterprise area and Dothan. You are a class act in my book and I hope all these “bumps in the road” are ironed out soon and Country Crossing can be a reality for our area.
thank you boggy…I am very grateful and I think you may understand my position. I just want more for my children. I want more opportunities, more options, more security than hotels and restaurants have provided so far. I’m very proud of the work I do. Nothing is nicer than the “Thank you so much” that you get from someone wanting an extra pillow or blanket. I know its not much, but its always appreciated. I’m not yet 50 (33 years young), but hang in there. Personally, I found casino work horrible. With business travellers you get the occasional trashed room. In the casino hotels..the rooms are more often trashed and downright nasty than not. Just my opinion, but that’s one reason why the CC service jobs are not appealing to me. Good luck to you
Daphne…
There are alot of terms used abroad that are not suitable here! Schlep as a slang in OUR culture is derogatory in the sense it refers to lower class!
It sucks that you don’t like your job, but don’t demean others that might enjoy the same kind of work you define as “schlepping”. If you don’t like your job or the pay then quit! Find another job that you enjoy and don’t come crying to message boards trying to prove your point by attempting to achieve sympathy!
As for william:
Go Lions!! haha… Even though I don’t live in Dothan anymore, I DO hope to invest there in 10, maybe 15 years, so I do keep up with the growth of the city! haha… it IS my hometown! So initials C.H.? Give me a first name! haha
Daphne….we all want a better life for our children. But unless we experience a dramatic change in this region those opportunities are going to be few and far between. This project will bring about change in a dramatic way. It will be much more than serving fries and colas I can assure you. There will be true opportunity for everyone in a multitude of arenas.
As far as the beach project…. we have a developers service agreement for the project. We are not the investor. However, we did break ground. Infact we completed the infrastructure, with the exception of asphalt, early last year. But, just as many other projects on the gulf-coast, we are in a sit and hold position until the real eastate market recovers somewhat. It is a speculative condo development. Nothing like Country Crossing. I’m sure you can understand the hold position as you seem to be very intelligent.
I wish you and your family the very best and good luck on that college fund. I know the sting associated with that.
epriseguy….hahaha. You just don’t get it do you? I’m sorry hang in there it’ll get better. Stop by the office anytime and I’ll be glad to share our books with you and whoever else you’d like to bring. We have nothing to hide. Oh I forgot…we’ve already had an encounter. Hope you get over it one day. Hopefully you can come to the Grand Opening of Country Crossing.
“Daphne”, be thankful you have 2 jobs. There are thousands of people out of work in the Wiregrass area, many more to come, who can’t find employment in this economy. I’ve been unemployed since April 3. 2008, and over 50…....starting over from scratch. Cry me a river.
Daphne, I have made bad investments, wrong decisions in my life. How many wrong decisions or investment not necessarily monetary have lost to your investment if nothing but time. Not every developement is going to work. A railcar company that has just opened in North Alabama has a sister company in Paragould Arkansas, they have not even finished the complete installatation yet they are talking of holding off opening it for six months.
Country Crossings has been going full steam ahead even with all the legal chaleenges, political chaos, and even people who for there own reason like you oppse such. Yet Mr. Gilley and company keep fighting no matter what. Unlike Mr. Clark that is mentioned in the article Mr. Gilley is trying to keep the project at home. Wouldn’t it be nice for the Wiregrass or Dothan to be known by something other than the “the town with the circle going to Panama City.“ ?
sorry twes…I beg to differ, didn’t really want to get into this but I too am in the service industry. I “schlep”, clean towels, sheets pillows and blankets to tired travelers every day. I “schlep” empty beer cans and peanut hulls to my trash cart and eventually the dumpster each day. No, I am not from israel, but my husband’s family is. If it’s ok with him to call it “schlep-ing” I feel ok using the term. But to get back to the point, as a lady who holds down two jobs, “schlep-ing” all kinds of things, I do hope that CC will offer me the kind of salary that will allow me to quit one job and be able to put back college money for my children and have more than 3 hrs a day with them. No, mine is not a life I would wish for my children, I work very hard for very little, but at the end of the day, I know my children will do better than me. I just want them to have more options than I do. If that makes me an idiot…so be it.
Preach it WesStyle! From one one of your old pals from C-Town.
C.H.
Sounds like “daphne” has led a sheltered, and most likely pampered, life and like most people, it seems, in Dothan, can’t see the forest for the trees. I’d even wager that she voted for Riley. The way she tries to support her opinion with misinformation or misdirection leads me to believe that she is also Southern Baptist.
And to back up honeybunches…
Usage of the word schlep to decribe the actions necessary of those in service industry is derogatory! In Yiddish it means a hard, long journey… so unless you are in Israel refrain from using a term that refers to the lower class when in fact many food service workers are in the middle class and some (at a lesser percentage) make more than those with a masters… and even MORE (at a much smaller percentage) make 6 or 7 figures!!!


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