Pa. slot machine revenue up slightly in April

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - May 2, 2012

The state's 11 casinos brought in $214.1 million in gross revenue last month, up 1.3 percent from the same period the year before, according to Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board figures released Wednesday.

Those figures, however, include the first full month of revenue from Valley Forge Casino Resort, which opened March 31. Without that revenue, the money generated by existing casinos actually fell 0.6 percent from the same period the year before. The only other times that has happened were in October 2011 (down 0.1 percent) and January 2011 (down 3.7 percent), with the latter decline blamed on weather.

"One month never makes a trend," gaming board spokesman Richard McGarvey said. "Revenue goes up, goes down."

McGarvey noted that April 2011 had five Fridays and five Saturdays - days that tend to produce the highest revenue - while last month there were only four of each.

One casino that has been seeing repeated declines is Harrah's Chester Casino and Racetrack, just outside Philadelphia. For the latest period, revenue at that casino - which opened in January 2007 - was down 7.6 percent. Several other casinos also saw declines for the period, including Hollywood casino near Harrisburg (down 5.6 percent) and Presque Isle Downs and Casino in Erie (down 6.6 percent).

Meanwhile, the state's second-newest casino, Sugarhouse Casino in Philadelphia, continued to show gains, with 7.5 percent growth last month from the year before.

Last month, the casinos set an all-time monthly high with $233.1 million in gross revenue, the most for a period since the state's first casino opened in November 2006. Pennsylvania recently passed Atlantic City as the nation's second-largest gambling market behind Las Vegas.

The state taxes casino revenue and uses it to support the state budget, public schools, civic development projects, volunteer firefighting squads, local governments and the horse racing industry.

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