Jackson, Mississippi casino proposal dies in legislative committee

Mississippi House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Trey Lamar said Tuesday that he will not pursue legislation allowing a casino to open in Jackson.

Mississippi House Ways and Means Committee members review legislation during a committee meeting at the Mississippi Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, March 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Rep. Robert Johnson of Natchez, the House Democratic leader, said a Jackson gambling site would hurt casinos along the Mississippi River, including in his hometown.

"The coast may survive it," Johnson said. "But there's no way anybody else could survive it."

The first casinos opened in Mississippi in 1992. The state Gaming Commission site shows that 12 state-licensed casinos operate on the Gulf Coast, and 14 operate along the Mississippi River. The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians also operates three casinos that are not regulated by the state — two near Philadelphia and one near Laurel.

Lamar’s bill specified that a Jackson casino would be owned by at least one person who already owns a licensed casino. The closest casinos to downtown Jackson are about 48 miles to the west, along the Mississippi River in Vicksburg.

Two Vicksburg lawmakers — Democratic Rep. Oscar Denton and Republican Rep. Kevin Ford — said opening a Jackson casino would hurt their city. More than 1,100 people work in the four Vicksburg casinos and connected hotels.

"It would've been devastating to us," Denton said.

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Mississippi originally specified that casinos could be developed only over water. After Hurricane Katrina blew some of the massive casino barges onto land along the coast in 2005, legislators changed the law to allow casinos to develop a short distance on shore.

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