ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Sunday, December 8, 1996 TAG: 9612100060 SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 2 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: WICHITA, KAN. SOURCE: TRACI CARL ASSOCIATED PRESS
One out, one down and a third headed for trouble.
That's the status of greyhound and horse racing tracks in Kansas, a domino-like fall that isn't unique to the state.
Race tracks, which until recently were among the few gambling operations outside Nevada and New Jersey, are having trouble competing with state lotteries and Las Vegas-style casinos on riverboats and Indian tribal areas.
After years of having much of the gambling market to themselves, track officials are bewildered by the stiffer competition, said Jeff Ewalt, projects coordinator of the Association of Racing Commissioners International in Lexington, Ky.
``They had the only game in town,'' he said. ``Now, suddenly they are being slapped around a lot.''
In the last three years, eight of the nation's dog tracks have folded, said Stan Flint, managing coordinator of the American Greyhound Track Operators Association in North Miami, Fla. Fifty tracks, sponsoring greyhound or a combination of dog and horse racing, remain.
The vast majority of tracks, he said, are competing with the upstarts in the gambling world, riverboat casinos and games of chance operated by Indian tribes.
In Kansas, the last of the state's race tracks to open - Camptown Racetrack in Frontenac - was the first to fold. It began greyhound racing in May 1995, then closed less than seven months later after reporting losses of $250,000 a month.
The Woodlands horse and dog racing complex in Kansas City, Kan., just minutes away from several riverboat casinos in Kansas City, Mo., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in May.
The track's attendance and cash flow are the same as a year ago, said Derrick Reicheneker, director of public affairs and marketing at The Woodlands. But both, he said, are down about 50 percent from the days before riverboat gambling opened nearby.
Bankruptcy protection will keep creditors away until June, when, he said, ``you are back to a crisis.''
Adding to the state's race track woes, Wichita Greyhound Park, the third major race track, is expecting its first loss in the seven years it has been open.
Competition from the state lottery system, along with Indian casinos in northeast Kansas and riverboat gambling in northwest Missouri, are taking a toll, said Roy Berger, executive vice president and chief executive officer of the Wichita Greyhound Park.
Attendance this year is off 22 percent from last year. The track's handle, or the amount bet, has fallen 15 percent since last year. Officials project an overall loss of $500,000 or more this year.
Track officials recently won permission from the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission to expand their simulcasting so bettors in Wichita can wager on races elsewhere in the country. Officials hope that will boost operations.
Even though riverboat and Indian casinos are about a three-hour drive from Wichita, Berger said gamblers are willing to make the long trip, drawing customers away from the track.
To try to compete with the new casinos, track officials want the Kansas Legislature to permit slot machines at the three tracks. Legislators have repeatedly refused to do so, but track officials plan to press their case again when the legislative session begins in early January.
The tracks doing well in the new, more competitive market are those that have been allowed to add casino-style gambling, said Flint of the greyhound track association.
``The bottom line is that when parimutuel [horse and dog] racing started in Kansas in 1989, it was just us and the lottery,'' Berger said.
``If anyone had known what we do now, there would not have been one dime put into parimutuel racing in Kansas,'' he added.
LENGTH: Medium: 77 lines ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO: AP. Donna McKenney (left) and Leroy Roads of Wellington,by CNBKan., are surrounded by empty seats at a greyhound park in Wichita
on a recent night.