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Christie Vetoes Bills That Would Help Struggling Atlantic City, Casino Industry

TRENTON, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on Monday vetoed most of a package of bills aimed at helping Atlantic City and its struggling casino industry.

He further proposed that the state hold $30 million a year in casino tax payments hostage until after the city passes a fiscal recovery plan.

The key bill would have let the eight casinos make payments in lieu of taxes for 15 years, allowing them to know exactly how much they owe instead of facing huge potential increases each year.

Instead, Christie would have $30 million of that money go to the state in each of tax years 2015 and 2016. The state would hold onto it until after Atlantic City passes a fiscal recovery plan the state deems acceptable.

``I am concerned that the bills, in their present form, fail to recognize the true path to economic revitalization and fiscal stability in the city,'' said Christie, also a Republican presidential candidate. ``While these bills represent the bipartisan efforts of many to provide important, near-term support to the city's immediate challenges, I do not believe they meet the goal of setting a course toward renewed, long-term prosperity and economic growth. To achieve these goals, we must continue our work and go further to ensure that the next step leads to that economically vibrant future for Atlantic City.''

Other measures in the five-bill package would have mandated employee benefits for casino workers, diverted alternate investment taxes the casinos now pay and directed that money toward helping reduce Atlantic City's debt, and eliminated the Atlantic City Alliance and use its $30 million annual marketing budget for other ways to help the city.

The only bill he signed was one that approves additional school aid for the city.

The Casino Association of New Jersey said the bills were ``vital'' to Atlantic City's future.

``Every day that passes jeopardizes the financial stability this legislation would achieve, and also threatens not only our employees but also non-casino Atlantic City businesses as well as residents and taxpayers across the county,'' the association said in a statement.

State Senate President Steve Sweeney (D-West Deptford/Salem) blasted the governor for delaying action on the package of bills, which the Legislature passed in June.

``I am extremely disappointed in the governor's failure to enact the package of bills to aid Atlantic City's financial recovery, and I am concerned by the time that was wasted since the plan was put on his desk close to six months ago,'' he said. ``Critical time has been lost to Atlantic City and to south Jersey's economy, leaving tens of thousands of people in continued financial peril.''

The package grew out of a devastating 2014 in Atlantic City in which four of its 12 casinos went out of business. Christie convened a series of summits on the city's future, and some of the measures included in the package arose in part from those talks.

The bill that would have allowed casinos to make payments in lieu of taxes was seen as a way to help stabilize the casinos' finances and prohibit them from filing tax appeals each year challenging their assessments. Such moves were almost always won by the casinos as the city's gambling market declined and they were able to prove to a tax court that their property was worth less than just a few years earlier. Those appeals have blown huge holes in the city's budget in recent years.

The school aid bill was designed to help replace state education aid that is based on the value of property in the city.

(TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2015 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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