Billionaire Owner Steve Cohen Strikes Out as Jessica Ramos Delivers Casino Slider.
With the end of this year’s legislative session looming, so too did the self-imposed deadline that Queens State Senator Jessica Ramos set for herself to decide on whether to let Mets owner and totally-not-a-financial-criminal Steve Cohen build a casino on what’s currently technically parkland (but is, in practice, the Citi Field parking lot in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park).
On Tuesday, Ramos delivered a slider, high and tight, that not only brushes Cohen off the plate, but most likely dooms his casino play once and for all—she announced, first in a New York Magazine article, then in a press release, that she would not support any bill that would give Cohen the right to build a casino, as well as other amenities including a parking garage, a Hard Rock hotel, and food hall, on the 50-acre site.
Over the past two years, Cohen has spent millions in both lobbying fees and donations to local groups in an effort to win approval for the site.
There is no one forcing me to say ‘yes,’ and I needed to make a conscious decision based on the conversations that I’ve had as a representative of the will of my constituents.
That’s my job, and that’s what I’m doing,” Ramos said during a midday Zoom press conference from her Albany office. “I’m going to be responsive to the will of my neighbors because that’s who I work for. I don’t work for a billionaire.”
Because the building of a casino would involve getting rid of what’s considered parkland, the state legislature needs to pass a bill allowing Cohen to do so—and, in the same bill, designating an alternate area that would become parkland, thereby not violating the state’s “public trust doctrine” which mandates that “parks, open space, air, waterways, shorelines and other natural resources should be preserved for public enjoyment.”
Cohen’s team has not yet responded to a request for comment from Hell Gate, but told other reporters that they plan on finding a way to still pass parkland alienation, either through an act of the governor or by having another legislator introduce the bill, without Ramos’s approval.
The parkland alienation issue has scuttled other previous plans for the parking lot, which sits to the east of Citi Field and is located on the site formerly occupied by Shea Stadium.
A plan by the previous owners of the Mets to put a mall on the site was killed by the state’s highest court, when its judges ruled that the state legislature would have to approve any non-park use for the space.
Those non-park uses would include a casino, which is why Cohen’s massive $8 billion casino and entertainment complex bid has had to navigate through Albany, where even the dreams of billionaires can end up striking out.
While the local state assemblymember, Jeff Aubry, has endorsed the project, introducing his own alienation bill, Ramos has spent the past two years determining whether the trade-offs of bringing in a soul-sucking casino—improved subway station, jobs, and local business—are ultimately worth it.
Steve Cohen is worth an estimated $18 billion dollars, math would dictate that a casino would not be necessary to build out any part of the remaining project,” Ramos told Hell Gate on Tuesday.
“My hope is that he sees that people are counting on him to do the right thing here. He’s still our neighbor as long as he remains the owner of the Mets, and he can gain trust and good public will by being responsive to our neighbors desires.”
Ramos pointed to a poll she commissioned that found that 75 percent of the residents of her district did not want a casino located in their neighborhood (Cohen commissioned his own poll which found the opposite).
On Tuesday, in addition to announcing her opposition to the casino, Ramos introduced a separate parkland alienation bill that would expressly forbid a casino but would keep much of the rest of Cohen’s “Metropolitan Park” plan intact, while adding 50 more acres of parkland.
Cohen’s team has repeatedly told Hell Gate that if a casino isn’t built, Cohen intends to leave the parking lot as is, for the duration of his $10/year lease from the City (which lasts the rest of all of our natural lifetimes).