MURWILLUMBAH Mustangs took down the Casino RSM Cougars on Sunday, 32-20.

The Mustangs got out of the blocks with an early try, but the home team responded with a Matty Roberts four-pointer after a well-judged kick from Roy Bell.

Then some poor mid field defence by the Cougars saw the visitors gain easy metres and skip away to a 20-4 half-time lead.

Things were looking very ominous for the Maroon and Whites when Murwillumbah scored two quick converted tries in the second stanza, but when Anthony Robinson ran all the way from an intercept, followed by two hard-earned tries to Harold Torrens and Garry Roberts, the boys were back in the hunt.

The Mustangs were doing it tough, but slowed the play down enough over the final stages to earn the victory. I'm sure the mighty Cougars will be looking forward to the return clash in the second round.

Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Sioux City General Manager Todd Moyer is shown Tuesday in the lobby of the company's new career center, which opens April 28. The space on the fifth floor of the MidAmerican Energy Building will be the nerve center for the company's hiring of 500 workers over the next few months.
April 13, 2014 12:00 am • DAVE DREESZEN ddreeszen@siouxcityjournal.com(7) Comments

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How to apply

Those interested in a position at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Sioux City are encouraged to complete an online application

On the web: HardrockCasinoSiouxCity.com/Careers

On Facebook: facebook.com/HardRockCasinoSiouxCityCareers

In person: Visit the Hard Rock Career Center, which is scheduled to open April 28 on the fifth floor of the MidAmerican Energy Building, 401 Douglas St.

Related Links

Timeline: Sioux City casino

Hard Rock Hotel & Casino
SIOUX CITY | There's no shortage of people wanting to work at Woodbury County's first land-based casino.

The Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Sioux City has already received about 1,500 online job applications, or nearly three for every one of the 500 positions that will be filled at the downtown gaming and entertainment venue over the next few months.

"It makes me feel good that so many people want to work here," Hard Rock General Manager Todd Moyer said. "'We're going to treat people right and create a great environment for them to grow their careers and really enjoy coming to work each day."

The flood of applications has come even though the casino has done little so far to promote the employment opportunities, other than post a handful of specific positions on its Facebook page and its website, hardrockcasinosiouxcity.com.

With construction of the $128.5 million project at least two months away from completion, hiring remains in the early stages. Only nine employees are on the payroll so far, including the general manager and directors of human resources, finance, slots, table games and security.

Moyer said the initial focus has been getting the department heads and other top managers in place. Once they're on board, they will hire the next levels of employees, with staffing gradually ramping up until the casino opens in late summer, he said. The Hard Rock has not yet announced a specific opening date.

The nerve center of the hiring operation will be the career center Hard Rock plans to open April 28 on the fifth floor of the MidAmerican Energy Building at 501 Douglas St., where Hard Rock has its temporary offices.

Among other functions, the career center will house a school for table game dealers. A series of nine informational meetings for prospective dealers begins May 13 at the career center. The casino plans to hire about 150 dealers.

Hiring for other front-line positions, from security guards and parking valets to bartenders and waiters, will start closer to the casino's opening, Moyer said.

The timing is tricky, Moyer said, because the the majority of Hard Rock job seekers are employed elsewhere. Casino officials do not want to ask applicants to leave those jobs until an opening date has been solidified, he said.

"We don't want to identify people too early," Moyer said. "On the other hand, we're afraid if we wait too long, we can't hire 500 people."

The largest and most experienced pool of candidates is the 300-plus employees at the Argosy Sioux City riverboat casino. The Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission has signaled its intent to close down the gambling boat upon the Hard Rock's opening. But the Argosy's parent company, Penn National Gaming Co., has filed a series of regulatory and legal challenges to keep the floating casino open and overturn the state's decision to award a license for a land casino to the Hard Rock developer, Sioux City Entertainment, and its nonprofit partner, Missouri River Historical Development.

A number of state and local officials have expressed a desire for as many Argosy employees as possible to transition from one Sioux City casino to the other.

During an interview last week, Moyer declined to identify how many current Argosy workers have so far submitted online applications, or how much of the boat's work force the Hard Rock anticipates absorbing.

Hard Rock officials have been reluctant to discuss the subject, citing the ongoing litigation, including Penn's breach-of-contract lawsuit against its former partner, MRHD.

Argosy Operations Manager Zach Rosenbaum said the employees he talks to are about 50-50 in wanting to go to work for Hard Rock.

"Some are totally anti-Hard Rock, and some understand the reality of the situation and will be applying," Rosenbaum said.

Complicating matters are retention bonuses that Argosy started offering workers when the future of the gambling boat began to look uncertain. The bonuses generally range from $500 to $2,500, depending on the type of position, Rosenbaum said. The latest bonuses are scheduled to be paid in July, right around the time the Hard Rock is expected to open.

"For some of the people who can't move, at what point do you give up X amount of money to go to the other place?" Rosenbaum said. "It puts some people in a no-win situation."

Rosenbaum said he eventually intends to transfer to another Penn property. Other Argosy workers also have that option, though Penn leaders are encouraging them to make the decision that's best for them and their family.

"Anyone that wants to stay with the company, they're going out of their way to make sure there are places for people to land," he said.

Moyer said Hard Rock is simply looking for the best qualified people for the job, with an emphasis not only on experience but also personal traits.

"We are looking for people who are friendly, personable and outgoing," he said. "If you have the right attitude, we can train you."

Hard Rock's core principals -- warmly greeting guests, anticipating and meeting their needs while they visit and inviting them to return -- are highlighted in a series of colorful posters with rock motifs in the career center lobby. Each poster bears the slogan, "Make Today Ridiculously Amazing."

When it opens, the career center will be a place where people can learn more about the company, view renderings of the casinos and check out various job postings. The space also include rooms for one-on-one and group interviews.

Computers also will be on site for those without Internet access to complete online applications. The form asks for name and address, contact information, current employer, up to two preferred positions at the Hard Rock and a salary expectation.

"We'll let you know as soon as those jobs are on our radar screen," Moyer said. "When we're starting to recruit for those positions, you'll be among the first to know about it."

The general manager said the Hard Rock will strive to make applicants feel like more than a number.

"We want to personalize the experience for each person and not let them think they're just one of many that are applying for a job," he said.

Though the Hard Rock has received applications from such places as Las Vegas and Florida, the vast majority are from Siouxland, he said. In its license application with the IRGC, the Hard Rock projected that 90 percent of the jobs would be filled by Iowans.

The hiring requires staffing a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week venue with a 30,000-square-foot casino floor, 850 slot machines, 20-plus tables games and multiple amenities. The latter include a 54-room hotel, a buffet, an upscale casual restaurant, beer garden, a sports-themed brew pub and grill, and retail shops.

The company projects a first-year payroll, which includes wages and benefits, of more than $20.3 million. About 100 jobs are salaried.

Under state law, Iowa casinos are required to pay 25 percent more than the minimum wage of $7.25 per hour for non-casino jobs. The provision ensures the workers make at least $9.07 per hour.

As employment grows, the Hard Rock staff will move this summer from the MidAmerican Energy Building to the new offices in the renovated Battery Building. The century-old warehouse at Third and Water streets is the centerpiece of the Hard Rock development.

TWO RECENT MASSACHUSETTS polls on casino gambling produced very different results, but the difference may have more to do with the population being surveyed than any actual change in attitude.

A new telephone poll conducted by the Western New England University Polling Institute indicates that 59 percent of Massachusetts adults support establishing casinos in Massachusetts while 34 percent are opposed. Among registered voters, the split was much the same. The margins mirrored results from earlier surveys by the polling institute dating back to 2009.

The strong support for casinos seemed to undercut an earlier poll conducted last month for WBUR by the MassINC Polling Institute that indicated public backing for casinos was slipping rapidly. The MassINC survey of likely voters suggested a once-large margin of support for casinos had slipped to 46 percent in favor and 43 percent opposed, a 3-point difference that falls within the poll’s margin of error.

Public attitudes on casinos are being watched closely as opponents are hoping to win approval from the Supreme Judicial Court to place a measure on the November ballot that would repeal the state’s gaming law.

Tim Vercellotti, director of the Western New England University Polling Institute, said he believes the difference in the poll results is due primarily to the audience being targeted. His survey targeted adults and registered voters, while the MassINC poll targeted a more narrow universe of voters who say they are likely to vote in the fall.

“We’re looking at two different groups and that’s why we see these different numbers,” Vercellotti said.

Vercellotti said he’s long been suspicious that support for casino gambling is broad but not very deep in Massachusetts. He said one question on his survey seemed to confirm that. He asked respondents to rate how important casino gambling was to them personally. Those who said it was “somewhat important” or “not very important” favored casino gambling by fairly wide margins. But those who said casino gambling was “very important” to them opposed casino gambling by a margin of 57-40 percent.

“Among voters who view this issue as very important to them personally, opposition to casinos is much higher and support is much lower compared to the entire sample,” Vercellotti said. “These individuals may be more motivated to organize and get out the vote if the casino question appears on the ballot in the fall.”

But Vercellotti also cautioned that, in a referendum campaign, the casinos themselves may throw a lot of money into the race and sway voters with their advertising. He concluded that the poll results should not be viewed as a prediction of how voters might respond to a ballot question on gambling.

The MassINC Polling Group is a subsidiary of MassINC, a nonprofit think tank that publishes CommonWealth magazine.

A delay in issuing a casino license for the Boston, Massachusetts, area could have a short-term impact on the Commonwealth’s finances, whether the delay be caused by an investigation of the Everett real estate holdings or by an environmental impact study in Revere.
The state’s budget for the fiscal year ending on June 30 anticipated $195 million in casino-related licensing fees. That would include $25 million, already paid by Penn National Gaming Inc. (PENN) for a slots license at the Plainridge harness track, and $85 million for each or the casino licenses.
Already the Massachusetts Gaming Commission has warned that the recent dispute involving “host community” status for Boston has delayed the awarding of a Boston-area license until August or later.
Ray Poirier is the longtime executive editor at GamingToday.

NILES

Relay for Life of Niles is sponsoring a bus trip to Mountaineer Casino on April 26.

The bus will load at 9:30 a.m. at the Kmart parking lot in Niles, and each guest will receive $25 free slot play.

The cost is $40 per person and there will be a 50-50 raffle, and bingo and games will be played during the bus ride.

Beverages will be available for purchase. A buffet will be on your own.

Call 330-349-4964 for reservations.

- See more at: http://www.vindy.com/news/2014/apr/15/relay-will-host-trip-casino/?nw#sthash.tQFBZH5V.dpuf

For the first time since 1995, a new casino has opened in downtown Reno, Nevada.
Last Friday, Siri’s Casino opened its doors at the site of the old Primadonna Club, across from Harrah’s Reno.
Owner Jeff Siri, who also is president of downtown Reno’s Club Cal Neva, said the new casino’s theme is based after Miami’s South Beach neighborhood. He said he hopes that the new property will not only attract more customers but also will encourage others to open downtown casinos.
Ray Poirier is the longtime executive editor at GamingToday.