Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and her Democratic challenger Joe Pakootas clashed over Obamacare, minimum wage, the best ways to bring jobs to the region and a new West Plains casino in their second debate of the campaign.

In a taped debate broadcast Thursday evening on KSPS-TV, Eastern Washington’s 5th Congressional District found a few areas of agreement. Both were wary of sending American ground troops to fight ISIS, although McMorris Rodgers said it was up to President Obama to make the case for any such strategy and Pakootas said part of the strategy needs to come from Congress which should stop “fingerpointing.” Both said they think the Veterans Administration needs a “change of culture” to do a better job of serving veterans.

But on most points, the five-term congresswoman and the chief executive officer of the Colville Tribal Federal Corp., disagreed sharply. . .

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…On Obamacare, which McMorris Rodgers has voted repeatedly to repeal, Pakootas argued the landmark health care legislation is working because many people who were previously denied medical insurance are able to afford it. The big scares didn’t prove true.

“Doctors are not leaving in droves. Death panels are not happening,” he said.

But some people have lost the coverage they preferred or can’t see their old doctor, McMorris Rodgers said.

Asked if she’d vote again to repeal the law, she replied: “I believe that we need to start over.” She’d keep some aspects of current law, such as not allowing insurance companies to deny coverage for pre-existing medical conditions and allowing young adults to stay on their parents’ insurance until age 26. But she’d expand health savings account, allow small businesses to form groups to qualify for better coverage, and allow customers to buy plans from other states.

McMorris Rodgers wouldn’t vote to change the federal minimum wage law, saying the individual states should decide whether the floor should be higher than $7.25. Minimum wage should be viewed as a beginning, and people should not be “trapped” there, she said. Pakootas supports a $10.10 minimum wage, contending that raising that wage would boost local economies because those workers spend their wages locally.

To increase employment, Pakootas said he’d support a $7 billion package of infrastructure improvements that would provide jobs and fix crumbling roads and bridges. McMorris Rodgers said she’d support streamlining the tax system with lower corporate tax rates. Pakootas replied that he, too, supports a streamlined tax system but Congress never does that, it provides new tax preferences for businesses, pursuing a “trickle down effort that does not work.”

McMorris Rodgers said she does not support the current proposal by the Spokane Tribe for a new casino on the West Plains, contending the planned location on Highway 2 presents a threat of encroachment to Fairchild Air Force Base and its flight patterns, based on her conversations with commanders at the base and the Pentagon.

Pakootas said he supports the casino proposal, provided the tribe follows all federal and state rules, adding Fairchild officials had a chance to weigh in on concerns when the project was being studied. “In that environmental impact statement, there were letters from commander at Fairchild Air Force Base. There was no encroachment concerns, there was no flight pattern concerns at that time.”

Hooray! Our schools have been saved! Doing what Colorado taxpayers did not do for perceived school budgets, generous Rhode Islanders have heard our pleas, and have arisen to redress our shortcomings! And all we have to do in return is to allow a private firm in Rhode Island to harvest gambling money (“the house always wins”) from Colorado and make an Eastern-State-style kickback to “hook” our populace vote-wise. The “hook” will be 34 percent of their take here, and it amounts to an advertised $114 million per year. The payoff will take place under the aegis of a proposed amendment to the Colorado Constitution (Amendment 68) and it restricts usage of the money to K-12 education only. Effective essentially forever, whatever its merits.
We should be thankful for such help —- until we wipe the tears of gratitude from our eyes and consider that their total take from Colorado is easily calculated to be $347 million per year, less the “kickback” to the Colorado Treasury, from already hard-set citizens! As constitutional provisions are not easily changed, this amendment will be effective forever once the end-recipients of these funds lock-it-in politically. If the gambling funds diminish or disappear during recessive times, calls will almost certainly be made for taxpayer help.
What about un-stated external costs probably left to Colorado taxpayers? Extra civic administration, additional policing, social support for cleaned-out families, etc.
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? Feature a city's pot-holed, two-lane road suddenly connecting with the casino's four-lane highway entrance?
I will vote no for this proposal, and I strongly urge you to vote no as well.
Alf Modahl

Just four stops remain in Season 5 of the Mid-States Poker Tour (MSPT), which recently saw Ryan Dykhouse top a field of 517 entries to win the FireKeepers Casino stop in Battle Creek, Michigan, for $124,500. The next stop for the MSPT will be at Meskwaki Casino in Tama, Iowa, from November 1-9 for an $1,100 buy-in $300,000 guaranteed Main Event.

Meskwaki has been one of the MSPT’s best-performing stops due partially to the fact that players only need to be 18 years old to play. The last time the MSPT visited the property, which was back in July, Jonathan Olson topped a field of 368 entries to win a $95,741 first-place prize after defeating MSPT regular Mike Holm in heads-up play.

Other past winners of the MSPT Meskwaki include Muneer Ahmed ($89,184), Dan Sun ($77,103), Michael Reynolds ($81,060), Terry Ring ($87,694), Andy Van Blair ($88,958), Jesse Spooner ($81,060), and Matthew Anderson ($100,075). As you can see, the winner of the event can expect a high five-figure score.

“The MSPT looks forward to returning to Iowa for the last time in Season 5," MSPT owner and operator Bryan Mileski told PokerNews. "Time and again Meskwaki proves to be one of the more popular stops on the schedule, and we expect the players to turn out in full force. The last time we rolled into town we crushed the $300,000 guarantee, and we expect to do the same come November.”

The tenth stop of Season II of the Card Player Poker Tour kicked off at Hollywood Park Casino in Southern California Oct. 17 and will host a series of tournaments through Oct. 26 culminating with a $340 no-limit hold’em $100,000 guarantee main event Oct. 23-26.

Here is a look at the latest results:

Jimmy Harris

Event No. 5: No-Limit Hold’em Super Stack Turbo $10,000 Guarantee
Buy In: $150
Entrants: 85
Prize Pool: $10,200

Jimmy Harris $2,587
Did Not Report $1,743
Kathleen Solowitz $1,647
Did Not Report $1,566
Dariush Alamdari $685
Jesus Frausto $560
George Wilson $450
Norman Cooper $355
Kyung Min $305
Frank Dorrel $150
Shyam Madiraju $150
Hollywood Park Casino combines the action and excitement of the most popular live casino card games with the thrill of simulcast thoroughbred wagering. Located just five minutes from Los Angeles International Airport, with thousands of hotel rooms nearby, HPC is the closest casino to Los Angeles’ Westside.

The Davenport City Council will take its first vote on rezoning land for a new land-based casino at Wednesday night's meeting.

The new land-based casino would go near the intersection of Interstates 80 and 74.

Many neighbors are against the plan, saying heavier traffic will have a negative impact on the area.

City leaders say the developer chose the location, not the city.

They'll take the first vote on the rezoning at Wednesday night's meeting.

It will take three votes to make the rezoning final.

With the general election just two weeks away, the four referendum questions on the state ballot are getting almost as much attention as the governor's race.

And among those four, the one seeking the repeal of the state's Casino Gambling Law seems to have gathered the most intense group of supporters.

Repeal the Casino Deal, the statewide grassroots, anti-gaming group, has been doing its best to convince voters that the 2011 bill providing for three casinos and one slots parlor should be reversed.

With all the fits and starts associated with the casino-licensing process -- including conflict-of-interest concerns and questions of partners with criminal records -- the odds of this question succeeding seemed favorable.

But that initial anti-casino momentum has slowed, as recent polls suggest. Surveys by the Boston Globe, Suffolk University/Boston Herald, UMass Lowell/7News, and WBUR all show the referendum question trailing by double digits.

Now anti-casino backers have disclosed a report that predicts the state's Lottery revenue will fall by as much as $104 million -- $830,000 in Fitchburg -- in just the first year of the three casinos' and one slots parlor's operation.

The only other support for such a devastating effect on the Lottery, according to the Globe, was a report filed in 2008 by state Rep. Tom Conroy, a treasurer candidate and casino foe, who alluded to a 2006 paper written by a Pennsylvania college student, which predicted a 25 percent drop in that state's lottery revenue once casinos began operating there.