"The proliferation of video lottery casinos is a growing eyesore in Rapid City.
City leaders want to do something about it with a welcome plan to ban such establishments within a 100-foot radius of residential neighborhoods.
City ordinance now requires any alcohol-serving establishment, including video lottery casinos, to be "sufficiently buffered with respect to residential areas so as not to adversely affect the areas."
Fearing that such loose language might invite a lawsuit, Ward 2 Alderman Sam Kooiker proposed a more specific buffer zone.
If there's one thing the city doesn't need, it's more lawsuits. And a determination of a "sufficient buffer" is sure to differ from on person to the next.
The owner of a video lottery casino might think 10 feet is sufficient. An owner of a house next door might think 1,000 feet is inadequate.
Setting clear parameters would go a long way toward derailing disputes before they occur, as well as sidestepping lawsuits from casino owners whose requests are denied by the city."
Get the Story:
Editorial: Keep casinos at a safe distance
(The Rapid City Journal 9/28)
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