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Chicago's VGT Fight Tests Local Control vs City Cash Needs
Windy City council chambers buzzed with tension this week. Six aldermen pushed ward‑level bans on video gambling terminals in bars and taverns. The License and Regulatory Affairs Committee rejected every request. This rare override breaks decades of local deference tradition.

VGT Revenue Math Doesn't Add Up
Each machine generates roughly $2,500 in annual taxes. Supporters bank on thousands of units filling the $16.6 billion 2026 budget gap. Bars and truck stops see steady foot traffic without casino treks. Simple math: more locations, bigger take.
Mayor Brandon Johnson stays skeptical. His team pegs a realistic yield closer to $10 million yearly. The math shifts when Bally's enters the equation. The $1.7 billion River West resort projects $40 million city cut plus 3,000 jobs. VGT saturation threatens both.
Bally's $74 Million Warning
Operator VP Elizabeth Sueve delivered stark numbers to the council. Legal VGTs could slash Bally's tax contribution by $260 million yearly. Chicago loses $74 million of that-on top of the firm's $4 million annual community payment. Downstate data backs the claim: casinos near heavy VGT zones drop 37% in slot revenue.
Phased opening starts September 2026. VGTs hit bars first. Resort needs time to build brand loyalty. Small‑scale machines undercut the draw before launch.
Ward Power vs City Directive
Ald. Jason Ervin called the committee vote "unusual." Wards 26, 27, 28, 33, 35, and 49 sought opt‑outs. Local leaders typically control zoning calls. Override forces full council showdown. Tradition cracks under fiscal desperation
Crime Waves Hit Downstate
Illinois logs 473 VGT burglaries last year, up from 358. Machines hold cash. Targets multiply. Chicago police brace for pattern. Bars lack casino‑grade security. Taxpayers foot patrol costs.
Addiction lines spike where terminals cluster. State hotline calls rose 25% post‑expansion. Neighborhoods groups demand caps or total bans. Aldermen weigh quick cash against social fallout.
2009 Ban Crumbles
State legalized VGTs statewide. The Chicago ordinance blocked city entry. The 2025 referendum cracked the door. Budget squeeze blew it open. Ald. Anthony Beale projects $60-100 million yearly, optimistic by half per city analysts.
Stakeholder Battle Lines
Pro‑VGT: Bars need a revenue lifeline. The Chicago Video Gaming Business Association claims 33 illegal machines are already running in one ward alone. Legal path captures lost tax dollars.
Anti‑VGT: Bally's, mayor's office, safety advocates. The resort deal hinged on VGT exclusion. Renegotiation looms if the council pushes forward.
Full Council Showdown Looms
License Committee advances to 50‑alderman vote. Override precedent weakens ward autonomy. Revenue hawks vs casino backers. Compromise talks bubble: vendor limits, density caps, ward vetoes.
Illinois Context
State hosts 50,000 machines across 8,000 spots. Chicago adds thousands. Tax structure favors casinos 4:1 over VGTs. Resort slots pay 22.3%; terminals just 5.15%. Long game favors Bally's.
What Happens Next
Applications hit Illinois Gaming Board desks. Processing backlogs hit 500 statewide. July launch slips to late summer. Bally's watches licensing pace. Council could amend via floor vote.
Ald. Walter Burnett (27th Ward) blocks machines outright. "Proponents won't talk regulation," he says. Safety, mental health gaps fuel resistance.
Budget math forces choice: scattershot terminals or concentrated resort? Ward bosses lost the first round. Citywide vote decides the play










