This story was published in USA Today:
October 10, 2016 3:11 pm
The Trump Taj Mahal, an iconic casino hotel on the Atlantic City boardwalk, ceased operations Monday after hemorrhaging money for years and negotiations with an employees’ union broke down, according to its owner, billionaire investor Carl Icahn.
The shutdown, which leaves 3,000 employees out of work, was widely expected after management announced the planned closure in August. Beset by labor strife and the decline of Atlantic City as a resort and gaming destination, the hotel lost “almost $350 million over just a few short years,” Icahn said in a statement Monday.
About 1,000 employees, including cooks, bartenders, housekeepers and cocktail servers, went on strike July 1, seeking health care and pension benefits. Icahn said his last offer, which included medical benefits, was rejected and keeping the Taj open would have required additional investments and result in losses in “excess of $100 million over the next year.”
The union, Unite Here Local 54, says many workers at the hotel “have seen only 80 cents per hour in total raises over the last 12 years” while the cost of living in Atlantic City has risen more than 25% during the period.
“Workers are trying to reenter the middle-class after Icahn used the bankruptcy court to strip them of pay and benefits worth more than one-third of their total compensation,” the union said in a statement released last month. “Housekeepers, servers and other casino workers at the Taj Mahal earn on average less than $12 and hour.”
Icahn’s clash with the union employees cost the Taj Mahal an estimated $150 million, the union said.
Meanwhile, Tony Rodio, CEO of Tropicana Entertainment Inc., which manages the hotel for Icahn Enterprises, said in August Icahn has lost about $100 million in trying to run the Taj Mahal after he acquired it from bankruptcy proceedings in February. Tropicana Entertainment is controlled by Icahn Enterprises.
The Trump Taj Mahal opened in 1990 after heavy debt financing and years of legal and financial maneuvers by its then-owner Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee. When it opened, it was one of the largest casinos in the world, with more than 100,000 square feet of gaming space, and it billed itself as “the eighth wonder of the world.”
But the fancy billing belied numerous financial woes it faced over the years, including multiple bankruptcy filings by its owners. In 2009, Trump Entertainment Resorts underwent a round of bankruptcy restructuring, in which Donald Trump lost control and the hotel operator company was sold to investment firm Avenue Capital.
In 2014, Trump Entertainment Resorts, whose assets by now mostly consisted of the Taj Mahal, again filed for bankruptcy protection. When it emerged from the legal proceedings in February, Icahn had grabbed control and the hotel become a subsidiary of Icahn Enterprises.
According to its website, Trump Taj Mahal customers had until 8 a.m. Monday to redeem gaming chips and vouchers at the hotel. After 8 a.m., they can be redeemed at Tropicana Atlantic City’s Casino Cage.
Room bookings on and after Oct. 9 have been cancelled. Room deposits will be refunded, it said.

And somehow Trump will figure out a way to claim loses on his tax returns.
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….as well as blame Hillary and Bill for the casino’s failure
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Let’s hear the same comments about all the casinoes closing in the AC area the past few years. Oh, there aren’t any….Gambling laws changed and facilities that were profitable became not profitable…period. I’d like to see anyone on this site make a business like this run for over 2 decades and keep it open when the environment changes as it did. Hardly a Trump failure. I am no Trump fan by any means but the kool-aid is strong on this site and lots are drinking it. Have the Clintons even come close to ever creating such a venture? Nope. Did they ever create 450 companies over their careers? Nope, not one, at least that was ever profitable except their “Foundation.”.
I successfully ran a business over a 4 state area for 20 years. Could not do it today. Neither could my competitors, they are gone. I closed my business when the tea leaves were indicating the world I worked was dying…or moving overseas. My customer base is gone today. It will never return in my lifetime.
Time to focus on education…what you do best on this site. jmho
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Trump is the epitome of con man
Trump University was a ripoff of working people
This fraud lost $916 million in 1995
There are actually succcessful ethical businessmen and women. Trump is not one of them.
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Dienne: So you agree with Teacher’s Husband?
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T.H.: Thank you for informing us what we are allowed and not allowed to talk about. You are obviously the authority on all things financial and the rest of us mere mortals should just shut up already. Now I will swim in my pool of kool-aid. Glug, glug.
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Ooh for heavens sake, Joe, you are the epitome of the police around here telling us what we can and can’t talk about. Pot, kettle….
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A little kool-aid is a dangerous thing,
Drink deep or taste not the Ravitchian spring.
Here shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
And drinking deeply sobers us again.
Just one more month to go. Hang in there! And if you have any stake in public education, in democracy, in our country… hang with us or we’ll all hang separately.
(How was that for messing up quotes spanning centuries! Thank you! Next show’s at 8 o’clock.)
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Ooh for heavens sake, Dienne, when have I ever parachuted into this web site and insulted 99% of the regular commenters as Teacher’s Husband did. Or do you agree with TH? I guess TH is unaware that many of the usual contributors came to education after careers in business and the private sector.
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T.H.,
I’m not sure how you measure success.
If making lots of money, being enterprising, having an abundance of confidence, and big ambition were virtues in themselves, then Trump would be an angel. But apparently there’s a lot more to a person’s character than these things.
Trump Taj Mahal made more money than any casino in history for about half a year, then was in debt and in some form of bankruptcy for the balance of it’s existence. Donald Trump was able to leverage this debt in various ways to consolidate his own personal wealth.
No doubt Trump excels at some skills that you share with him and admire. His Taj Mahal project took vision, initiative, and a lot of guts. But even so, I’m not sure it qualifies as a success. And… so what. Do you believe his skill sets out weigh that of my plumber’s, just because Trumps line of work generates more income? My plumber has depth of knowledge, and range. Not only does he know his trade well, but he makes his own boutique beers, plays in a rock and roll band and is raising a beautiful family. And he is working hard running his own business without needing to declare bankruptcy, not even once! By comparison, Trump is a one trick, self lovin, pony.
While the Clintons haven’t created 450 businesses over the years, they have devoted many decades of their lives to bonafide public service. That counts for something.
Wealth is only one measure of success, so it’s ok to look past Trump’s business awesomeness and see the man and his character, and be appalled! This is hardly drinking the kool-aid
Your’e mistaken if you think that Diane or many of the people commenting here lack clarity on the issues discussed. Trumps abilities may involve big projects and make him lots of money, but he has no business running for president.
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Thank you for not using the term “job creator”. But may we now touch your robes to gain the wisdom that makes business people superior beings to the mere mortals not on Mount Olympus and working for a living? Or am I allowed to speak without first asking permission as to what I can say?
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Yes, Vale, that was my feeling about TH. A very arrogant guy who has a very high opinion of himself as he indiscriminantly insults a whole blog site of commenters.
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Yes and Trump stiffed the people to whom he owed money in the process. He lost enough money, with the law’s blessing] so that he did not have to pay income taxes for what, 18 years?
Some business man. AND he wants to run our country like he ran his failed businesses?
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Reminds me of Bush who said he would run the government like a business. Oh yeah, just like ENRON.
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It is my sincere hope that when Hillary gets elected and she has what she wants, a position in history as the first woman President of the United States of America (parallel to President Obama’s claim to fame), that she will turn honest and patriotic. Of course, it didn’t happen that way with President Obama, so who can tell?
Look for a single payer health system, free college tuition, open borders and universal amnesty, and probably a real war when Putin tests her beyond toleration like say invading the Baltic states, or the Chinese in some place in the Pacific, or by the Iranian takeover of Iraq and Syria, and she must react to maintain her credibility.
The only question then will be “Will she lose the war?”
We live in interesting times.
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Harlyan,
I believe Hillary wants badly to go to war with Russia, and I don’t mean a cold war. These are not just interesting times; they are ever more dangerous given our technology.
Open borders? Yes. Single payer system and free college tuition at public universities? Probably only a very, very watered down version of them that won’t really go anywhere. Nothing like Norway or the rest of single payer Europe. Nothing even remotely like Canada. It will be a single payer system in name only, and it will complete, in its starved status, with private healthcare, which will be well funded by those who can afford it.
Stil, it’s a step in a better direction. You would be lucky to live and die in Norway.
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Norwegian F.,
I have seen no evidence that Hillary wants to go to war with anyone. I guess you would have said the same about FDR in 1940, and Norway today would be a little Nazi country. Or Soviet.
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FDR should have gone to war years sooner because he had plenty of information from intelligence that the Germans were brutalizing the Jews. FDR refused to get involved upon his knowledge because he really felt that this was Europe’s problem and none of America’s business. In that sense, FDR waxed isolationist. It was not until Pearl Harbor that FDR was compelled to get involved. It made sense to him, and while I certainly don’t blame the Holocaust on America by any stretch of the imagination whatsoever, I do posit that with much earlier intervention on America’s behalf, millions of Jews might have been saved.
As a Norwegian, I am grateful for whatever interventions the USA did provide, for we might have ended up, as you stated,, a satellite of Russia. But Rooselvelt, in his turning the other way, was no angel in this specific regard, although he was an angel an in many other regards for having started your Social Security system.
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Norwegian Filmmaker: There is no way that FDR could have gone to war earlier without the consent of the people and the Congress. He was not a dictator and the country was very isolationist at the time. It took the attack on Pearl Harbor to propel us into WWII. Where are you getting this idea that Hillary WANTS to go to war with Russia?! I don’t think she is that insane. She has her failings but I don’t think she’s a war monger because most Americans are sick unto death of war and invasions. However, if there is another big terrorist attack in the US, that could change things for the worse.
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Joe,
She keeps blaming the leaks on Russia’s interference. These are my speculations only. Of course, going to war would be vetted by her more than with Trump, but her dealigns with Libya and Syria caused more harm then good.
For the record, I have repeated over and over on this blog that despite my intense dislike for her and Trump, I have encouraged people to vote for none other than Hillary. I mean, I know the anger is not directed personally at me, but it is people’s fear of who wins and what they will not end up doing potentially for democracy, but will do, rather, for the 1%. I don’t blame anyone, given the lack of strong safety nets here in the States. The stress is terrible, to say the least.
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NF,
The American intelligence agencies blamed the hacking on the Russians, just to set the record straight.
Putin would love to see Trump elected: a useful idiot
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DIane,
Putin would love exactly like. A smart dictator puppeting a dumb one. I shutter . . .
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Most of all you people are obviously not business owners. Unless you’ve been on both sides for any amount time as a employee and as a business owner then you really have no idea how it really works owning a business and what it takes day in day out. I thought I did and it took me awhile before I learned that pigs get fat and hogs get slaughtered so it other words don’t be a hog when it comes to business.
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I’d say the same about teaching.
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My utopian proposal is that all teachers should be entrepreneurs, that is, own the schools in which they teach as members of a cooperative.
The fundamental difficulty is that for anyone to become a teacher they would have to raise enough capital to purchase their share in the cooperative. And the price per share would have to be high enough to either build a facility or purchase one already built by the state.
This is the only way teachers will ever control the schools in which they work. Sort of like the union operating the factory.
It would probably be a private school rather than a charter, unless state and local taxes went toward a foundation grant for every child.
Has anyone ever known of a school organized in that fashion?
Is it a good idea intrinsically?
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Jason, let me introduce you to Teacher’s Husband, if that’s OK with Dienne.
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Back to the Taj & Atlantic City. Interestingly enough, I was in AC & talked to some of those on strike. Several stated they had already lined up new employment (good for them!) but, of course, not in Atlantic City & not in New Jersey. (They continued the picket to make a point for their fellow workers.) Recently, over 8,000 employees lost their jobs in AC. A question that came up was, where’s the governor? Oh–why he’s following Trump around like a puppy dog when he SHOULD be back in NJ, doing the job he was elected to do. (And that doesn’t include pointing a finger in the face of a constituent {& screaming at her, while his charming wife–the First Lady–giggled behind him}–who happened to be a teacher–asked him a reasonable question {which, of course, as an NJ citizen & taxpayer, she was more than entitled to do}.) Can’t wait until he gets pulled into Bridgegate. Had he been the GOP candidate, we’d be hearing yet another sordid tale, with a good side of venom coming out of his mouth (remember his “prosecution” of Sec. Clinton during the Rep. Nat’l Convention?).
I guess he wants to be that A.G. who is going to send Sec. Clinton to jail!
P.S.–There’s a sign by the Taj Mahal parking garage/area that simply says, “Taj Mahal”
(now owned by Carl Icahn. It originally said, “Trump Taj Mahal.” Someone went back & put a banner on the sign, above Taj Mahal, that read Trump–some of the strikers, I believe…to show who’d started the entire problem.
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Harlan,
Your proposal that teachers own / manage their own schools makes education a business for certain.
That is what the reformists want, market based education. Moreover the new marketing pitch for the “reform” and “transformation” of public education into a business is that “innovation” is always good (for business), failure is a necessary catalyst for innovation, and that “churn” in startups (new entries and failures) is inevitable.
Students are pawns, more or less profitable and expendable. The purpose of test scores is to signal where new markets for innovators are likely to be “hot.” Collateral damage? The innovators do not care. Failed charters just vanish. Failed and costly delivery and data gathering systems sold for so-called personalized learning produce no collateral damage. This is not to say that wonderful schools cannot be founded and operated by teachers, just that wishful thinking is not enough.
http://www.statisticbrain.com/startup-failure-by-industry/
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For the record: Carl Icahn, Princeton grad, billionaire, supports Trump. Icahn said: “Over my years I’ve listened to a lot of salacious talk in locker rooms, bachelor parties, etc., by a lot of high-level people, some of whom are now supposedly so outraged,” Icahn told CNBC.
“All I can do is refer to that great quote, ‘Let he who has not sinned cast the first stone.'”
http://www.businessinsider.com/carl-icahn-is-still-supporting-trump-2016-10
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