Business

New Jersey loses 4th casino as Trump Plaza closes


Ruth Hardrick, a dealer who worked at Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino for 26 years, stands with a friend, Anthony Powell, on the Boardwalk as she answers a question early Tuesday. Trump Plaza is the fourth Atlantic City casino to go belly-up so far this year.
Ruth Hardrick, a dealer who worked at Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino for 26 years, stands with a friend, Anthony Powell, on the Boardwalk as she answers a question early Tuesday. Trump Plaza is the fourth Atlantic City casino to go belly-up so far this year. Associated Press

The supervisor drew his finger in a slashing motion moments after the final hand of blackjack had been dealt at Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino.

And with that, gambling was done.

The 30-year-old casino at the heart of the Boardwalk shut its doors at 6 a.m. Tuesday, becoming the fourth Atlantic City casino to close this year. Beset by crushing debt, fleeing customers and run-down facilities, Trump Plaza had been the town’s worst-performing casino for years. This year, it has won about the same amount from gamblers that the Borgata takes in every two weeks, and at pennies on the dollar, no one wanted to buy it.

Trump Plaza thus became the latest victim of casino contraction brought on by competition in neighboring states in the saturated northeastern U.S. gambling market.

Atlantic City began the year with 12 casinos; it now has eight. The Atlantic Club, Showboat and Revel also closed, and the Taj Mahal could be next on Nov. 13.

Yomari Blanco, a housekeeper at Trump Plaza for 18 years, plans to file for unemployment this week, and may go back to school.

“It’s really hitting me,” she said. “You realize the reality that’s coming right at you.”

Theresa Volpe, a cocktail server at the Plaza for 26 years, is looking for a new job – along with about 8,000 others suddenly cut loose by Atlantic City’s casinos since January. An unemployment assistance session will be held Wednesday at Boardwalk Hall.

“I don’t know if we’re going to have a difficult time because of our age,” she said. “Someone in their 50s is not necessarily what they want. Friends have been on interviews and they never get called back.”

Dealer Ruth Hardrick worked at Trump Plaza for 26 of its 30 years. She, too, is jobless.

“You think something will come along (to save the casino),” she said. “And it didn’t.”

Trump Plaza had its heyday in the ’80s and early ’90s. Bedazzled with chandeliers, it hosted many a star-studded after-party when a big event like a Rolling Stones concert or a Mike Tyson prize fight was held next door at Boardwalk Hall. The casino even had a cameo in the film “Ocean’s Eleven”; when George Clooney and Brad Pitt recruited Bernie Mac’s character to help with a Las Vegas casino heist, they plucked him from Trump Plaza, where he was a dealer.

Unlike Revel, which opened just over two years ago and was considered new and luxurious before closing, or the still-profitable Showboat, shuttered by its owner in the name of reducing competition for the remaining casinos in town, the demise of Trump Plaza could be seen a long way off.

Gamblers have been abandoning it for newer, ritzier casinos for years. New casinos in Pennsylvania and elsewhere have added competition for gamblers’ dollars.

The casino’s owners, Trump Entertainment Resorts, let it deteriorate in recent years, particularly after a sale for the bargain-basement price of $20 million to a California firm fell through last year.

Jim Redmond is a 60-year-old from Montreal who loves Atlantic City and regularly stayed at Trump Plaza. He says its decline was obvious over the last seven years.

“It was so sad to see it get a little worse every year,” he said. “They really seemed to give up about five years ago.”

This story was originally published September 16, 2014 at 1:16 PM with the headline "New Jersey loses 4th casino as Trump Plaza closes."

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