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Argentina – Tender process launched for seven casinos in Buenos Aires

By - 31 January 2018

The tender process for seven casinos in the province of Buenos Aires has been made official after Resolution 34/2018 appeared on Tuesday (January 30) in the government’s Official Gazette.

Signed by Matías Lanusse the head of the Provincial Institute of Lotteries and Casinos (IPLyC) the licence will be for a period of twenty years, with the possibility of an extension for one additional year. The opening of the envelopes will be held on March 27 at 11:00 a.m. at the IPLyC’s headquarters in the city of La Plata.

According to the resolution, the casino licences up for renewal are the Casino Central in Mar del Plata, as well as the casinos in the cities of Monte Hermoso, Pinamar, the Trilenium casino in Tigre (one of the largest casinos in the region), as well as the state owned casinos in the cities of Miramar, Tandil and the Hermitage casino, also located in Mar del Plata.

The new operator will need to invest in much needed building and infrastructure improvements and is permitted to build additional entertainment facilities. The purpose of the tender will be to “contract the provision and maintenance of automated gaming machines, the on-line control of the same, the remodelling, construction and / or cession and enhancement of the different gaming rooms and a variety of complementary services and annexes to gaming activity ” according to the resolution. In all the tender includes 3,860 slot machines.

The last casino tender in Buenos Aires province was in 1999, and since then all licence extensions and licences have been granted by resolutions or by decree. In January Governor María Eugenia Vidal announced that she would cancel the casino licences of Mar de Ajó, Valeria del Mar and Necochea, as well as the bingo hall in the city of Temperley in order to reduce gaming but would renew seven casino licences.

The government is expected to announce a number of other measures aimed at curbing gambling addiction in the near future. The closures mean that gaming unions are already planning further action after a 24-hour long strike in January. This week union representatives demanded an urgent meeting with Vidal over the closures. The General Secretary of the Association of Employees of National Casinos (AECN) Daniel Méndez told press “since the governor of Buenos Aires made the announcement regarding the closure of the three casinos to date there has been a total lack of communication.” He also said that the unions would be staging more protests this week.

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