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We, the Undersigned, endorse the following petition:

Raise Your Hand! No Casino on the Hill Petition

Target: Ted Decker, Chairman, Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board
Sponsor: Kimberly Ellis, Dr. Goddess Arts, Education and Management
  • Signatures: 343
  • Goal: 5,000
  • Deadline: Ongoing...

We, residents of the historic Hill District, Pittsburghers, students and national and international supporters of preserving the Hill and supporting neighborhood residents, sign this petition to speak for ourselves and express to the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board that we do not want the Isle of Capri Casino development in the Lower Hill District because it will destroy our community and ask that the PGCB absolutely refuse a casino license to Pittsburgh First / Isle of Capri / Nationwide Reality Investors / Mario Lemieux ---  the ONLY one of the three proposals for slots licenses in Pittsburgh to be set alongside an historic, residential community.


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Number Date Name Zip/Postal Code Country Are you a Hill District Resident? How long have you resided in the Hill? Why do you, personally, oppose a casino set in the Lower Hill District? Have you ever visited the Hill? Do you have any testimony you would like to share about casinos and community development?
346 3:40 pm PDT, Aug 8 greta malkotzoglou 10440 Greece no        
345 3:06 pm PDT, Apr 12 Anonymous 80218 United States no        
344 5:19 am PDT, Mar 31 Robert Rihn 15044 United States no no If they built the casino near "The Hill" I won't go. I'd be gambling with my life. yes They bring in money to the neighborhood
343 3:23 pm PST, Feb 4 Adina Thompson 94591 United States no        
342 10:13 am PST, Dec 31 Natalia Villalobos Mora   Costa Rica no never because casinos are bad, and all the things in them, if the casino is putted there it can bring negative impact on the people and children, in the future... no BAD!!
341 7:30 am PST, Dec 25 Victoria Mary Stong / Community Activist 11101 United States No. N/A Because Historical neighborhoods enrich the Country and need to be protected! Unfortunately not. When developed in these type area's it's very destructive to the Community and the residents there too.
340 5:36 pm PDT, Oct 14 Lisa Buchan 19001 United States No   It is already a poor neighborhood and there are too many students in the area so access to gambling and creating gambling problems would be greater if it was in that area Yes, I was a U of Pitt student  
339 2:58 pm PDT, Jul 22 dana szemereta 27920 United States nope     no  
338 5:54 pm PDT, Jul 7 jesse wendt 47165 United States no        
336 11:26 am PST, Jan 30 Anonymous 15235 United States No        
335 11:33 am PST, Jan 21 Anonymous 15213 United States no n/a I don't think it's a good idea. I think it will increase crime in the area . I think that Mellon arena was a big mistake and, unfortunately ruined what could have been a unique, diverse area. Putting in a casino will make things worse. I think Pittsburgh should spend it's time reviving the Hill District. If anything, Pittsburgh should probably put in a drug rehab center. Not to be stereotypical but drugs fuel most of the violence in the hill district. We got lost and drove through it at night. It was not a pretty sight there were prostitutes everywhere. It just looked unsafe.  
334 12:23 pm PST, Dec 29 Sam Portnoff 14901 United States Not now, I grew up there. I spent the first 18 years of my life on the Hill before I left for college. I oppose the casinos placement on the Lower Hill because it would pull much needed money out of the community. Yes, I was born and raised on the Hill. No
331 2:34 pm PST, Dec 19 Milton Wolfson 15120 United States no   it will harm there and bring more crime to the area yes  
330 2:17 pm PST, Dec 19 Paul Warlop 15217 United States No n/a I don't think a casino will help the city anywhere it is located: especially in the middle of a residential neighborhood it will be especially disruptive. Yes see previous comment
327 2:00 pm PST, Dec 18 Robin Fok 15217 United States No   It will further alienate the Hill from the rest of the city. Besides, what it needs is NOT a casino. Yes The Singapore government recently approved plans to have a casino built admidst fears of social problems. There might be laws preventing persons earning less than a minimum income from entering. This exemplifies the problems that could plague the Hill district, ie: exacerbation of current social problems in a poor working class neighbourhood
326 12:13 pm PST, Dec 18 Anonymous 21401 United States no   yes yes  
324 12:00 pm PST, Dec 18 Anonymous 14580 United States no   hate the PITTSBURGH PENGUINS YEA GAMBLING BRINGS THE WRONG INFLUENCE
322 11:43 am PST, Dec 18 Jennie Boatman 78664 United States no n/a yes yes no
321 11:43 am PST, Dec 18 Deniz Secilmis 10003 United States No, but I went to school in Pittsburgh and hope to see it improve to the great city it can once again become.   Evidence in surrounding cities with similar proposals provides that the areas the casions are set in get no benefit from the casinos. Atlantic City for example is beyond being a pure slum. You see children smoking and poverty in the streets. Yes I have done several school projects based on the hill district, and know its poor condition. It will only become worstened with a casino. Gambling is not a way to foster community. It will simply greaten the divide and draw an unwanted group to Pittsburgh. This is not how to develop the community. Also they will never see a drop of the profits.
317 11:23 am PST, Dec 18 Steve Chiang 15206 United States no n/a gambling is exploitation anywhere. especially bad in an economically challenged area like the Hill District yes Atlantic City is not a success story
316 10:56 am PST, Dec 18 William Hopkins 15232 United States No, Shadyside N/A I think it will not only be detrimental to residents of the hill district, but will be detrimental to the City as a whole Yes  
313 10:49 am PST, Dec 18 A. Simms 15232 United States No   It just doesn't seem like a good idea Yes I can't help but think that this casino would only hurt the people living around it. I wouldn't think gambling would be a good way to cause an area to improve
312 10:48 am PST, Dec 18 Stephen Mrdjenovich Jr 15085 United States no        
310 10:38 am PST, Dec 18 Tom Renney 10001 United States No..   Casino = Bad    
308 10:31 am PST, Dec 18 A. Ovechkin 15217 United States One time.   bad idea.    
307 10:23 am PST, Dec 18 G Hanlon 15217 United States Yes Too long to count I belive that this will bring out the worst in people.   Casino's rot communities. And if the only reason people want this travisty is to keep a barbaric sport in the city.. no need
306 10:23 am PST, Dec 18 Anonymous 15217 United States No, I used to be.   Gambling is not a way to re-bulid!! We need Stores and better living. Gambling is not the way to do it. I used to  
305 8:57 am PST, Dec 18 Anonymous 15233 United States no     yes Casinos are terrible
304 8:47 am PST, Dec 18 ben straus 97205 United States No   It would further separate the area from greater pittsburgh and create an even larger rift between one of pittsburgh's great communities and the city itself Yes They suck
303 6:04 am PST, Dec 18 nathan hargenrader 15201 United States no   Definitely seems like a bad idea... yes  
302 5:04 am PST, Dec 18 Darin Curts 15212 United States No        
301 2:35 am PST, Dec 18 Geoffrey Di Beneditto 15289 United States No.   See below. Contact for more info. Yes I am an architect and an urban designer. I fully understand the ramifications of redevelopment such as this kind. The modernist discourse of the 1960s and 70s had a profoundly negative impact on cities and urbanism in this country. Melon Arena and I579 was part of this movement destroyed one of the most vibrant cultural centers of the country, let alone Pittsburgh. DO NOT MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE TWICE. This is a dire time for Pittsburgh. Its future sits on the edge of a knife. It could climb out of what it has become over the last 30 years, and regain its prominence amongst American cities, or, with poor decisions, can put itself into the point of no return. This city is dying, its population is comprised of only those who remain behind, and that population is on the verge of leaving forever. Slots are NOT going to draw those people. It will only push others away. The Cultural Trusts site downtown is a major step forward and I applaud whole-heartedly. Do not ruin it with this project. Please, consider the ramifications before there is no longer a Pittsburgh for which to fight.

Raise Your Hand! No Casino on the Hill Petition

If you know the history of the Hill, raise your hand
If you know the Wylie Avenue thrills, raise your hand
We've got a lot to be proud of our past
And we're gonna build a future that's gonna last
So we don't want no casino on the Hill

Somebody raise your hand
You better raise your hand


Don't try to use August Wilson's name
While you put the neighborhood he loved to shame
Cuz we don't want no casino on the Hill
Somebody raise your hand
He already raised his hand


We stand and sign united as Hill residents and supporters of Hill residents on this issue because:

The Hill is an internationally famous neighborhood not only for its jazz greats and Negro League Baseball Teams such as the Pittsburgh Crawfords and the Homestead Grays but most recently because the late, great playwright, August Wilson set "The Pittsburgh Cycle", nine of his ten plays in the Hill District community in which he was born and raised. All of the people who love the characters in "Jitney", "Fences", "Two Trains Running", "Joe Turner's Come and Gone", "The Piano Lesson", "Seven Guitars", "King Hedley II", "Gem of the Ocean", "Radio Golf" --- even "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" are all familiar with and appreciate the culture of Hill District residents that directly influenced Wilson's characters.

But we are not just characters, we are real people with a real community and real issues to confront, just like the characters do in the plays. So art imitates life imitates art.

We are a proud and hardworking community and, although we do not have billionaires at our backs, a large PR firm or high-powered attorneys, we know we have a voice and can make a difference. We ask that we band together and for your assistance for all of these reasons.

We confronted this issue in the 1960s with the city's plans for "urban redevelopment" and we WON the battle to save the REST of our neighborhood with the slogan --- "Not Another Inch!". Now, in 2006, the proposal for its "development" is even worse. But we have a slogan and a freedom song! --- "Raise Your Hand! No Casino on the Hill!" --- and most importantly, determination to save our community and further empower ourselves.

The proposal for the Isle of Capri Casino development set in the
Lower Hill District will cause much more harm than good to the City of Pittsburgh and the residents of the entire Hill District, in particular.

In order to preserve the Hill District (which is currently experiencing various phases of development), we want to ensure its positive future by preventing a gambling casino to be placed in the neighborhood.

Gambling addiction rates will increase, thereby causing residents to lose their property, homes and efforts at a more quality of life. Crime rates will dramatically increase and such crimes as murder, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and rape are well known as the types of crimes which permeate casino development in cities, in particular. Further, the increase in domestic violence, child neglect and abuse has also been statistically proven to increase in areas of casino development in cities in particular.

City Councilwoman Tonya Payne does NOT represent our interests in this development, nor does the Rev. James Simms, whose church does not even reside in the Hill District. Neither of these two persons represent the majority of the Hill District residents who do NOT want a casino in our neighborhood.

The majority of the residents of the hard working but lower to mid-income community of the Hill District cannot sustain this onslaught and, therefore, ask for support of other Hill Residents, Pittsburghers and non-Pittsburghers alike to stand (and sign) with us and support our cause.

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board has a choice to make and we are asking that all concerned citizens seek to influence that choice. We seek to communicate to and persuade the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board that it is a poor choice and liability on the city to allow for the Isle of Capri / Pittsburgh First / Nationwide Reality Investors / Mario Lemiuex to have a license to build a casino in the Lower Hill.

The new arena can be built and the Pittsburgh Penguins can stay with Governor Ed Rendell's PLAN B. But leave the Isle of Capri away from our community!

We will resist this development every step of the way because we care about our community and find this entire proposal to be careless, callous and disrespectful to our community.

We stand and sign united as Hill residents and supporters of Hill residents on this issue.

Note: This Raise Your Hand! No Casino on the Hill Petition petition was submitted by Kimberly Ellis. ThePetitionSite.com is a free service provided to help concerned citizens rally support for issues they believe in. The opinions expressed by this petition do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of ThePetitionSite.com or Care2.com. There is no express or implied endorsement of this petition nor any newsletter offers (except those from Care2.com) by Care2.com, Inc, ThePetitionSite.com, or our sponsors. If you believe this system is being abused, please contact customer support.

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