The NSW casino regulator has become busier with Sydney on Monday becoming the first Australian city with two competing casinos.
The NSW casino regulator has warned that its independent monitor installed to watch Crown’s Sydney casino will scrutinise every move Crown makes at the $2.2 billion Barangaroo tower when its high-roller gambling floor opens for the first time on Monday.
Simon McGrath, chief executive of Crown Sydney, at the entrance to the gaming area. Crown Sydney will finally open its gaming floors on Monday.Ahead of Crown’s first gaming floor opening on Monday, Mr Crawford vowed the catastrophic failures of governance seen at the Crown over the last few years, including money laundering, tax avoidance and lawbreaking, could never happen again.
The Crystal Room will open on Monday, with the Mahogany Room to follow. Crown has 160 gaming tables and 70 electronic table games. The venue also has 12 exclusive “Sky Salons” for extra privacy for high rollers. Mr McGrath said the tower was still an “icon” for Sydney, even after Crown’s regulatory troubles, and would attract more international visitors to the city as per billionaire James Packer’s initial 2012 pitch to the state government.
”There’s no doubt that the contribution we’ll make to Sydney is to bring international visitors here.” Mr Crawford has become the busiest casino regulator in Australia, with Sydney on Monday becoming the first city with two competing casinos.
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