Business

Investigators study Cincinnati casino accident; at least a dozen injured

  • Al Behrman/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Workers and officials inspect the scene of a collapse Friday at the Horseshoe Casino under constructionin Cincinnati. Authorities in Cincinnati say at least 12 people have been taken to hospitals with minor, nonlife-threatening injuries

FROM STAFF and WIRE REPORTS
Posted: Jan. 27, 2012 | 9:11 a.m.
Updated: Jan. 28, 2012 | 8:38 a.m.

CINCINNATI -- Federal investigators are looking into an accident at a $400 million Cincinnati casino project -- half owned by Caesars Entertainment Corp. -- that injured about a dozen construction workers.

Cincinnati's fire chief said a crew was pouring concrete Friday when a support beam gave way, sending the workers tumbling 30 feet to the ground. The fire chief said the injuries are mainly bruises and bumps, and possibly some broken bones, with seven workers known to have sought hospital care.

No one was under the area when it collapsed. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration says its inspectors are on the scene.

The Horseshoe Casino Cincinnati is being developed by Ohio-based Rock Gaming in partnership with Las Vegas-based Caesar's Entertainment. The companies are also developing a downtown Cleveland casino where a 60-foot by 60-foot second-level section of the parking deck gave way while concrete was being poured on Dec. 16. No one was injured.

There is "absolutely zero connection" between the collapse in Cincinnati and the accident in Cleveland, Rock Gaming President Steve Rosenthal said. "These are two different construction management companies, two different contractors, two different sites, two different areas."

The development in the northeast corner of the city's center is expected to open in spring 2013. The Horseshoe Casino Cincinnati is supposed to attract nearly 6 million visitors and create 1,700 jobs, said Lee Dillard, vice president of finance for the Horseshoe Casino Cleveland. It will feature three restaurants, about 2,000 slot machines, 85 table games and a 31-table World Series of Poker room.

The general contractor overseeing the casino project has a clean safety record with OSHA since 2006 when it was penalized for four violations and paid a $3,100 fine.

Jessie Folmar, a spokeswoman for Cincinnati-based Messer Construction Co., said the company is trying to learn what happened Friday.

State Sen. Bill Seitz, a Cincinnati Republican, said construction workers have been hurrying to make up time lost during negotiations over gaming tax policy, but added: "I don't think they're knowingly or willfully sacrificing safety or quality for time."

The Associated Press and Las Vegas Review-Journal reporter Howard Stutz contributed to this report.

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  1. biff.wellinford Jan. 29, 2012 | 6:50 p.m. Report Abuse

    Another finely run and managed Caesars Entertainment property. It wasn't bad enough how Caesars screwed up ALL of its Las Vegas properties with its Roman Empire Development subsidy (the remodeling company that messed up the Rio, Harrah's, Flamingo and Caesars). Now its moved its (let me ruin a property) mentality to Ohio! Of course they will find some reason for the accident that WON'T be from cutting corners (a Caesars Entertainment speciality).

  2. Deebo.James Jan. 28, 2012 | 7:19 p.m. Report Abuse

    Martin Harris has more integrity than any other contracting firm in Las Vegas. Third World American is truly a lowlife, to make dumb statements....

  3. Third World American Jan. 28, 2012 | 10:53 a.m. Report Abuse

    lol.... this is what we get when we ut corners and allow companies to bring in visa workers from other countries that dont have the skill the American tax payer does... and yes these construction co's bring in visa workers by the thousands,., just ask martin harris or any of the contractor that were bringing them in on ity center... and look what a cluster !$#$! that was

  4. Southside Teddy Jan. 27, 2012 | 2:25 p.m. Report Abuse

    Gary (boy) Lovechecks will sacrifice quality for money, 2nd one in the last 8 weeks, The boys from Rock Gaming still dont have a casino lic, Keep up the good job Gary, when will the IPO be out ? will buy,then exit when you say its time to dump this dog.

  5. jveee Jan. 27, 2012 | 11:52 a.m. Report Abuse

    Good old Harrah's. Changing your name to Caesars won't hide your ineptness, it will just ruin what was Caesars.

  6. MIKE VEGAS Jan. 27, 2012 | 10:11 a.m. Report Abuse

    CHINESE OR KOREAN STEEL AND BAD ENGINEERING IS MY GUESS. YOU CAN ONLY THIN DOWN TIN FOIL SO MUCH BEFORE IT TURNS INTO PLASTIC WRAP.

  7. mrnyc84 Jan. 27, 2012 | 10:04 a.m. Report Abuse

    ohio is a place that exports jerks to live in las vegas

  8. doogie Jan. 27, 2012 | 9:35 a.m. Report Abuse

    More than likely, hoards of Union loafers overloaded the exterior beams while hiding out during the pouring of the slabs. "Don't kill the job, kid".

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