Our Successes

Casino-Free Philadelphia started June 1, 2006, with a rally of 200 people for greater transparency and more public input on casinos. Since that rally, we created a grassroots movement to stop the casinos, including:

  • Earning thousands of media articles about this struggle both locally and nationally, including coverage by National Public Radio, USA Today, The Washington Post and international press in the UK and Australia.
  • Publicizing the harms of casinos on neighborhoods and their link with increased crime with hundreds of public service announcements.
  • Successfully lobbying for the introduction of House Bill 1477 to create the same 1,500-foot casino buffer as the question the PA Supreme Court prevented from being on the city ballot.
  • Filing numerous lawsuits which slowed down the casino construction process.
  • Organizing dozens of demonstrations and actions across the city and region to voice our concerns in many venues.
  • Proving that citizens can take back their government!

We did this with an opponent that bought nearly every major public relations firm in the city to discredit us. SugarHouse claims our delay tactics have cost it $100 million, which included their hiring of private investigators to try to smear and intimidate us, law firms to intimidate and threaten lawsuits, and an aggressive public relations strategy.

Our core beliefs and strategy have shown to be effective. We believe in strengthening the power of the people through grassroots organizing, direct action, and sustained public involvement. To fight corruption, one needs transparency; to fight poor planning, one needs public involvement in planning processes; to fight despair in the political system, one needs involvement that does not merely ask politicians but respectfully insists on a fair process. These values are reflected in our recent campaigns.

Our Casino-Free Campaigns

August 2009 to the present

Into the Red: Bankrupting Casinos Before They Bankrupt Us

For the last three years we have prevented construction of two "inevitable" casinos through creative campaigns and direct action. We will continue to stop the two proposed casinos with your help. Sign the Casino-Free Pledge.

Casino-Free Philadelphia's In the Red campaign aims to persuade casino investors Neil G. Bluhm (of SugarHouse) and Ronald Rubin (of Foxwoods) to abandon their plans for casinos in Philadelphia.

January to July 2009

We seek to embolden one Philadelphia elected official — a Philadelphia politician representing us in City Hall, Harrisburg or even Washington — to publicly adopt the position that casinos, no matter the location, would be bad for Philadelphia.

February to April 2008


Gov. Rendell is using grossly inflated and misleading numbers to push casino slot parlors into neighborhoods. Industry studies never looked at the costs of casinos, only their benefits. We deserve the truth.

May to June 2007

Rather than allow the public to have their say, the PA Gaming Control Board, SugarHouse, and Foxwoods sued the city to prevent a vote from going forward on creating a 1,500-foot buffer between casinos and homes, places of worship, schools, and parks.

In a decision reeking of corruption, the PA Supreme Court overruled the city’s right and the right of the voters by handing down an injunction that prevented the vote from taking place. A sticker stating, “Removed by Court Order” was placed over the already-printed ballot question on each voting machine. Once again, many politicians, reporters, and pundits declared the anti-casino movement dead.

But we take a bold response to repression. Instead of seeing this as a loss, we saw this as a chance to show the city just how deeply casinos and corruption were intertwined.

February to May 2007

After the Gaming Control Board made its decision to pick SugarHouse and Foxwoods, we vowed to give the public a say in the siting process. We launched No Way Without Our Say — a petition drive to get over 20,000 signatures. That many signatures would force a city council vote on creating a primary ballot question.

Citizens were asked to support a ballot referendum creating a 1,500-foot buffer between casinos and homes, places of worship, schools, and parks. The goal was to allow Philadelphians a chance to have their voices heard through a legal and open process.

October 2006 to January 2007

The PA Gaming Control Board (PGCB) refused to make public their documents, such as updated site plans and traffic plans. No meaningful public input could be made without access to such basic documents.

The goal was to get the PGCB to stop violating our right to know and release the hidden documents. If they did not release the documents by our Dec. 1, 2006 deadline, we vowed to go to their offices in Harrisburg to carry out a “citizens’ document search” and make the documents public ourselves.