Svenska
Spel first among 140 WLA operators
As
Reported by yogonet.com
SWEDEN
- Swedish Games is the first among government-owned licensed
gaming companies worldwide with a poker site, which was
launched on March 30. Boss Media provided the development
work and system delivery. The next step on the market
is expected to be that many government-owned licensed
gaming companies launch their own sites.
In
total, there are about 140 WLA government-owned licensed
gaming companies, so-called WLA (World Lottery Association)
companies, worldwide. Svenska Spel is the first
government-owned licensed gaming company to launch Internet
poker. There are more companies in the starting blocks
and they are well aware of our role in the development
of this poker site and how important it is that the system
supplier is the right one," says Johan Berg, President
of Boss Media.
In
November 2005, Svenska Spel received approval from the
government to be the first Swedish gaming company to launch
Internet poker. Since then, preparatory work has been
under way at full speed. The aim during the entire development
process was to create a world-class poker site in terms
of entertainment and gaming responsibility.
"Gaming
responsibility is a critical factor for the government-owned
licensed gaming companies. Our solution is clearly more
advanced than what is available on the market today. It
creates greater security for the end-users as well as
for the gaming company since they gain increased control
of the gaming operations," says Berg.
Boss
Medias instant gaming platform, which was already
being used by Svenska Spel, was selected as the base of
the development work to ensure that the high demands could
be met.
"It
is a system that is easy to implement and which offers
a high degree of control and many choices for the operator
in the future. For example, it is easy to add new and
change existing games and other programs that enhance
the efficiency and security of the gaming operations.
We are seeing great interest in this solution among the
government-owned licensed gaming companies," says
Johan Berg.
Casino
jobs a good deal?
As
Reported by The Union-Tribune
SAN
DIEGO, California - A survey of county tribal employees
shows a diverse, growing, mostly happy work force. They
are retirees and middle-agers who wanted to shift gears.
Or seasoned professionals who brought specialized skills
to a new arena. Others are just starting out, in their
early to mid-20s.
They
serve meals and mix drinks. They deal cards, greet customers
and count change in cashier cages, handling more money
in one shift than many people see in a year.
Earning
$10 an hour to $100,000 a year, they're part of what has
become one of the region's fastest-growing labor pools:
the Indian casino work force.
Figures
gathered from the five tribes employing almost 90 percent
of the county's 12,800 casino workers reveal a demographic
portrait of this burgeoning industry. Even more illuminating
are stories from workers themselves, how and why they
came to be doing what they are.
Few
of them are making less than $20,000 a year. Many earn
$40,000, $50,000 or more, plus benefits. They are ethnically
diverse. Most are older than 30 and many older than 50.
About half drive at least 20 miles to work.
An
overwhelming majority of the casino workers have at least
a high school diploma, and many are pursuing higher education
with tuition assistance from their employers. More than
half of those in management have college degrees, executives
say.
For
some in this industry, like table games shift manager
Pat Hixon, gaming has been a longtime profession. He supervised
floor games at Las Vegas' posh Paris Resort before coming
to Pala in 2001.
For
others, such as dispatch supervisor Jerry Lynn, who has
been running Barona's busy radio communications control
room since 1994, casino work was a midlife change after
30 years of auto-body repairs.
I
make more now than I did in that career, and it's easier
work, he said. It's hectic and it's stressful,
but I don't have to worry about stitches in my fingers.
Most
casino jobs involve customer interactions, and people
who are grumpy or introverted are advised to look elsewhere.
It's
lights. It's loud. It's fun, said Danielle Quiroz,
28, a buffet cashier at Sycuan for 3½ years. It's
kind of like you're performing sometimes.
Galyan
JuJu Gago, 27, says working Sycuan's cashier's
cage is far more stimulating than the liquor store where
she used to be. I deal with the money, with the
jackpots. I deal with the customers when they bring me
the chips, she said. It's fun.
The
regional casino work force has more than doubled in the
five years that Gago has been at Sycuan. Five of the county's
eight casinos opened in 2001, and all eight have expanded
since then.
Yet
the casinos still employ only a fraction of the region's
1.3 million workers, according to state Labor Department
statistics. As of 2005, San Diego County had 86,600 construction
workers, 21,600 grocery employees and 16,100 telecommunications
workers. More people worked in clothing stores
12,900 than the 12,800 in Indian gaming.
Each
of the more than two dozen casino employees interviewed
for this story expressed high overall satisfaction in
their jobs, including benefits such as health, dental
and vision insurance, yearly bonuses and 401(k) funds.
According
to figures provided by the casinos, a majority of their
workers earn more than the $32,300 calculated by the state
labor office as the 2005 median wage in San Diego County.
The
main drawbacks voiced by casino employees were cigarette
smoke and having to work nights, weekends and holidays.
The
hours can be a challenge, said Barona Assistant
General Manager Kari Stout-Smith, whose four 10-hour overnight
shifts each week include Saturdays. The only other
negative to it is that not everybody's going to leave
the casino happy. There can be some negativity sometimes.
Each
of the large casinos surveyed by The San Diego Union-Tribune
showed noteworthy numbers in at least one demographic
category.
Barona
Valley Ranch, for example, reported that 65 percent of
its 3,543 employees earn more than $40,000 a year. (Two
casinos, Pala and Rincon, declined to provide pay-scale
percentages.)
Viejas
Casino reported many long-tenured employees, with 47 percent
of its 2,222 workers on the payroll more than five years.
Pala Casino listed 56 percent of its 1,863 workers as
41 or older.
Harrah's
Rincon resort reported the most long-distance commuters,
with 81 percent of its 1,656 workers driving at least
20 miles. Sycuan Casino reported the most diversity among
its 2,004 employees, with 37 percent white, 24 percent
Asian, 16 percent Hispanic, 5 percent black, 1 percent
American Indian and 17 percent other minorities.
Gago,
the Sycuan cashier, is Iraqi. She spends much of her time
off with 10 pals from work men and women.
There
is a Mexican, Vietnamese, white people we're all
mixed, she said. We go to restaurants. They
come over to my house. We go to the movies. We go bowling.
Floor
security guard Murrill McCoy, who is 62 and black, worked
for grocery stores and armored trucks before coming to
Sycuan 12 years ago. He makes $15.70 an hour and likes
the carnival atmosphere of casino work.
He
and others elsewhere say few workers are moving from casino
to casino. Most migration is in-house, from entry-level
to skilled jobs, such as dealers. Their bosses agree,
saying most turnover occurs in the first year or two.
The
thing that surprises me the most is the stability of the
work force, said Jerry Turk, Pala Casino managing
partner. Of the original 1,000 employees that we
had (in 2001), over 250 of those people are still with
us.
Among
them is Hixon, the table games shift manager. He had doubts
about leaving Las Vegas because he had heard that tribal
casinos in California were unprofessional and second-rate.
Those misgivings were dispelled when he came to Pala and
met Turk and his top managers.
They
wanted to operate this 100 percent like a Las Vegas casino,
Hixon said. Everything I feared and heard was untrue.
Sycuan
Casino General Manager Steve Penhall said the toughest
positions to fill are those at the top and bottom of the
pay ranges, and for the same reason: the high cost of
living in San Diego. Entry-level workers often have transportation
problems, he said, which is why Sycuan now buses employees
to work from Tecate, Chula Vista and El Cajon.
Many
specialized jobs aren't out on the casino floor. Creative
manager Larry Gallegos has been with Barona 11 years,
overseeing its radio and TV ad campaigns and making a
salary he says would rival any in his field.
Late
last month, Gallegos was holding casting sessions for
actors in an upcoming commercial, then reviewing the videotapes
with the producer, director and writers in a Mira Mesa
video production studio.
Tiffany
Noriega of Carlsbad left an office job close to home four
years ago to become senior secretary for the Harrah's
Rincon marketing vice president. She drives 45 minutes
to work, but says it's worth it.
A
38-year-old single mom, she makes $42,000 a year, 20 percent
more than she did at her last job. She also likes being
in on behind-the-scenes stuff such as booking entertainment,
planning ad campaigns and organizing in-house promotions.
This
is the easiest and most fun job I could come up with without
a college degree, she said.
Many
entry-level employees dream of career paths such as those
taken by Viejas' John Tehan and Barona's Rodrigo Acero,
both 31.
Tehan
started out at Viejas 13 years ago, making minimum wage
cleaning bathrooms and emptying trash. He
worked his way up through the housekeeping department,
eventually supervising it for eight years.
In
2004, he transferred into gaming, learning all the card
games and becoming a dealer, then pit boss. Now he earns
more than $55,000 as a shift manager and part-time casino
manager, alternately supervising Viejas' 31 card tables
and, in his other role, the entire casino on 12-hour overnight
shifts.
Acero
started at Barona almost 12 years ago as a dishwasher
making $4.75 an hour. He was soon serving food and drinks
on the casino floor, then 10 years ago got trained in-house
to become a blackjack dealer.
Now
Acero makes more than $60,000 a year managing Barona's
baccarat room, where players wager $100 to $10,000 a hand.
He wears a crisp suit; his dealers wear tuxedos. He describes
his job as the exact opposite of the golf-club assembly
line where he used to work in El Cajon.
What
attracts me to it is the action, the money, the people,
he said. On top of that, every day is a different
day.
Acero
expects more growth ahead in his casino, his industry
and his career.
They've
given me the opportunity to be able to progress,
he said. I know I can still keep moving up.