|
REPRINTED FROM THENEXTMAYOR.COMApril 16, 2007 press release, (submitted via e-mail) |
Casino-Free Philadelphia - Media Alert
April 16, 2007 * www.CasinoFreePhila.org
Media Contact:
Daniel Hunter, 267-825-0807
WHAT: Rally at City Hall for our right to vote
WHERE: City Hall, west-side (Dilworth Plaza)
WHEN: 12noon on Monday, April 16th
Casino-Free Philadelphia will also announce its brand-new strategy if the referendum is struck from the ballot.
"We are shocked and perplexed by this outrageous decision," said CFP coordinator Daniel Hunter. "The Court provided no reason for denying Philadelphia citizens their basic rights, while the dissenting opinion was several pages of rationale."
Hunter said he is hopeful that further legal action might result in the Court lifting its injunction.
If Friday's decision is permitted to stand, however, Hunter said his group would appeal to City Council to assert its zoning powers and reject the sites forced on the city by the state Gaming Control Board. "Council showed its resolve before when it overrode the mayor's veto of the referendum. It may have to once more step up again and force the state to recognize our rights."
Hunter also said the state legislature should demonstrate its resolve to do away with the abuses that produced the slots parlor law. "The new legislature passed reforms to eliminate this sort of abuse," Hunter said. "But that victory for good government is hollow if our representatives do not have the resolve to put these reforms into practice.
"If the Court does not remove its injunction, Council and the legislature must not permit this unsupportable ruling to go unchallenged. Otherwise, they will be saying to voters that money and undue influence still trump the interests of the public in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. The voters will remember that cynical stance on the part of its elected officials and reject them again as we did last November."
Briefs for the preliminary injunction have to be submitted by April 27th.
###