Ottawa

Ottawa's slots payout dropped $580K during lockout

It would appear the five-month labour dispute at the Rideau Carleton Raceway OLG Slots caused a steep decline in the City of Ottawa's fortunes.

Long labour dispute between raceway workers, OLG ended late May

The Rideau Carleton Raceway (Jean-Sebastien Marier/Radio-Canada)

It would appear the five-month labour dispute at the Rideau Carleton Raceway OLG Slots caused a steep decline in the City of Ottawa's fortunes.

The city's revenue from the gaming operation at the raceway dropped by more than a half-million dollars since the lockout of workers there began, according to figures just released by the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation.

OLG's most recent quarterly payment to the city for hosting the slots was $1.4 million, down about $350,000 from the same period last year.

Add losses since the lockout began before Christmas, and the city is out about $580,000.

Some 124 casino workers hit the picket lines in December, but returned to work after agreeing to binding arbitration in late May. The slots operated on reduced hours during the lockout, but returned to round-the-clock operation June 6. 

The city earns on average $5 million annually from the casino at the raceway. Quarterly earnings are far higher in the spring and summer than they are in the winter months.

While that revenue may seem small relative to the municipality's $3-billion budget, the city still counts on the income to cover such costs as upgrading parks facilities.