Two Fairfax County resident coalitions told the Joint Subcommittee on Gaming they oppose a proposed Tysons casino and called for a moratorium on new casino approvals until a Virginia Gaming Commission is in place and funded.
Sally Horn of the Tysons Stakeholders Alliance and Chuck Anderson of the No Fairfax Casino Coalition urged lawmakers to require (1) a local-government request before any locality becomes eligible to hold a casino referendum, (2) mandatory community consultation, (3) a referendum and (4) a full, objective cost–benefit study commissioned by JLARC for any future legislative proposals.
Key points from testimony
- Horn said the alliance “strongly supports a pause on approving any new gambling options until such a commission is up and running.” The group recommended increasing the allocation of gaming-tax revenue dedicated to problem-gambling treatment and research to at least 2.5% annually.
- The testimony said Fairfax County residents had been insufficiently engaged in 2024 and 2025 proposals, and Fairfax County’s board leadership had written that the county did not seek casino authority and had not been substantively involved with the developer’s plans.
- The coalition presented survey results it said show strong and growing opposition to a Tysons casino; testimony cited a recent poll finding 75% of Fairfax voters oppose a Tysons casino. The groups warned of traffic congestion, economic substitution harming area retailers, threats to mixed-use redevelopment in Tysons and social costs tied to problem gambling.
Why they asked for a pause
Speakers told the committee that Virginia’s existing gaming landscape is fragmented, enforcement is uneven across products (including illegal sweepstakes machines and apps) and that a new gaming commission should be created and resourced before new licenses are authorized. The groups also warned that a Tysons casino could undermine property values and retail and would be inconsistent with Tysons’ existing redevelopment strategy.