Crash shows casino lure for seniors

A charter bus lies in a water-filled ditch Sunday after crashing on a rural two lane road near Williams, Calif. At least eight people died and several were injured when the bus crashed while carrying passengers to a casino resort 60 miles north of Sacramento.

? The casinos run by American Indian tribes in Northern California work to attract lonely seniors on fixed incomes by offering cheap transportation on charter buses like the one that crashed over the weekend, killing eight people and injuring dozens.

The casinos also provide free meals and complimentary slot machine play to the thousands of seniors who have helped fuel the industry over the past decade. Some seniors fund the excursions with their Social Security checks and return home worrying about not being able to cover basic living expenses.

“They always complain they don’t have money,” said Pa Phang, 37, whose 87-year-old father-in-law, Xee Hue Vang, died in Sunday’s crash an hour north of Sacramento. Her mother-in-law, Mao Lee Yang, 75, remains hospitalized.

Seniors actively recruited

Gambling opponents and social workers say that while casinos draw all types of players with dreams of striking it rich, California’s network of bus services and recruiters has been especially effective in luring seniors to the state’s 56 Indian casinos.

A significant portion of casino business in California comes from seniors, many of whom are Asian, according to a tribal gaming consultant who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“It’s a matter of free time,” said the consultant, who is not authorized to speak to reporters.

But James May, a spokesman for the California Nations Indian Gaming Association, which represents 41 casinos, would not comment on the age or race of players that frequent the casinos.

The charter bus that crashed Sunday in Williams, about 60 miles north of Sacramento, was en route to Colusa Casino Resort, which said it had done business with the bus company since 2006 but did not have an appointment with it that day.

The California Highway Patrol arrested the 52-year-old bus driver on suspicion of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Officials said that he did not have the proper license to carry passengers and that the vehicle had an invalid license plate. The investigation continues.

Theresa Saechao, a social worker who has been helping bus crash victims and their families, said casinos and charter bus services have profited by targeting poor Southeast Asian communities, particularly seniors. “It’s destroying these communities here,” Saechao said.

State hearings

State lawmakers have conducted hearings on problem gambling in recent years. And Democratic Assemblyman Mark DeSaulnier, chairman of the Transportation Committee, said his panel is requesting information about Sunday evening’s crash in Colusa County.

Relatives of the victims say recruiters for chartered buses come to the community, and then word of the gambling trips spreads.

“They are actually going into low-income neighborhoods and picking people out,” DeSaulnier said.

There are 1 million Californians who have a serious gambling problem, a state-sponsored study estimated two years ago.

Another state study found that the rate of problem gambling is lower among adults older than 65 than among the disabled, the unemployed and African-Americans. But gambling opponents and family members say seniors are hit especially hard by losses because they are on fixed incomes.

“Many live very insecure financial lives,” said Rev. James Butler, executive director of the California Coalition Against Gambling Expansion, a faith-based organization. “And by them being in a situation where they begin to lose $50 to $100 a week, it might be enough to jeopardize their financial situation and make them unable to make payments on utilities.”