Oxford -
The state Department of Environmental Protection has reissued a construction permit to the Oxford Casino, six months after a Kennebec County Superior Court found that the state had violated its own permitting rules in granting a permit in 2011.
The Androscoggin River Alliance and several abutters argued that the state was required to consider all three phases of the proposed casino project when issuing the permit, but only considered Phase I - the 65,000-square-foot casino and parking lot.
The court agreed.
The Sun Journal reports that the newly reviewed land use and construction permit was signed by DEP Commissioner Patricia Aho on Tuesday.
Casino developers want to expand the gambling facility, and add parking, restaurants, a spa, a pool, a conference center, an RV Park and a skating rink.
State Reissues Permit for Oxford Casino
-
Energy Bill Targets Prices
-
Accused Murderer Heads to Psychiatric Hospital
-
Ignition Interlock Devices Designed To Reduce Drunk Driving
-
Gifford's Ice Cream Gets a Sweet Prize
-
Hundreds Attend Balloon Release For Cable Family
-
Pittsfield Students Honor Men and Women Who Serve
-
Bar Harbor to Boston Air Service is Back
-
UMaine Unveils Floating Buoy to help with Offshore Wind Power
-
Battlefield Cross Memorial Ceremony to Take Place in Augusta
-
State Police Increase Patrols for Holiday Weekend
Comments
Add your comments to the discussion. By submitting a comment, you agree to the terms of the terms of use and are 18 years of age or older.
Fields marked with a * are required.
Want a personal picture next to your comment? Sign up for a free Gravatar or post with your facebook account.
Facebook Comments
Breaking News from CBS
-
Video: Torrential rains cause record flooding in south Texas
The San Antonio area faces major flooding problems after nearly 10 inches of rain in just a few hours caused the San Antonio River to reach record levels. Gary Cooper of CBS affiliate KENS reports.
-
Video: Cold start to summer season for Sandy-impacted shore towns
Towns along the Jersey Shore hard hit by superstorm Sandy kicked off the summer season this Memorial Day weekend on a cold and wet note. Terrell Brown reports.
-
Thousands of U.S. bridges vulnerable to collapse
Some bridges deemed to be fine structurally can still be crippled if they are struck hard enough in the wrong spot
-
Texas flooding turns deadly as police confirm body found in water
San Antonio police urge people to limit travel after body found in floodwaters
-
Drive or fly? What summer travel shows about economy
USA Today reporter Charisse Jones explains how summer travel patterns can tell a lot about nation's financial well-being








Add your Comments