Icahn rejects union bid to keep Trump Taj Mahal casino open
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Billionaire investor Carl Icahn rejected an offer Monday by Atlantic City’s main casino workers’ union that it says would have saved the struggling Trump Taj Mahal casino.
Through a local official of the Atlantic City casino company he owns, Icahn reaffirmed his plan to close the Taj Mahal on Oct. 10, saying the union has no one but itself to blame for the impending loss of nearly 3,000 jobs.
Local 54 of the Unite-HERE union presented Icahn’s management team on Monday with an offer it said would cost only $1.3 million more than the billionaire’s last offer, a comparative drop in the bucket in the casino industry. The proposal would have restored health insurance in January for Taj Mahal workers that was terminated in 2014, and would have adopted in September 2017 the same contract terms that the Icahn-owned Tropicana agreed to before the Taj strike began on July 1.
The main issue in the strike is the restoration of health insurance and pension benefits that previous management ended in October 2014, while the casino was in bankruptcy. Icahn took over the casino in March, and was its main lender during the bankruptcy.


