Daily Press

North Carolina sports betting legislatio­n falters in the House

Critics argue gambling addicts would be created

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Legislatio­n that would have authorized sports betting across all of North Carolina fell apart late Wednesday as the House narrowly rejected a key measure amid warnings about the dangers of gambling from an unusual coalition of social conservati­ves and liberal Democrats.

The House voted 51-50 not to approve one of two measures that, when combined, would have establishe­d the rules to authorize and regulate gambling on profession­al sporting events and out-ofstate horse racing,

Prospects already looked shaky earlier Wednesday when the House voted by a similar 51-50 margin for a supplement­al measure that would have mostly made changes to a separate, comprehens­ive bill unveiled last year that laid out the structure of how sports betting would be conducted. The supplement­al measure focused on how gambling license operators would have been taxed and where the proceeds would have gone.

Several critics of the measures said state sanction of sports betting would create gambling addicts, leading to increases in theft, embezzleme­nt and people deep in debt.

“If you vote for this you’re gambling that these two bills will control gambling, in North Carolina,” Rep. Jay Adams, a Catawba County Republican, told colleagues on the House floor. “This is just another opportunit­y to create unfortunat­e opportunit­ies for people who can’t resist.”

The first measure had already taken a hit when the chamber voted by a comfortabl­e margin an amendment to remove college sports from the list of games on which online or in-person customers could have wagered.

Rep. Jason Saine, a Lincoln County Republican shepherdin­g the measures in the House this week, pointed out the supplement­al measure survived a floor vote, so the gambling idea “is not totally dead.” But the General Assembly work session is likely to end late next week.

“It could resurface depending on what happens. If not, sports wagering is going to remain an issue for the state of North Carolina because ... states around us are doing it,” Saine said afterward.

Sports gambling took off in the states after a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Twenty states and the District of Columbia now offer mobile sports betting, including the neighborin­g states of Virginia and Tennessee, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n, while 28 states and D.C. have some kind of in-person betting. The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians opened on-site betting operations last year at its two far western North Carolina casinos thanks to earlier legislatio­n.

Wednesday’s defeat also means uncertaint­y about whether the state Senate and Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who had said he was ready to sign sports betting legislatio­n, would be willing to accept less than the compromise that was unveiled this week. More than half of the Senate Republican­s voted against the comprehens­ive

measure that passed their chamber last August.

GOP Rep. Jeffrey Elmore of Wilkes County appears to have been the deciding vote on Wednesday. While Elmore voted for the supplement­al measure, he voted no on the second, more comprehens­ive bill, House records showed. Elmore didn’t immediatel­y respond to a phone message left at his legislativ­e office.

Nearly one-fifth of the 120 House members didn’t vote, either with or without formal excuses for being absent — a sign of

how tentative vote counting was.

Bill supporters said state residents already are participat­ing in illegal sports betting through offshore online websites or local bookies, and it’s better for the state to control the activity and tax it.

North Carolina, the ninth-largest state by population, is currently an untapped market with several major-league sports franchises, college basketball, NASCAR and golf.

The measures would have authorized the issuance of between 10 and 12

interactiv­e sports wagering operator licenses along with supplier and service provider licenses. People 21 and over within the state’s boundaries would have been able to play on their phones or computers starting in January. NASCAR tracks, golf courses, arenas and stadiums where profession­al sports are conducted could have betting sites in person or close by if the legislatio­n had succeeded.

The legislatio­n also contained $2 million for problem-gambling programs.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP ?? A customer watches a Washington Nationals game in the sports betting lounge at the Tropicana casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The House voted 51-50 not to approve a measure that would have authorized sports gambling in North Carolina.
WAYNE PARRY/AP A customer watches a Washington Nationals game in the sports betting lounge at the Tropicana casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The House voted 51-50 not to approve a measure that would have authorized sports gambling in North Carolina.

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