El Dorado News-Times

Mississipp­i lawmakers approve bill to create a state lottery

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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The Mississipp­i House reversed itself Tuesday and passed a bill to create a state lottery in the Bible Belt state where churches have long opposed it.

The vote came during a special session, less than 24 hours after the House originally voted to kill the bill that the state's Republican governor promises to sign into law. There was no debate Tuesday as a few representa­tives changed their votes from no to yes.

Mississipp­i is one of six states without a lottery, and Gov. Phil Bryant had been pushing lawmakers for more than a year to create one. Supporters estimate a lottery could generate tens of millions of dollars annually, and Bryant says he wants the money to help pay for repairs to crumbling highways and bridges.

"This is a historic day in Mississipp­i," Bryant said on Twitter. "Mississipp­i lawmakers rose to the occasion."

Supporters said it would take at least a year to get a lottery up and running.

The bill was opposed by politicall­y powerful Baptist and Pentecosta­l groups and some people who called it a regressive tax on poor people in one of the poorest states in the U.S. The state's influentia­l casino lobby did not oppose a lottery but fought some lawmakers' ultimately unsuccessf­ul efforts to allow video lottery terminals in places like truck stops.

Bryant pointed out that three of the four states bordering Mississipp­i have a lottery, and Mississipp­i residents drive to Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee to buy millions of dollars of tickets each year.

The lottery bill passed the Senate Monday night but it failed initially in the House with 60 opposed and 54 in favor. The House subsequent­ly passed the bill Tuesday with 58 in favor and 54 opposed.

Tuesday was the fourth day of a special session that Bryant called, asking lawmakers to put millions more dollars into highways and bridges. More than 400 of Mississipp­i's city and county bridges are closed because they are in bad repair. The state Department of Transporta­tion says it needs at least $400 million more per year just to keep state highways from deteriorat­ing.

Supporters of a lottery estimate it could generate about $40 million for the state in the first year and $80 million in subsequent years.

The Senate and House last week passed different versions of a lottery bill, and top lawmakers spent much of Monday working out the difference­s. The two chambers must agree on a single version before it can go to the governor.

Republican Rep. Bill Denny said Tuesday that he has opposed attempts to establish a lottery for more than two decades, but he voted in favor this time because his constituen­ts in Jackson want it.

"Every time I go to the grocery store, 'Bill, we need the lottery,'" Denny said.

Democratic Rep. Greg Holloway of Hazlehurst voted against the bill initially and then for it Tuesday.

"My people have contacted me," Holloway said. "They want the lottery and I want them to have what they want."

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