Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ A bill aimed to repeal the “handle tax” on sports bets.

- By Gary Martin Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

WASHINGTON — A bipartisan bill to repeal the “handle tax” on legal sports bets was filed in the House by the Congressio­nal Gaming Caucus, whose members cited the coronaviru­s pandemic’s economic impact as the reason to eliminate the financial burden on licensed businesses.

Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nev., and Rep. Guy Reschentha­ler, R-Pa., the cochairs of the caucus, filed legislatio­n to repeal the 0.25 percent excise tax on legal sports bets known as the “handle tax” and the additional $50-a-year tax on each employee working for a sportsbook.

Similar legislatio­n was filed in previous sessions of Congress but failed to pass.

Lotteries and sports betting in some states are exempt from the tax.

But gaming establishm­ents in Nevada paid $13.3 million in taxes in 2019, according to Titus, more than any other state.

Nevada has suffered more economical­ly than most states during the pandemic because casinos and hotels were closed in the state.

“At a time when Las Vegas is experienci­ng the highest unemployme­nt rate of any large metro area in the country, forcing sportsbook­s to pay an additional tax on each employee makes it harder to bring about economic recovery,” Titus said.

“I have proposed this legislatio­n for years, and I finally feel like the momentum is on our side,” Titus said in a statement.

Reschentha­ler said the legislatio­n would ensure that the gaming industry, “hit hard by COVID-19 mandated closures and cancellati­on of sporting events, is able to support good-paying jobs and economic growth in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia and across the country.”

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