Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lotto itch? Scratch it somewhere else

Gaming interests tip balance from tickets

- By Sean Whaley Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Someone could be $700 million richer when the Powerball numbers come up Wednesday night.

But if the winner — or winners, for all you office pool lottery players — is a Nevada resident, he or she will have had to make a drive to get the lucky ticket.

The lottery is against the law in Nevada because the gaming industry in the state does not want the competitio­n.

“The potential impact of a lottery on commercial gaming, and therefore the state’s tax revenue, should be well-understood before amending the state’s constituti­on is considered,” the Nevada Resort Associatio­n said.

So while fortune seekers in 44 states, including California and Arizona, can head to the local convenienc­e store to pick their lucky Powerball numbers, Nevada residents have to cross a state line — but not to Utah — to even play a scratch ticket.

Compared with other types of gaming, lotteries do not pay property taxes or require investment in infrastruc­ture. Nor do they create high-paying jobs with benefits or have the direct and indirect eco

LOTTERY

nomic impacts of resort casinos, the resort associatio­n said.

“A state lottery would be a regressive tax which would provide no immediate revenue (and) does not create quality jobs, and lotteries have not proven to solve revenue problems in other states,” the associatio­n said in a statement to the Review-journal.

There is also some opposition from religious and conservati­ve groups because of the potential negative effects on people with low incomes who might invest scarce income on a chance at riches. Difficult to change

And even without the opposition, implementi­ng a lottery in Nevada would be difficult.

A prohibitio­n on the state lottery was placed in Nevada’s constituti­on at statehood in 1864. In the sesquicent­ennial-plus since then, the only change has been a voter-approved amendment in 1990 that allows lotteries to be operated by charitable organizati­ons.

So getting a lottery in Nevada would require a constituti­onal amendment, and both methods of doing so take years.

A citizen-backed initiative petition would require votes in two consecutiv­e general elections. A petition done by lawmakers would have to pass two consecutiv­e sessions of the Legislatur­e, then go to the voters once.

Every effort to amend Nevada’s constituti­on to allow a lottery floated in the Legislatur­e over the past 30 years has failed.

The last effort came in 2015, when former Assemblyma­n Harvey Munford, D-las Vegas, got a committee hearing on his measure, but it never came up for a vote.

Contact Sean Whaley at swhaley@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @seanw801 on Twitter.

 ?? Andrew Kelly ?? Reuters Powerball lottery tickets cannot be purchased in Nevada because the state prohibits lotteries to protect its lucrative gaming interests.
Andrew Kelly Reuters Powerball lottery tickets cannot be purchased in Nevada because the state prohibits lotteries to protect its lucrative gaming interests.
 ?? Elizabeth Brumley ?? People fill out numbers on Powerball tickets at the Primm Valley Lotto Store last week.
Las Vegas Review-journal
Elizabeth Brumley People fill out numbers on Powerball tickets at the Primm Valley Lotto Store last week. Las Vegas Review-journal

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