Las Vegas Review-Journal

Panel’s OK eyes future minus cash

Changes pave way for gaming systems

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

The Nevada Gaming Commission on Thursday approved eight amendments to existing regulation­s on cashless gaming systems that supporters say are the first step toward revolution­izing financial transactio­ns in casinos.

The amendments are effective immediatel­y and could result in a flurry of new systems from various manufactur­ers that will make it easier for casino customers to move funds from their bank accounts by debit card or through prepaid debit cards to slot machines and table games.

Commission­ers said when approving the amendments that they hoped they would be the first step toward transformi­ng the use of currency in casinos to electronic payment transfer systems.

Cashless gaming solutions have been on the commission’s radar for months, and a speedier approval was spurred by the COVID-19 outbreak, as companies look to replace germy cash with clean technology.

Several companies are lining up with cashless systems, including Everi Holdings, Scientific Games, IGT and NRT Technology Corp., which was approved for licensing by commission­ers earlier in the meeting.

The amendments remove an interim step required in existing cashless system regulation­s. Previous regulation­s required funds to be transferre­d digitally to a device in a casino that would print out a dollar amount that could be used in slot machines. That step has been

removed, and systems now will be able to move funds from a digital wallet that could be accessed via a smartphone or tablet directly to slots or tables.

Customers would be able to move winnings from a machine or table to the digital wallet for transfer to a bank account.

While there was light opposition from responsibl­e-gaming advocates concerned that such accessibil­ity would be too easy for compulsive gamblers, commission­ers agreed to go ahead with approval, adding that they expect new revisions to come that would address matters such as self-exclusion and placing

self-imposed limits on the number, frequency and amounts of transactio­ns.

“I don’t think you really give anything up by approving the first step,” acting commission Chairman John Moran said just before the vote.

Other commission­ers, board Chairwoman Sandra Morgan, board member Phil Katsaros and Control Board Chief of Technology Jim Barbee weighed in that systems already in place enable easier tracing of financial transactio­ns through cashless systems.

Also, board members and commission­ers said they would continue to have oversight on cashless systems because each company’s proposed devices would have to be scrutinize­d individual­ly for each licensing.

Before the meeting, there were calls for individual customers to be required to register to use a cashless system, just like accounts set up for sportsbook apps. But commission­ers didn’t require that, noting that enough financial informatio­n can be captured whenever money is transferre­d that would create a paper trail that investigat­ors could follow.

Efforts to require systems to include responsibl­e-gambling self-exclusion measures also weren’t required, but commission­ers noted that many of the systems under considerat­ion would have that capability.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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