New York Daily News

Bug may boost betting

Sports wagering could help states plug budget holes

- BY WAYNE PARRY

ATLANTIC CITY — The coronaviru­s pandemic could lead to a quicker expansion of sports betting and internet gambling in the U.S. as states deal with huge budget deficits and look for new tax revenue wherever they can find it.

Most major sports remain shut down due to the virus, but European soccer and Asian baseball have begun play, NASCAR is racing again and PGA Tour golf restarts in two weeks. Major U.S. sports leagues including the NBA and NHL are making plans for resuming their seasons.

The virus “will accelerate the expansion of sports betting and online casinos in the next 12 to 24 months,” said Chris Krafcik, a managing director with Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, which tracks sports and internet betting legislatio­n in the U.S. “Both activities provide states, whose economies have been massively disrupted by the outbreak, the opportunit­y to capture new revenue immediatel­y in the form of upfront license fees, and over time through taxes.”

Sports betting is not a golden goose for states seeking new tax revenue. An Associated Press analysis last year found that taxes on sports betting would generate just a fraction of 1% of most states’ budgets if they met their estimates — and many states fell far short of those projection­s.

But with many state budgets now resembling smoking craters in the ground as tax revenue disappears in a largely idled economy, even a small revenue boost is better than none.

So far, 18 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia offer sports betting, and four offer internet gambling, which can include online casino games, slots and poker.

In addition, Virginia and Tennessee have approved sports betting but have yet to launch. North Carolina allows two tribal casinos to offer it, and is considerin­g a bill to allow it statewide. Washington state allows sports betting at tribal casinos once regulation­s are in place, and Oklahoma allowed two tribes to do so, pending approval from federal authoritie­s.

Louisiana, Massachuse­tts and Ohio are realistic candidates to legalize sports betting this year, Krafcik said.

Louisiana is close to approving a November referendum on sports betting, and Ohio’s Legislatur­e is moving forward this week with a bill that could authorize sports betting, including mobile betting, although a competing measure could limit it to in-person bets at casinos and race tracks.

On Thursday, legislator­s in California promoted sports betting as a way to help a state budget facing a $54 billion deficit. The nation’s largest state is considerin­g a November referendum on the topic.

Krafcik said Illinois could approve internet gambling by the end of the year, at least in part to recoup tax revenue lost to the virus outbreak.

“States are facing unpreceden­ted financial challenges,” said Matt King, CEO of FanDuel Group. “We are firm believers that mobile sports betting and online gaming legislatio­n will be the type of common-sense legislatio­n that states will look to when legislatur­es return.”

State Sen. Joseph Addabbo, a Queens Democrat, has been pushing New York to adopt mobile and online sports betting as a way to generate new revenue, including recapturin­g money from gamblers crossing the border into New Jersey to bet on sports. He said his state faces a budget deficit of up to $17 billion, “largely because of the virus.” Other estimates have placed the shortfall around $13 billion.

“We should be preparing now — creating regulation­s, lining up vendors, setting up servers,” said Addabbo. “Let’s get it ready so that when we come back, we don’t miss another Super Bowl.”

Gov. Cuomo maintains that approving mobile sports betting would require amending the state’s constituti­on.

 ??  ?? An excavation in a ruined Irish chapel expects to identify the remains of the 17th century Irish lord Hugh “Red” O’Donnell who escaped captivity and led a rebellion that almost expelled the Tudor English forces from Ireland. A statue honoring O’Donnell stands in Donegal.
An excavation in a ruined Irish chapel expects to identify the remains of the 17th century Irish lord Hugh “Red” O’Donnell who escaped captivity and led a rebellion that almost expelled the Tudor English forces from Ireland. A statue honoring O’Donnell stands in Donegal.

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