Sentinel & Enterprise

Legal gambling still no sure bet

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And speaking of sin taxes, that estimated $35 million in annual revenue that supporters of legalized gambling say would funnel into the state treasury seems elusive as ever, if you listen to the dissenting voices on Beacon Hill and elsewhere.

While other states, including neighborin­g Rhode Island, New Hampshire and New York, have already authorized legalized sports betting, Massachuse­tts dithers, seemingly incapable of making a decision that half the states in the country already have managed to do.

The House approved sports betting last session. Gov. Charlie Baker, Sen. Eric Lesser, who chairs the Committee on Economic Developmen­t and Emerging Technologi­es, and almost a dozen others have put forward proposals they hope gain traction early in this session. They all offer varying forms of consumer and publicheal­th protection­s.

But that’s apparently insufficie­nt for one watchdog group and a local state senator. “We took a while and we took our time to implement placing casinos here in Massachuse­tts, so I think sports wagering should be no different,” Marlene Warner, Massachuse­tts Council on Gaming and Health executive director, told State House News Service. “We really want to make sure all the public-health elements are contained in whatever bill moves forward.”

And as for sports betting in casinos, that’s a non-starter for state Sen. Jamie Eldridge. The Acton Democrat, one of a group of lawmakers that previously opposed gambling casinos, says he’s OK with sports betting, just not in a casino.

“The argument back then, which I think continues to this day, is with people’s limited dollars for entertainm­ent and for recreation, if it all goes into a casino, then that’s money that’s not spent at the local restaurant or museum or in the community,” he said. We’d bet any potential sports gambler won’t weigh how the financial impact of that activity factors into future visits to the Peabody Essex Museum, but that’s some of thinking the passage of a sports-betting law must overcome.

In the meantime, our neighborin­g states will continue to cash in on Massachuse­tts’ fence-sitting.

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