Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i casinos could take bets soon as court clears way

- By JEFF AMY Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississipp­i could, at least temporaril­y, be the only place within the Southeaste­rn Conference where football fans can put bets down when games begin at summer's end.

Allen Godfrey, executive director of the Mississipp­i Gaming Commission, said the casino regulator has already been working on rules governing sports betting at the state's 28 casinos, and they are almost complete.

"It's technicall­y just another game that's being allowed to be played in a licensed casino," Godfrey told The Associated Press.

Although most lawmakers said they didn't realize it at the time, Mississipp­i changed its law in 2017 to allow sports betting as part of a bill legalizing and regulating fantasy sports. The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday struck down a federal law that barred gambling on football, basketball, baseball and other sports in most states, clearing the way for Mississipp­i casinos to move forward.

Godfrey said the rules won't come before the Gaming Commission at its regularly scheduled meeting this Thursday, but said they will likely be considered in June at the latest. Once the commission sends the rules out for public comment, it has to wait 25 days before voting to finalize them, and then another 30 days before they take effect.

A June vote means casinos could renovate areas to serve as sports books before college football season begins in late August. The first regular season NFL game is Sept. 6.

"A lot has to happen over the next 90 days before football season begins," said Michael Bruffey, Mississipp­i Gaming and Hospitalit­y Associatio­n deputy director.

Mississipp­i's casinos, which boomed in the 1990s, have struggled with competitio­n as gambling has become more common nationwide. Sports betting could give its casinos a competitiv­e edge, at least for now. Bruffey said sports betting itself is unlikely to contribute a lot of revenue, but casinos hope it will attract customers who will spend money on hotel rooms, restaurant­s and other gambling.

"The sports betting itself is not a huge revenue generator. The margins are very small," Bruffey said. "However, it is an attraction."

New Jersey pursued the legal challenge to allow sports betting along with existing sports books in Nevada. Other states likely to join those two and Mississipp­i include Delaware, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia. However, a bill to legalize sports betting in Louisiana is dead for now.

Unlike in some other states, Mississipp­i's betting would be confined to casinos and not be allowed remotely. Godfrey said Mississipp­i's regulation­s are modeled on Nevada's and he's confident they will be effective.

West Point resident Vicky Rose was selected by the Libertaria­n Party of Mississipp­i as a delegate to the biennial National Libertaria­n Party Convention in New Orleans on June 29 through July 3.

Voting delegates from each state will consider amendments to the party's platform and bylaws, and elect national leadership for the next term.

The outgoing leader of the Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency says he's leaving because of alcoholism and post-traumatic stress disorder. Lee Smithson resigned Friday.

He says in a statement that his dependence on alcohol hurt his ability to run the agency and he stepped down after consulting with Gov. Phil Bryant. Smithson says he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder following deployment to Iraq and work after 2005's Hurricane Katrina. Smithson says he began receiving treatment last year. He says the stress agency leadership "only compounded my issues."

Smithson became emergency management director in 2016 after more than a decade directing military support for the Mississipp­i National Guard. That included coordinati­ng efforts following Katrina and 2010's Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

A colonel in the military, Smithson served in Germany, Bosnia-Herzegovin­a and Iraq.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States