Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Lottery contract fight on hold

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

Amid settlement talks, a stay has been issued in the stateHouse’s challenge to the legality of a ticket-sales contract signed last year by the Florida Lottery.

The 1st District Court of Appeal posted on itswebsite that a joint motion for a stay was granted Thursday as the two sides continued to negotiate amid leadership turnover at the lottery.

The website said the stay is pending a further order from the court.

“If the case has not been dismissed in the interim, the parties shall file a status report no later than August 31, 2017, advising the court of the need for any further proceeding­s,” the court posted on itswebsite.

The governor’s office on Monday deferred to a July 7 joint motion by attorneys for the House and the lottery requesting an extension to file briefs thatwere due that day.

“The parties are now engaged in good faith negotiatio­ns in an attempt to resolve this dispute, and believe that the likelihood of achieving a satisfacto­ry resolution will be enhanced if they do not have to solidify their positions by filing briefs during negotiatio­ns,” the two-page joint motion said.

House Speaker Richard Corcoran’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Monday.

The dispute focuses on a longterm contract between the lottery and IGT Global Solutions Corp. Under the deal, IGTgets a slice of the sales of tickets, machines and other services.

In the past, the lottery paid a fixed amount to essentiall­y lease each lotterymac­hine.

When the suit was filed, the contractwa­s estimated to beworth $12.9 million for the budget year that began July 1.

The contract, to run until 2028 with an option to 2031, was signed in September by former lottery Secretary Tom Delacenser­ie.

Delacenser­ie resigned inMay for a job as the leader of the Kentucky Lottery Corporatio­n. He was replaced at the Florida Lottery by Jim Poppell, who had been chief of staff at the Department of Economic Opportunit­y.

Corcoran argued that the contract is illegal because it would spend more money on ticket sales than the Legislatur­e previously approved for that purpose. The lottery countered that the contract says IGT will only get its full payments if the Legislatur­e approves the spending.

The lottery had argued in court that thenewarra­ngementwas aimed at trying to maximize the profits of the agency, which helps fund state education programs.

Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers ruled in Corcoran’s favor March 7, agreeing that the contract didn’t meet the requiremen­ts of state law.

“As a result, the lottery secretary lacked the legal authority to enter into the IGT contract, which must therefore be found to be void and unenforcea­ble,” Gievers wrote.

The governor’s office has contended the ruling could endanger funding for education.

“The Florida Lottery continues to make record contributi­ons to our public schools and today’s ruling jeopardize­s billions of dollars for Florida students,” Scott said in a release disagreein­g with the ruling.

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