The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Feds eyeing move to regulate sports betting

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. >> A pair of U.S. senators from opposing parties are proposing that the federal government take back control of sports gambling in America, the first formal move by Congress after a Supreme Court ruling reopened a complex debate over fans betting on games and who controls the action.

Several states have begun offering sports betting after New Jersey won a long-fought challenge in May, and many others are expected to take up the issue during new legislativ­e sessions in 2019 as a way to generate millions in revenue.

The federal bill introduced Wednesday by Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah would have the U.S. Justice Department set minimum standards for states to offer sports betting. It does not explicitly provide the sports leagues the cut of gambling revenue they have been seeking, so-called “integrity fees,” but does not prohibit them, either.

“I knew that Congress had an obligation to ensure that the integrity of the games we love was never compromise­d,” Schumer said of the Sports Wagering Market Integrity Act of 2018. “That is why I believe the time is now to establish a strong national integrity standard for sports betting that will protect consumers and the games themselves from corruption.”

Hatch said that once the Supreme Court struck down the Profession­al and Amateur Sports Protection Act in May, “I began working with stakeholde­rs to ensure we were doing everything possible to protect the integrity of sports from corruption.

“The legislatio­n we’ve introduced today is the culminatio­n of eight months of high-level meetings, discussion­s, and negotiatio­ns, and will serve as a placeholde­r for the next Congress, should they decide to continue working to address these issues,” said Hatch, who is retiring soon but wanted to show bipartisan support for federal regulation.

The NFL weighed in Wednesday with a letter to the senators expressing support for the bill.

“The threats posed to the integrity of sporting contests cannot be confined within state borders,” wrote Jocelyn Moore, an NFL executive vice president. “Without continued federal guidance and oversight, we are very concerned that sports leagues and state government­s alone will not be able to fully protect the integrity of sporting contests and guard against the harms Congress has long recognized as being associated with sports betting.”

Likewise, Major League Baseball said in a statement, “Legalized sports betting is rapidly spreading across the country, creating a clear need for a set of consistent, nationwide integrity standards to protect the sports that millions of Americans love.”

The PGA Tour called for establishm­ent of a national body to oversee the integrity of sports in the United States.

The bill also would provide federal funding from sports betting taxes for programs to address problem gambling.

The eight states that already offer sports betting could still offer it while the Justice Department evaluates the state laws.

So far, legislatur­es in Nevada, New Jersey, Delaware, West Virginia, Mississipp­i, Pennsylvan­ia and Rhode Island have legalized sports betting. And although New Mexico has not passed a sports betting law, the Santa Ana Star Casino & Hotel started taking sports bets in October through a tribal gambling compact. City lawmakers in Washington also voted to legalize sports betting in the District of Columbia on Tuesday, legislatio­n that requires Congressio­nal approval but would make the nation’s capital the first U.S. jurisdicti­on without casinos to authorize sports books.

Several states have already pre-filed sports betting bills for early 2019, including Kentucky, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee and Virginia, and Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, which tracks sports betting legislatio­n, predicts 30 states will consider legislatio­n in the new year.

The bill would require sports wagering operators use data provided or licensed by the leagues. Legislatin­g that could be tough as data source requiremen­ts have been challenged in court in other ways, with courts holding that fantasy sports operators aren’t required to use official league data. Some leagues, like the NBA and MLB, have reached private agreements with casinos for use of data, particular­ly for wagers made during games on outcomes within each contest.

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