The Palm Beach Post

Seminole Tribe offered new deal by legislator­s in Senate

Dropping $3 billion guarantee may lead to craps, roulette.

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — The Seminole Tribe would not be required to guarantee $3 billion in payments to the state in exchange for adding craps and roulette to the tribe’s casino operations, under the latest offer in gambling negotiatio­ns between the House and Senate.

The Senate made the proposal Thursday while not backing away from other high-profile positions. Those positions include allowing slot machines at pari-mutuels in eight counties where voters have approved them, as well as limited blackjack at South Florida “racinos,” and two new casinos — with slots and cardrooms — in Broward and/or Miami-Dade counties.

The eliminatio­n of the proposed $3 billion requiremen­t for the Seminoles, which would have been paid over seven years, i s a concession to the tribe, which has maintained that federal officials won’t sign off on such a deal, something that would be required.

Thursday’s meeting was the latest round in legislativ­e leaders’ attempts to reach consensus on a sweeping gambling plan built around setting the parameters for a 20-year deal with the Sem- inoles, as time runs out on the legislativ­e session slated to end May 5.

“I’m excited about the d i r e c t i o n t hi s i s go i ng , ” R e p . J o s e Fe l i x D i a z , a Miami Republican who is the House’s chief negotiator, said Thursday morning.

The issue of slots in the eight counties — Brevard, Duval, Gadsden, Hamilton, Lee, Palm Beach, St. Lucie and Washington — remains one of the main sticking points in the negotiatio­ns, after Diaz made an offer Wednesday that included major concession­s to the Senate.

In that offer, the House partially agreed to the Senate’s plan to allow nearly all dog and horse tracks to do away with live racing but keep more lucrative cardrooms or slots, a process known as “decoupling.” The House, however, would require voters to approve decoupling in county referendum­s.

The Senate’s counteroff­er Thursday rejected the requiremen­t of decoupling referendum­s and maintained a Senate position that would also allow jai alai frontons to quit holding matches while keeping more lucrative gambling activities.

The two chambers also are inching toward agreement on the issue of controvers­ial “designated player” card games.

A portion of a 2010 agreement, known as a compact, gave the tribe “exclusive” rights to operate banked card games, such as blackjack, at most of its casinos. That portion of the agreement expired in 2015.

But the Seminoles filed a lawsuit, and a federal judge last year ruled that the state had violated the exclusivit­y agreement by allowing the designated player games — in which a player acts as the “bank” — at pari-mutuel cardrooms. The state has appealed the decision.

Wednesday’s House proposal would cap the number of designated-player tables that cardrooms could have at 25 percent of the total number of tables. Bets would be capped at $25 per hand, a significan­t reduction from the unlimited bets that now can add up to thousands — or tens of thousands — of dollars.

In the offer made Thursday morning, the Senate’s chief negotiator, Bradenton Republican Bill Galvano, proposed a $100 limit on the games and a 50 percent cap on the total number of tables.

Both proposals also would lower the current 35 percent tax rate on slots at racinos in Miami-Dade and Broward counties to as low as 25 percent, if the pari-mutuels agree to a maximum of 1,500 machines — about 100 more than any facility currently operates. The Senate plan would also allow the racinos to add up to 20 blackjack tables, with caps on maximum bets.

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