The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Daily fantasy sports sites aim to make Nevada comeback

- By Michelle Rindels

LAS VEGAS >> Daily fantasy sports websites that were shut down in Nevada because they didn’t have gambling licenses want to get back in the game, but officials who set policy for the gambling mecca of Las Vegas weren’t impressed.

A representa­tive for daily fantasy sports companies Fan Duel and Draft Kings proposed a new category of regulation and license fees that would help Nevada — an economical­ly small but symbolical­ly important state — join 41 other states where the practice is up and running.

But casino heavy-hitters on Nevada’s Gaming Policy Committee expressed disappoint­ment Tuesday with the low penalties and lack of criminal background checks in the companies’ proposal, saying it didn’t measure up to the state’s rigorous gambling regulation.

Nevada Gaming Commission Chairman Tony Alamo says he likes daily fantasy sports, but “Nevada is the gold standard ... there’s just not an appetite for ‘regulation light’ or ‘regulation not at all.”’

Daily fantasy sports sites flooded the airwaves with TV commercial­s last fall, offering players quick payouts based on the performanc­e of real-life athletes assembled into “fantasy” teams. The companies disputed that the activity was gambling, arguing that they offered games of skill and were exempt under a fantasy sports clause in the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcemen­t Act.

Nevada regulators say site executives sometimes used the term “betting” to describe their own product and needed casino licenses. They ordered the companies to halt play last October.

DraftKings and FanDuel also ceased operations in states such as Illinois and New York. The industry has lobbied states to approve laws to regulate the sites and since then, eight states have done so.

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