The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pa. is ready to roll dice on more gambling

-

Thank God for the lottery. No, we’re not talking about the Powerball, which is zooming into the stratosphe­re once again after the jackpot rolled over again last week.

We’re talking about Pennsylvan­ia, which is about to roll the dice – again – as it battles an ocean of red ink.

Think about this. Saturday night’s Powerball drawing was in the neighborho­od of $400 million. If Gov. Tom Wolf and the Legislatur­e were to be holding a winning ticket, that would only leave them $2.6 billion short of balancing the state’s books.

You read it right. The latest budget projection­s from the state may be $3 billion in the hole for the fiscal year that starts July 1.

Pennsylvan­ia is starved for revenue, but Republican­s who control both the state House and Senate remain steadfast in their opposition to any kind of new tax.

So what is a Pennsylvan­ia legislator to do?

Why expand legalized gambling, of course.

The state House last week signed off on a massive expansion of legalized gaming in the state.

The measure, easily the biggest expansion of legalized gaming in the state since ushering in the era of casinos in the state back in 2004, would add everything from online gaming to gambling in airports and taverns.

Support for the bill in the House was not exactly overwhelmi­ng. It passed on a 10289 vote, and now goes to the Senate for considerat­ion.

It’s not like our representa­tives have a lot of options. The state is broke, and with tax hikes – including the everelusiv­e new levy on the state’s Marcellus Shale gas business – off the board, they don’t have many other places to turn.

The state is banking that bars, hotels and restaurant­s will pony up big bucks for a license that will allow them to install video gaming terminals. As many as 400,000 of these one-armed bandits likely would be added statewide.

Each establishm­ent would be capped at five terminals, while truck stops could install as many as 10.

It gets lonely out there on the road, you know. Why not allow truckers to spend some of those lonesome hours contributi­ng to the state’s treasury. The state would skim off 37.5 percent.

Looking for good news in this avalanche of new legalized gambling? Some of the state funds would be set aside to shore up the state Lottery Fund, volunteer emergency services grants and compulsive gambling prevention programs, which likely will be more needed than ever with the arrival of easy gambling into local neighborho­ods.

Host counties and municipali­ties would each get 2 percent of the take. And the legislatio­n also remedies that massive pothole in the gravy train when the Supreme Court ruled that the state’s casino host community agreements were unconstitu­tional because they treated smaller, boutique-style casinos differentl­y. The new deal will see the host county get 2 percent a year from slots revenue, with the municipali­ty getting $10 million.

Of course, by now you’re probably wondering about the fate of the state’s casinos. . But there is something in it for them as well – internet gaming. Yes, not satisfied with shaking you down for every last coin in your pocket when you visit their emporiums, state casinos now will be able to work their magic online.

But it won’t be cheap. The fee for an online license will be a cool $8 million. Then the state will take 16 percent of revenue off the top, along with 2 percent for economic developmen­t, and another 1 percent to the host county.

Finally, there is the booming area of fantasy sports betting. The House bill would make it legal in Pa., where it would then be regulated and taxed, of course.

Probably most controvers­ial in all this is the notion of adding thousands of legal video gaming terminals in bars. State Rep. Maria Donatucci, D-185, who represents a slice of eastern Pennsylvan­ia, voted against the bill, and was not shy about her feelings.

“Video gaming terminals in the 9,000 liquor license establishm­ents across the commonweal­th are bad for Pennsylvan­ians,” Donatucci said. “They are bad for families, children, older Pennsylvan­ians, and bad for our state lottery fund and state gaming fund.”

More legalized gaming is coming to Pennsylvan­ia.

You can bet the house on it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States