Chattanooga Times Free Press

Session adjourns without gambling decision

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama lawmakers ended the legislativ­e session Thursday without approving a lottery, slot machines and video poker machines, continuing a 25-year gambling stalemate.

Supporters were unable to break an impasse in the Alabama Senate after the measure failed by one vote earlier in the session. The Senate did not take the bill up again on the session’s final day, ending hopes of getting the issue before voters later this year.

“There was a lot of effort to try to make it work. I think the people want a chance to vote. I hear that everywhere I go,” Republican House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter said. The House had approved the bill.

Alabamians last voted on the issue of gambling in 1999, when voters rejected a lottery proposed by then-Gov. Don Siegelman. There have been multiple efforts since then for lottery bills, but the measures stalled amid debate over casinos and electronic gambling machines.

Republican Senate President Pro Tem Greg Reed said senators had approved a scaled-down bill that included a lottery and allowing dog tracks and other sites to have machines where players bet on replays of horse races. Senators were less receptive to proposals that included slot machines or video poker.

“It was something that there weren’t votes in the Senate to approve,” Reed said of the conference committee proposal. “So that’s where we are.”

The House had approved a sweeping bill that would have allowed a lottery, sports betting and up to 10 casinos with slot machines and table games. The state Senate scaled back the legislatio­n. A conference committee proposed a compromise that would have authorized a lottery as well as slot machines at seven locations in the state. Representa­tives approved the measure, but it did not win approval in the Senate.

The House spent part of the day in a slow-down to allow last-minute discussion­s to see if something could win approval. Ledbetter said when it became clear that wasn’t going to happen “it was time to move on.”

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