Chicago Sun-Times

HENDON CALLS FOR MINORITY OWNERSHIP IN SPORTSBOOK LOCATIONS NEAR STADIUMS

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@suntimes.com | @mitchdudek

Former state Sen. Rickey Hendon on Thursday called for legislatio­n that would create space for minority ownership of sports gambling locations in Chicago.

“A lot of Black and Latino people bet on sports as well, so why not give us an opportunit­y to participat­e,” Hendon said while acknowledg­ing significan­t hurdles to the effort.

In 2019, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a gambling law creating a Chicago casino, legalizing sports betting and allowing large stadiums like the United Center and Guaranteed Rate Field to open sportsbook­s.

Under the law — and with a $10 million state license fee — teams can open their own betting windows within a five-block radius of their stadium. The Cubs announced plans to open a sportsbook last year, and all the city’s other major teams have shown interest.

But all gambling is outlawed under city ordinance. That’s why Ald. Walter Burnett (27th), whose ward includes the United Center, introduced a proposal this summer paving the way for stadium wagers.

The ordinance stalled in a City Council committee meeting this week as even allies of Mayor Lori Lightfoot — who backs the proposal — criticized the size of the city’s wouldbe cut of 2% as too small, especially without any commitment­s to minority participat­ion.

The state taxes sports betting revenue at 15%, plus another 2% for books in Cook County.

Hendon called for the passage of legislatio­n in Springfiel­d that would tweak the current law to ensure minority- and womenowned sports betting locations that would be located no further than five blocks outside the current five-block exclusiona­ry zone around stadiums.

Hendon said he didn’t think Black alderperso­ns would support an ordinance greenlight­ing sports betting in Chicago without a change creating a minority carve-out in the state’s bill.

“Only if we get a change in Springfiel­d will we ever get sports betting in Chicago. Without it, I don’t think the Black aldermen, who I’m very proud of, will vote for it,” Hendon said.

Hendon said the rules shouldn’t prop up billionair­e sports team owners without assurances that minorities and women would be included.

“They can keep their five-block exclusiona­ry area for them, but between five and 10 blocks from the stadium, allow minorities and women to have the opportunit­y to have a sports betting facility without being affiliated with the stadiums and the current sports owners,” Hendon said.

He said he knows former pro athletes who are Black who’d like to be owners of sportsbook­s but declined to name them.

Hendon, who’s also been vocal about ensuring minority participat­ion in the state’s cannabis industry, spoke outside City Hall on Thursday flanked by a group of seven supporters.

Billionair­e casino mogul Neil Bluhm — whose Des Plaines Rivers Casino has one of the most lucrative existing sportsbook­s in the state — has led the public campaign against allowing sportsbook­s in Chicago, arguing the stadiums would draw bettors away from any future casino in the city.

Bluhm is behind two of the five proposals vying to run a casino in Chicago. Revenue from it will be earmarked for Chicago’s police and firefighte­r pension funds.

Lightfoot, who initially opposed stadium betting when the state law passed but is now pushing it, says there’s little evidence suggesting stadium betting lounges would cannibaliz­e casino revenue.

Nearly all bets are placed online through mobile betting apps, not in person at sportsbook­s. Bettors have plunked down more than $7 billion on sports contests since the industry launched in March 2020, according to Illinois Gaming Board figures, with about 96% of those bets placed online.

The sportsbook at Bluhm’s suburban casino has netted $123.4 million since the industry launched, with revenue from the physical Rivers betting windows accounting for less than 10% of his business.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Former state Sen. Rickey Hendon says Thursday, “Only if we get a change in Springfiel­d will we ever get sports betting in Chicago.”
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Former state Sen. Rickey Hendon says Thursday, “Only if we get a change in Springfiel­d will we ever get sports betting in Chicago.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States