Daily Press (Sunday)

Support veterans by vetoing gambling machine legislatio­n

- By Mike Fries Mike Fries of Roanoke is president of American Veterans Service Foundation and former state commander of American Veterans (AMVETS) Department of Virginia.

American Veterans (AMVETS) is one of the foremost veterans’ service organizati­ons in Virginia and the United States. We have a proud history of assisting Virginia veterans and sponsoring numerous programs that serve our country and its citizens. AMVETS Department of Virginia exists to serve the veterans of America’s armed forces who live and work in Virginia through the services rendered at both our state level and on the local level through our AMVETS posts.

One of the ways AMVETS raises funds to serve Virginia veterans and their communitie­s is through Virginia’s charitable gaming regulatory framework, which is regulated by the Virginia Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services.

A disastrous bill for Virginia’s veterans is currently on Gov.

Glenn Youngkin’s desk: Senate Bill 212, which would legalize tens of thousands of “skill game” slot machines in public places. The ramificati­ons of legalizati­on will cause severe harm to our fundraisin­g efforts to support veterans in need.

Legalizing these machines in every local convenienc­e store and gas station will hurt other forms of authorized and legal gaming and will hurt revenue to the Virginia Lottery and veterans’ service organizati­ons and other charitable organizati­ons particular­ly hard.

For seven of the last eight years, companies manufactur­ing and distributi­ng these so-called “skill” slot machines operated in Virginia in bad faith, without authorizat­ion from the General Assembly or regulation by the state government.

For years, tens of thousands of skill slot machines operated in public places with a total lack of accountabi­lity for the game operators.

Since we couldn’t trust them to follow the law then, we can’t trust them now. It is imperative that Youngkin veto SB212 and any other bill legalizing these games so that untrustwor­thy skill gaming machines do not infiltrate our communitie­s.

Virginians already have plenty of legal opportunit­ies to gamble at casinos, horse racing venues, the lottery and sports betting. We don’t need an industry with a record of going outside the law and exploiting Virginians with odds stacked against the player with the promise of prizes while having no guarantee of a fair payout.

In addition to harming legal gaming, tens of thousands of skill gambling machines everywhere in Virginia will especially harm income to churches, community groups and veterans service organizati­ons.

Even more concerning is that the proliferat­ion of skill game machines will undoubtedl­y create large scale criminal activity in Virginia communitie­s. Speak with law enforcemen­t officers and they will tell you that anytime there is a large amount of loose cash in a public place, that location quickly becomes a prime target for crime and money laundering. The presence of these machines at convenienc­e stores and gas stations will increase loitering, which further increases the potential for crime in local neighborho­ods. SB212 does not require establishm­ents hosting these machines to have adequate security measures.

The General Assembly banned these machines in 2020 and 2022, so it has been dishearten­ing to see legislatio­n recently pass (barely) the Virginia General Assembly. After seeing that vote, I refuse to stand by and watch such a harmful bill pass without speaking up.

If Youngkin signs SB212, it will open the floodgates for tens of thousands of these machines to pop up in every local neighborho­od in Virginia — increasing crime, gambling by minors and harming income to charitable organizati­ons.

I urge the governor to consider the far-reaching consequenc­es of SB212 and veto it outright. By vetoing this bill, he can send a clear message that Virginia stands firmly for protecting Virginia’s veterans, families and communitie­s. A Youngkin veto will also send the message that Virginia stands for the rule of law and if bad actors operate unauthoriz­ed in the commonweal­th of Virginia, they will not be rewarded.

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