Daily Press

NC Senate gives strong nod to sports betting legislatio­n

Speaker Moore expects House to back changes to bill

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Legalized sports gambling starting next year in North Carolina now seems a better bet as the state House’s top leader said Thursday he expected his chamber would accept alteration­s to its own proposal made by the Senate.

House Speaker Tim Moore’s comment was a turnabout from Wednesday, as the Senate initially approved its version of the measure to authorize and regulate betting, and to tax proceeds. The Senate voted for it again Thursday by a strong bipartisan vote of 37-11.

Moore said Thursday he anticipate­d the House would formally vote to accept the Senate changes in two recorded votes next week. Should these votes be successful for bill supporters, the final measure would go to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who has expressed support for legal sports wagering.

Moore had told reporters Wednesday that the House would likely formally reject the Senate’s option. Moore said it was part of a goal of negotiatin­g a compromise with Senate leaders that he hoped would also permit non-tribal casinos in the state and legalize video gambling machines.

But a chief sponsor of the House proposal, Rep. Jason Saine of Lincoln County, had said Wednesday that he would recommend to his colleagues the Senate’s version. And Senate leader Phil Berger said he thought it best to finalize the sports gambling measure — which had support from House bill sponsors — before considerin­g other gambling ideas.

On Thursday, Moore attributed his updated parliament­ary path on the bill to “me not reading the notes properly on” the legislatio­n, rather than changing his position.

A bipartisan coalition in the House scuttled a sports gambling bill last year. While the chamber voted for its current proposal in March as support for the idea solidified, the margin remained relatively narrow.

The Senate’s version includes among other changes legalizing wagers on horse racing and allowing anyone over 21 to bet on sports using cash at sports venues that would offer gambling, and not just through registered accounts online. And while betting could begin next January, the Senate proposal could let regulators delay the opening until June 2024.

The idea of legal sports gambling in North Carolina has gained traction as casinos have opened in Virginia near the North Carolina border. They include a temporary casino that opened barely two weeks ago in Danville, just across the border into Virginia and roughly 25 miles from where Berger lives.

“Because the conversati­ons are taking place, we’re a lot closer than we’ve ever been before,” Berger said, but “there are still some fairly significan­t hurdles” to create legislatio­n in the final weeks of the General Assembly’s chief work session this year.

Virginia lawmakers in 2020 approved legislatio­n for five casinos to be built around the state if the projects cleared a voter referendum. Based on that law, casinos have opened in Bristol and Portsmouth in addition to Danville. And a fourth is moving forward slowly in Norfolk.

Offering casinos on the North Carolina side of the border could be a defensive measure against losing money to Virginia while gaining revenue from visitors from other surroundin­g states.

Moore said he is also interested in combining casino-expansion legislatio­n with language regulating and taxing video poker machines, which are currently illegal under state law. A separate House measure heard in a committee last week would direct the Lottery Commission to regulate that industry.

 ?? GARY D. ROBERTSON/AP ?? North Carolina state Senate leader Phil Berger, speaks to reporters on the Senate floor after voting for a measure that would legalize sports wagering in the state.
GARY D. ROBERTSON/AP North Carolina state Senate leader Phil Berger, speaks to reporters on the Senate floor after voting for a measure that would legalize sports wagering in the state.

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