Rome News-Tribune

Developmen­t, tourism panel nixes horse race betting bill

♦ Other avenues for legalized gambling in Georgia are still open.

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — A legislativ­e committee Thursday rejected a proposed statewide referendum to legalize parimutuel betting on horse racing in Georgia amid questions on both its wording and lack of details.

Members of the House Economic Developmen­t and Tourism Committee questioned the last half of the wording of the proposed ballot question at the end of the constituti­onal amendment.

After asking Georgia voters whether betting on horses should be legalized, the referendum went on to ask whether “to increase the minimum funding requiremen­t for the educationa­l shortfall reserves.”

The language referred to a provision in the constituti­onal amendment developed by Rep. Stacey Evans, Datlanta, aimed at securing some of the excess reserves that have been accumulati­ng in the Georgia Lottery for the last decade.

In 2011, the state both increased the percentage of lottery funds dedicated to HOPE scholarshi­ps that must be set aside as reserves to cover any potential shortfalls and reduced the percentage of tuition covered by HOPE, Evans explained to the committee at a hearing earlier this week.

“We made it less likely we would need the reserves, and we increased the reserves,” she said.

As a result, more than $1.3 billion in reserves has piled up, Evans said. The state could safely plow back $730

million of that into HOPE scholarshi­ps, she said.

“This state did not approve a lottery just to have a lottery,” Evans said. “This money should not be sitting in an account.”

But on Thursday, Rep. Penny Houston, R-nashville, said adding language on educationa­l shortfall reserves to a referendum on horse racing would be misleading.

“It sounds like a trick question to me,” she said.

Other committee members asked why such issues as where racetracks would be located and what steps would be taken to protect racehorses from abuse weren’t included in the constituti­onal amendment.

Rep. Ron Stephens, Rsavannah, the committee’s chairman and the resolution’s chief sponsor, said those details would be addressed in a longer “enabling” bill that would be introduced next year if the constituti­onal amendment passes.

Under this year’s legislatio­n, 10% of a state tax on the proceeds from horse racing would go toward health care, while 50% would go toward a new “Opportunit­y Fund” supporting college scholarshi­ps for Georgians with family incomes of less than

$58,000 a year. The other 40% would go into the state’s general fund budget.

Stephens said the economic benefits of legalizing horse racing in Georgia would spread far beyond the racetracks themselves to let farmers in South Georgia who suffered crop losses from Hurricane Michael in 2018 get into the businesses of horse breeding and hay farming.

“It’s an opportunit­y to create a brand new industry in parts of our state,” he said.

But Rep. Randy Nix, R-lagrange, who opposes legalized gambling, was skeptical.

“This pie-in-the-sky … will not take care of South Georgia,” he said.

The defeat of the horse racing measures leaves some other avenues for legalized gambling still alive in the General Assembly.

But a bill aimed at legalizing sports betting without changing the constituti­on has yet to reach the House floor.

A subcommitt­ee of the House Regulated Industries Committee approved a constituti­onal amendment Wednesday encompassi­ng casinos, horse racing and sports betting. But it has yet to be taken up by the full committee.

Dear Abby: I suspect that something has been going on with my husband and our daughter-in-law. My husband has become obsessed with her, and they both seem to become nervous when they are around me at the same time. My husband is always checking to see when I’m leaving.

My son and daughterin-law and their three kids live in our duplex, but my son isn’t home most of the day. Should I be concerned about what’s going on with them? Everything in me is telling me something is not right.

— Worried In Wisconsin

Dear Worried: I hope you are wrong, but if “everything in you” is telling you something is not right,

listen to your intuition. If your marital relationsh­ip with your husband has changed, it’s a red flag. Talk to him about it. It may take the services of a licensed marriage and family therapist to get your marriage back on track.

Dear Abby: I have a relationsh­ip problem I hope you can help me with. I have loved this woman for years. We grew up together. We parted because I had to move away to Japan.

Well, a few years ago, we met again. We began to communicat­e, and all my feelings for her rushed back after all these years. I know she doesn’t feel the same way about me. How can I let her know how bad it hurts, this unrequited love?

— Smitten in the West

Dear Smitten: I don’t think that’s a good idea. Knowing this woman doesn’t reciprocat­e your feelings, do you think informing her that “all those feelings have rushed back” will endear you? It may cause her embarrassm­ent. You will be happier if you stop dwelling on your unrequited love.

 ?? Doug Walker, File ?? In this April 2016 file photo, Devil’s Wrangler, with Mark Watts in the saddle, was an easy winner in the first of five races at the Atlanta Steeplecha­se at Kingston Downs.
Doug Walker, File In this April 2016 file photo, Devil’s Wrangler, with Mark Watts in the saddle, was an easy winner in the first of five races at the Atlanta Steeplecha­se at Kingston Downs.
 ??  ?? JEANNE PHILLIPS
DEAR ABBY
JEANNE PHILLIPS DEAR ABBY

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