Stamford Advocate

Purchase Conn. Lotto tickets online? Could be, soon

- By Mark Pazniokas

“This is the future of lotteries.”

Rep. Joe Verrengia, D-West Hartford, co-chairman of the public-safety panel, which has jurisdicti­on over gambling legislatio­n

The future of gambling was on display Friday in two conference rooms at a suburban office park, home to CT Lottery. Two vendors demonstrat­ed free-standing terminals and mobile applicatio­ns that could allow gamblers to buy lottery tickets and place bets on sports from, well, just about anywhere.

On Tuesday, the legislatur­e’s Public Safety and Security Committee will try to take the first step at shaping that future, voting on a relatively straightfo­rward bill to allow limited lottery sales online and a second measure addressing the far more complicate­d question of who should get the rights to sports betting.

CT Lottery, which turns a $330 million profit for the state on more than $1.2 billion in annual sales of instant tickets, KENO games and daily and weekly drawings, wants authorizat­ion to sell tickets to drawings on its website and through smart-phone applicatio­ns. Michigan boosted its sales by $100 million going digital.

“This is the future of lotteries,” said Rep. Joe Verrengia, D-West Hartford, co-chairman of the public-safety panel, which has jurisdicti­on over gambling legislatio­n.

CT Lottery projects increased revenue of $54 million over five years.

Sports betting is en- meshed in the larger, complex question of whether or not bookmaking is a casino game, the exclusive province in Connecticu­t of the two tribal casinos, Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun.

The administra­tion of Gov. Ned Lamont is trying to negotiate an agreement with the tribes that would resolve rights to sports betting and the most intensivel­y lobbied issue in recent years, casino expansion.

Even if implementa­tion must await a larger deal, Verrengia wants the committee to approve a structure for sports betting: Offering three licenses for sports betting online and at bricks-and-mortar outlets, such as current OTB parlors, sports bars or other retailers. CT Lottery intends to be one of those bidders.

“What we’re going to do, we’re going to do an RFP process. What that does is create a bidding process,” Verrengia said. “It allows the industry to set the market value.”

The committee’s deadline is not until Thursday, but Verrengia’s goal is to finish work on its gambling proposals Tuesday. One of those proposals is Ver- rengia’s call for the creation of a State Gaming Commission that he says would give Connecticu­t in-house expertise on the increasing­ly complicate­d world of legal gambling.

Currently, a division of the Department of Consumer Protection oversees gambling.

The administra­tion is taking no public stand on Verrengia’s plans.

“Gov. Lamont is committed to a global resolution of all outstandin­g gaming issues, including sports betting, and remains actively engaged with key stakeholde­rs,” said Colleen Flanagan Johnson, the governor’s senior adviser.

Other states have quickly embraced sports betting since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a federal law that had allowed it only in Nevada and, to a limited degree, Delaware. Sports books are now available in New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, West Virginia and Mississipp­i. New York has legalized it and expects to offer it by the summer.

“It’s a gold rush, isn’t it?” said Charles Cohen, the vice president for sports betting at IGT, which does business in all those states.

IGT and a competitor, Intralot, have been demonstrat­ing their machines and smart-phone applicatio­ns for lawmakers, staffers and DCP officials at the lottery headquarte­rs in Rocky Hill.

Officials from both companies and the lottery said the gambling market is ripe for expansion.

Michigan’s retail sales at convenienc­e stores and other outlets continued to increase even after online sales began and quickly blossomed into a $100 million market.

“There is no cannibaliz­ation at all,” said Fernando Ors, the president of sports betting at intralot.

Overall, the Michigan Lottery returns nearly $1 billion in annual profits to the state.

Online users must register, showing proof of age with a drivers’ license that is scanned. Protection­s against compulsive gambling include self-set limits and restrictio­ns on credit. Ohio limits players to $100 a week in credit or debit purchases.

“Every purchase online has a ‘responsibl­e gaming’ feature,” said Greg Smith, the president of CT Lottery.

One of the terminals displayed Friday was geared to the sports-betting newcomer. Bets are placed on a touch screen. The bettor chooses a game and the amount of the bet, then the terminal instantly computes the payoff, based on the current odds on the game in question.

Sports betting in Connecticu­t is complicate­d by the state’s relationsh­ip with the Mashantuck­et Pequots and Mohegans, owners of the two casinos in eastern Connecticu­t. In return for exclusivit­y, the tribes share 25 percent of their gross slots revenue, which is estimated to produce about $250 million for the state this fiscal year.

The tribes won authorizat­ion in 2017 to jointly develop a commercial casino in East Windsor to blunt the loss of market share to the MGM casino in nearby Springfiel­d. MGM has successful­ly lobbied the Trump administra­tion to withhold federal approval.

In the meantime, MGM has urged Connecticu­t to open the state to commercial competitio­n, proposing a Bridgeport casino.

Verrengia understand­s sports betting is intertwine­d with the the larger casino issues, but he believes the legislatur­e can position the state to move quickly if the tribal exclusivit­y issues are resolved.

“We’re certainly not going to have enough time to fully vet this issue before the deadline,” Verrengia said. “My hope is to get both bills out of committee so we can continue to work on these issues.”

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