The Columbus Dispatch

Report says states on move with legislatio­n

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — A new report predicts that 16 states will introduce bills to regulate sports betting this year, with 11 — including Ohio — having a good chance of passing legislatio­n.

Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, which tracks gambling legislatio­n nationwide, said that is just the minimum; the firm predicts that more than 30 states could introduce sports betting bills.

The U.S. Supreme Court this year will decide a case brought by New Jersey that seeks to overturn a ban on sports betting in all but four states: Delaware, Montana, Nevada and Oregon. A favorable ruling in that case could open the floodgates in terms of states adopting a new form of gambling.

"Assuming a Supreme Court decision or action by Congress permits it, we could see the largest simultaneo­us expansion of regulated gambling in U.S. history with sports betting in 2018," said Chris Grove, the company's managing director.

The court is expected by June to decide New Jersey's case, which seeks to overturn a ban on sports betting by any state that did not meet a 1991 deadline to legalize it. States and private companies in the U.S. and abroad are already moving quickly to position themselves for a favorable ruling.

States listed as likely to introduce a sports betting bill are: Massachuse­tts; Rhode Island; New York; New Jersey; West Virginia; South Carolina; Georgia;

Florida; Illinois; Michigan; Iowa; Minnesota; Louisiana; Mississipp­i; Oklahoma and California. Indiana and Kentucky already have introduced bills.

Pennsylvan­ia and Connecticu­t have already passed bills. Grove said Delaware is arguing that it doesn’t need to pass a bill because it already has gambling legislatio­n on the books, and added that Mississipp­i might not need to pass a bill. He said an argument has been made that that state’s fantasy sports bill also authorized sports betting.

The report listed 11 states as having a good chance of enacting sports betting bills

this year: Massachuse­tts; Rhode Island; New York; New Jersey; West Virginia; Ohio; Michigan; Illinois; Oklahoma; Kentucky and Indiana.

On Dec. 22, Gov. John Kasich signed a bill that legalized fantasy sports gambling in Ohio.

The report also listed states where the introducti­on, much less adoption, of a sports betting bill is considered unlikely: Tennessee; Alabama; Arkansas; Texas; Kansas; Nebraska; North and South Dakota; Wyoming; Utah; Idaho; Alaska and Hawaii.

States across the nation are looking for new sources of revenue, and adding or expanding gambling is seen as an attractive option for

many. While not vouching for the political likelihood of any particular state adopting gambling legislatio­n, David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming research at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, said the prediction­s are “definitely in line with the historical trend of states turning more to gambling.”

Sports betting is seen as most likely to be offered through commercial or tribal casinos, or state lotteries. Some analysts and industry observers also think that a Supreme Court ruling legalizing sports betting nationwide would prompt a rapid expansion of internet betting, as states will move to allow it to be offered online.

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