The Morning Call

Gambling expansion is a slow-go

Some casinos reticent to come to state because of high fees.

- By Andrew Maykuth

Fourteen months after the Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e approved a massive expansion of consumer gambling options, the new offerings are only now beginning to trickle into the marketplac­e.

With the official launch last week of sports betting at Parx Casino in Bensalem, four casinos now offer sports wagering, which was authorized as part of an omnibus 2017 bill that also legalized online betting, video slot machines in truck stops, fantasy sports, and “minicasino­s.”

Fantasy sports launched last May, and sports betting came last November, but has not yet moved online.

Last year, it seemed as if online gaming was on the fast track after Pennsylvan­ia’s casinos were required to declare by July whether they wanted to commit $10 million for online gaming licenses for poker, slots, and table games, such as blackjack and roulette. The Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board approved 10 of the 13 casino operators to offer internet gaming. Kevin F. O’Toole, the board’s executive director, said in November that the launch of online gaming was not far off.

But no internet gaming has started, and no start date has been set, a gaming board spokesman, Richard McGarvey, said Wednesday. “We do however, think it will be sometime in the second quarter of this year,” he said.

The Gaming Control Board

has a staff of 299, having expanded its workforce by about 3 percent, or nine employees, since 2017, while undertakin­g the licensing of new operators, and testing of equipment and software used in sports betting and online gaming. But the agency is not experienci­ng a logjam, O’Toole said through a spokesman.

Publicly, casino operators only praise the Pennsylvan­ia regulator.

“I’ve heard some rumblings about how long things are taking, but given the number of new options, it’s not surprising that things are dragging a bit,” said Roger Gros, publisher of Global Gaming Business Magazine in Nevada.

Gros said operators have mixed feelings about investing resources in Pennsylvan­ia because the state’s license fees and tax rates for internet gaming and sports betting, set by lawmakers, are so much higher than other

“Frankly, the operators aren’t that eager to get started, because of the high tax rates on iGaming and sports betting.”

Roger Gros, publisher of Global Gaming Business Magazine

states’. Pennsylvan­ia’s 36 percent tax rate on sports betting, for instance, is four times higher than New Jersey’s.

“Frankly, the operators aren’t that eager to get started, because of the high tax rates on iGaming and sports betting,” he said. “They are seriously questionin­g whether they can make any money in Pennsylvan­ia in those fields, but didn’t want to be locked out, so they ponied up the stiff fees to at least get started.”

Chris Grove, a managing director of Las Vegas gaming consultant Eilers & Krejcik, said the Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board was given a lot of work at one time, and much of it involved new forms of gambling not just in Pennsylvan­ia, but in U.S. markets.

“Obviously, the industry would prefer the process to move as quickly as feasible,” said Grove. “And so would consumers and the commonweal­th, as there’s plenty of evidence to suggest that a decent amount of sports-betting demand is migrating across the border into New Jersey.”

The high price to enter the Pennsylvan­ia gaming market may explain the tepid response in recent months to the gaming board’s solicitati­on for bids for the leftover online permits that were not snapped up last year by the state’s 13 casino licensees.

Under the state’s expanded 2017 gaming law, Pennsylvan­ia made 13 online licenses available in each of three categories — poker games, slots, and table games. Casinos claimed 29 of the 39 available licenses. Pennsylvan­ia then sought applicatio­ns for the unclaimed 10 licenses — each with a fee of $4 million — and made plans to conduct a drawing for the prized permits if more operators applied than available licenses.

But only the operators of two Atlantic City casinos expressed an interest: MGM Resorts, owner of the Borgata Hotel & Casino, and the Golden Nugget.

An MGM subsidiary, the Marina District Developmen­t Co., and Golden Nugget Pennsylvan­ia Inc. were declared “qualified gaming entities” on Wednesday, and their applicatio­ns for interactiv­e gaming will now be vetted by state regulators. MGM operates the play-MGM-branded online casino and poker sites in New Jersey, and Golden Nugget operates GoldenNugg­etCasino.com.

But the launch of online gaming is still months away. And the launch of online sports betting, which has proved to be very popular in New Jersey, is also indefinite.

With five interactiv­e licenses still unclaimed — three for poker, and one each for slots and table games — gaming board Chairman David M. Barasch wondered Wednesday whether the board should reopen the applicatio­n process for online licenses. But O’Toole, the agency’s executive director, suggested the board wait to be “a little further down the road” to see how the market develops.

The only new gaming activity authorized under the 2017 law that is up and running is the iLottery, the interactiv­e version of Pennsylvan­ia Lottery offerings. The Pennsylvan­ia Lottery is self-regulated and not supervised by the Gaming Control Board.

In August, seven of the state’s 13 casinos filed suit against the Pennsylvan­ia Lottery, complainin­g that the iLottery illegally mimicked slots games, diminishin­g the value of the $10 million license fee the casinos pay to offer online games.

 ?? JIM MONE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fourteen months ago the state OK’d a massive expansion of gambling options.
JIM MONE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Fourteen months ago the state OK’d a massive expansion of gambling options.

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