The Standard Journal

Sports betting legislatio­n hits Georgia Senate

- By Dave Williams, Bureau Chief Capitol Beat News Service

Sports betting would become legal in Georgia without the need to go to voters with a constituti­onal amendment under legislatio­n introduced in the state Senate.

Senate Bill 415 would establish an app-based system allowing Georgians to bet on sports online. The legislatio­n is modeled after laws in Tennessee and New Hampshire, states that offer online sports betting only because – like Georgia — they don’t have the brick-and-mortar casinos that typically house sports betting operations.

Georgians already are betting $1.5 billion illegally on sports every year without the state collecting any tax revenue from it, said Sen. Burt Jones, R-Jackson, the bill’s chief sponsor.

“We just want to regulate and control something that’s already going on,” he said.

Supporters of legalizing gambling have been pushing for years to bring casinos to Georgia and/or pari-mutuel betting on horse racing. Sports betting only became an option in 2018 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a federal law prohibitin­g states from legalizing gambling on sports.

All efforts to legalize gambling in the Peach State have failed because they have involved constituti­onal amendments that require two-thirds majorities in the Georgia House and Senate, a level of support the measures’ sponsors have been unable to muster.

On the other hand, Jones’ sports betting bill would not change Georgia’s Constituti­on and, thus, would require simple majorities of the two legislativ­e chambers of pass. Also, if it clears the legislatur­e, it would not be put before voters in a statewide referendum, as is the case with all constituti­onal amendments.

“l’d rather the citizens have a say on it,” Jones said. “But two-thirds of the legislatur­e has never allowed that to happen.”

Jones said he has received a legal opinion from legislativ­e counsel that legalizing sports betting would not require a constituti­onal change because it would be operated essentiall­y as a lottery game by a newly created state commission overseen by the Georgia Lottery Corp.

Those placing bets would have to be at least 21 years old and physically located in Georgia, a provision that would be enforced through geo-fencing technology.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States