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| The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to jetset For This Useful Post: | ||
Casinomeister (23rd April 2008), classymom (23rd April 2008), Mousey (23rd April 2008), Random#rs (25th April 2008), stepfordwife (30th April 2008) | ||
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Kyl frustration over UIGEA regs
THE IMPATIENT POLITICIAN
Passing an online gambling ban is one thing...implementing it is quite another Online gambling's arch enemy, Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona, appears to have little regard for the practical difficulties surrounding the implementation of his Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, judging by reported comments he made this week. The UIGEA, tacked onto a totally unrelated security bill, was passed in a late night, pre-recess session of Congress in October 2006, with a requirement that federal bureaucrats draft supporting regulations within 270 days. Despite causing costly withdrawals from the US market by online gambling companies, UIGEA remains unsupported by the essential regulations, which officials are struggling to draft. The financial industry which will be required to do government's job in enforcing the regulations has been highly critical of the impractical and vague proposals offered thus far, and the project has gone significantly over the Congressional deadline. This week the Las Vegas Review-Journal quoted Kyl as saying that he is losing patience with the Federal Reserve and the Department of Treasury as they continue to wrestle with the complexities of crafting sensible regulations to enforce the UIGEA, which seeks to disrupt financial transactions with online gambling companies. Kyl said the regulations are a year overdue, according to the 2006 prohibition statute. "The longer it goes the less certainty there is," said the Senator. "I mean, the people who are violating the law need to know that they're not going to be able the get away with it, and I think that the failure to get these regulations promulgated on time has perhaps given some hope, and it's given life even to an idea over in the House of Representatives to put a moratorium on the regulations." Kyl was referring to a bill introduced April 11 by Congressmen Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and Ron Paul, a Texas Republican. The Frank-Paul HR 5767 bill is designed to block the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department from completing regulations to enforce the ban, and has already attrracted support from at least ten other politicians. In a financial services subcommittee hearing April 2 (see previous InfoPowa reports) Federal Reserve and Treasury Department officials admitted the regulations are proving to be a serious problem, partly because the 2006 legislation does not define unlawful Internet gambling. Louise Roseman, director of bank operations and payment systems for the Federal Reserve, testified that the prohibition of Internet gambling fiancial transactions cannot be "ironclad." Kyl is probably also looking over his shoulder at another bill - HR 2046 - proposed by Congressman Frank and currently supported by 48 other Congressman. The Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act seeks to licence and regulate online gambling in the USA, and has the potential to dismantle the UIGEA further. Kyl is apparently not worried by these proposals, saying: "I would be concerned if something like that were to be adopted by the House ... I'm not sure that the momentum is there to actually get it done."
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More sponsors for Frank-Paul bill HR 5767
ANTI-UIGEA BILL HAS ALREADY ATTRACTED TEN CO-SPONSORS
Introduced on April 10, HR 5767 seeks to stop federal officials from implementing any supporting regulations Introduced to the House by Congressmen Barney Frank and Ron Paul only on April 10, a bill seeking to halt the implementation of the notorious Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act has already attracted 10 co-sponsors, with more thought about to sign up. HR 5767 targets the Treasury Department and U.S. Federal Reserve, enjoining them from continuing work on the regulations supporting the UIGEA, which have been heavily criticised for a lack of precision, and the impractcalities of enforcement through an already overworked US financial services industry. Frank and Paul introduced the bill after a hearing conducted by the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade, and Technology that showed the weaknesses of and problems with the UIGEA (see previous InfoPowa reports). The following congressmen have signed onto the new bill thus far: Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.) Shelley Berkley (D-Nev.) William Lacy Clay (D-Mo.) Bob Filner (D-Calif.) Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) Michael Honda (D-Calif.) Peter King (R-N.Y.) James McGovern (D-Mass.) James Moran (D-Va.) Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) All 10 supporters have also signed up as co-sponsors of Frank's IGREA bill that seeks to legalise and regulate online gambling. H.R. 2046, the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act, has 48 cosponsors and is still making its way through committees in order to go to a vote on the House floor.
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UIGEA complications for US online horserace betting
CARVE-OUTS DON'T HELP HERE
Kentucky Derby could be impacted by UIGEA complications U.S. horse racing companies comfortable with their specially exempted online betting status in US legislation have apparently discovered some inconvenient facets of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act which has so effectively reduced competition by offshore firms. The Boston Herald quotes gaming and banking industry experts as saying that horse racing fans looking to place online bets for the 134th Kentucky Derby this weekend may find their transactions blocked by banks and credit card companies trying to avoid running afoul of unclear federal regulations. "Unless the government takes the responsibility of telling the banks which merchants they shouldn’t deal with, and when banks take the position that they are not going to process these transactions without guidance, all heck will break loose," said Tony Cabot, an attorney with the Las Vegas firm Lewis and Roca, which represents the Nevada Pari-Mutuel Association. The Herald notes that advocates for the banking and online gambling industries, legal scholars and several members of Congress are pushing the U.S. Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the Justice Department to clarify whether a regulatory exemption in the Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act that allows Internet gambling on horse racing could also mean that banks and credit card companies would be penalised for processing the money from those wagers. Under the law, passed in 2006 as part of the SAFE Port Security Act, the nation’s banks and credit card companies are prohibited from accepting payments for some online bets or wagers. However, the financial institutions are largely left to figure out which gambling transactions are illegal and block payments. Financial institutions say this unfairly puts them in the position of trying to decide what’s legal with little clear guidance from the federal agencies responsible for implementing the rule. Until the federal agencies issue better guidance, some financial service companies may refuse to handle any online gambling transactions, said I. Nelson Rose, a law professor at Whittier College in Costa Mesa, California. "The problem is that in some states online gambling is legal, in others it is not and in still other cases the question depends on where the bettor is, where the gaming operator is and what form of gambling is taking place," Rose told the newspaper. The Herald recaps recent Congressional hearings and requests from federal officials for comment on implementing regulations designed to underpin the UIGEA. Over 200 responses were received and are still being considered by federal drafters. On the hearings front, many witnesses across the spectrum of those involved in the process were sharply critical of the law, which they called vague and costly for financial institutions to implement. One of the most common complaints is that the rules fail to sufficiently define key terms, leaving financial institutions to figure out how to comply, said Congressman Luis Gutierrez. "For example, the regulation fails to adequately define what constitutes ‘unlawful Internet gambling’ or ‘restricted transaction,’ yet requires the financial institutions to make a determination on their own about what is lawful or unlawful," Gutierrez said. Also noted by the Herald are the current IGREA legislative attempts led by Congressman Barney Frank to legalise and licence online gambling, and a more recent move in concert with Congressman Ron Paul to halt federal drafters from further work on the now long over deadline regulations. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers and Rep. Chris Cannon took former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to task in a letter last year for the UIGEA's ambiguity on which states should block online horse gambling transactions. They still await a definitive reply. In response, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowski said then (and the Department of Justice has since reiterated that) "...while the UIGEA requires that the regulations be issued ‘in consultation with the attorney general,’ the Department of the Treasury and the Federal Reserve have the primary responsibility for drafting the regulations, and therefore we would defer questions concerning the timing or the scope of the regulations to those parties."
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jetset |
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PPA REMINDS SEN. KYL OF UIGEA IMPERFECTIONS
One of the most egregious flaws in the bill is that it does not define "unlawful Internet gambling" clearly Las week's report in the Las Vegas Review-Journal (see previous InfoPowa report) that Senator Jon Kyl was growing impatient with the protracted drafting process on regulations to support the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act elicited a tart response this week from the Poker Players Association. The Las Vegas director of the PPA, Ken Illgen minced no words in his letter to the LVRJ editor, saying: "Frankly, the confusion regulators are dealing with as they develop the regulations to enforce the law is a direct result of how this act was written and sneaked into a must-pass port security bill in the dead of night, allowing no time for review and debate." Illgen goes on to point out that one of the most egregious flaws in the bill is that it does not define "unlawful Internet gambling" clearly - something that the legislators trying to make Internet gambling unlawful should have included. "This law is clearly unworkable, as regulators, bankers and several members of Nevada's congressional delegation have publicly stated," Illgen concludes. "To truly place checks and balances on Internet gambling, Congress should look to existing legislation that would seek to regulate online gambling in order to protect children and problem gamblers and collect the billions of dollars in lost tax revenue from these transactions. "Let's not blame regulators for struggling to enact this flawed and ambiguous bill, and [instead] start looking for workable solutions to truly regulate this growing online industry.
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jetset |
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House committee to vote on suspending internet gambling ban!
House Committee to Vote on Suspending Internet Gambling Ban
PRNewsWire News ReleasesPublished: 06/20/08 01:09 PM CDTReleased By: Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative NewsvineCommentCurrent law unduly burdens U.S. financial services institutions WASHINGTON, June 20 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On June 24, 2008, the House Committee on Financial Services will mark up legislation, H.R. 5767, that would prohibit the Department of the Treasury and Federal Reserve System from proposing, prescribing or implementing any regulations related to the current ban on Internet gambling, as required by the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA). "Congress has studied this issue and heard from the financial services community and federal regulators that the current ban on Internet gambling is burdensome and doomed to fail. Now it is time for Congress to change course and find a way to protect the millions of Americans that are continuing to gamble online," said Jeffrey Sandman, spokesperson for the Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative. H.R. 5767 was introduced by Reps. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) and Ron Paul (R-Texas) on April 11, 2008. The introduction followed a hearing entitled, "Proposed UIGEA Regulations: Burden without Benefit?" in the House Committee on Financial Service's Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade, and Technology. Reps. Frank and Paul stated in their press release accompanying the introduction of H.R. 5767, "it was clear at the hearing that the regulations are unworkable for the financial services industry, and this bill would, therefore prohibit their implementation." Cont'd http://markets.chron.com/chron?GUID=...ChannelID=3197
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Finally some REAL action on the moronic UGIEA.... All I can say is... its about frickin time...
I hope the vote will be on CSPAN. Oh ya... as far as Senator Kyle... Lets just hope the good people of Arizona see him for the douch bag he really is and dump him next election. We really don't need anymore politicos like him, politicos need to take their working orders from the public... not dictate to the public and try to force their own 'twisted' set of morals on the people they are susposed to work for.
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Cheaters Suck... |
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Good piece on the vote...
Lawmakers to vote on suspending the UIGEA By FreedomAtStake | View all Posts Posted 1 hour, 12 minutes ago 1 comment Things are about to get very interesting on the Hill. Tomorrow, June 24, should see a scheduled vote by the US House Committee on Financial Services regarding H.R. 5767. Specifically, that bill is Barney Frank's legislation to effectively suspend the UIGEA from ever being enforced. So, what does this mean? Well, Democrat Barney Frank sponsored the bill and is also the Chairman of the Committee, so that's a good sign. The bill was co-sponsored by Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul, who also sits on the committee - another good sign. As well, the number of Democrats on the committee outnumbers the Republicans. So, all things considered, one would have to think that this bill has a pretty good chance of passing through this vote. But what then? That's when things get cloudy because .....
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Like I mentioned in another thread - here are some important links if US players want to contact their representatives:
Congressional reps: http://www.casinomeister.com/US_congress.php Here is a list of who is on the committee: http://financialservices.house.gov/members.html __________________
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Beer is living proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy ~Ben Franklin Useful links: ~ Accredited Casinos ~ I-Gaming Representatives ~ Evil Section ~ Pitch a Bitch ~ Affiliates Click Here ~ Webcast ~ Quit Gambling! ~ Donate Now! |
| The Following User Says Thank You to Casinomeister For This Useful Post: | ||
dominique (23rd June 2008) | ||
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The hearing on Barney Franks Bill is currently streaming here....
http://www.house.gov/htbin/leave_sit...ervices&wait=2
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Cheaters Suck... |
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