PRIVATE INITIATIVE TO LEGALISE ONLINE POKER GETS
UNDER WAY
3 August 2007
430 000 petition signatures sought by Christmas
From San Diego comes the story of an online poker
player, Anthony Sandstrom aka "Tuff Fish" who has
decided to do something about the legal restrictions on
his favourite pastime and that great American game,
poker.
This week the California secretary of state's office
cleared Sandstrom to circulate petitions putting his
proposed initiative on a statewide ballot, where voters
could call for the creation of a state-owned Internet
poker gambling agency, reports MediaNews from
Sacramento. The private initiative, which will have to
present state government with 430 000 signatures by
Christmas 2007 to have any hope of success, faces
challenges from anti-online gambling opponents but
Sandstrom is confident he can mobilise public opinion
for his goals.
Under Sandstrom's proposal, the site would collect a
rake from poker games, 45 percent of which would go to
the teachers' pensions in the state with an additional
45 percent going to veterans' homes, mental health
programs for military personal and to purchase hearing
aids and artificial limbs for veterans. The remaining 10
percent would fund gambling addiction programs.
The system would be similar to Sweden's Svenska Spel,
which raked $700 million in profits last year.
If successful a ballot could push the state to establish
a state-owned Internet poker site within 150 days of the
proposal's adoption.
Although he doubted that Sandstrom's initiative was the
right vehicle, legal expert I. Nelson Rose, a professor
and attorney at Whittier Law School in Costa Mesa said:
"It's silly for the state not to get into the business.
Billions of dollars are being spent on the game here,
and the state isn't getting one penny."
California is the world's online poker capital, analysts
said. The government is missing out by not legalizing,
regulating and taxing it.
The proposal would allow Indian casinos and other
gambling establishments to set up revenue-sharing deals,
which would serve as an incentive to wealthy tribes to
gather voter signatures needed to put the measure on the
February ballot.
"We will take a look at the initiative and discuss it,"
said Garry South, a consultant to the California Tribal
Business Alliance, made up of some of the tribes who own
the largest casinos.
Among those flatly opposed are card rooms in the Los
Angeles and San Francisco Bay Area,
anti-gambling-expansion activists and educators, who
fear that success for Sandstrom may result in diversion
and loss of state lottery funds.
The disarmingly frank Sandstrom acknowledges his
initiative isn't aimed at solving major social problems.
"I am just a guy who wants to play poker at home when I
don't feel like making an hour drive to a card room or
casino," Sandstrom said on his Web site.
"I am going to make a mighty effort to make safe, legal,
and accessible online poker possible."
The poker crusader hints at tax benefits for the state
when he says that the proposal could provide money for
the repair of potholes on city roads.
The wild card in the game is the Internet, opines
MediaNews. By harnessing the reach of the Internet
through his website, message boards and blogs Sandstrom
is making his petition available as a download for
supporters trying to collect signatures via the
Internet.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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