NEW JERSEY TO ALLOW REMOTE HORSERACE BETTING
19 December 2008
Sona mobile's "on premises" remote betting to be
deployed
Remote "on premises" betting is gaining in popularity
and spreading beyond its high profile use in Las Vegas
land casinos, with New Jersey the latest state to
approve the concept as it attempts to increase revenues
for the troubled racing industry.
New Jersey authorities are set to allow Internet betting
on horse races, according to a report in the Star-Ledger
this week, which reveals that two publicly owned tracks
are expected to lose $20.8 million next year, according
to the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, which
runs the Meadowlands and Monmouth Park racetracks. This
year, the tracks are set to lose $16.9 million.
"All told, the authority expects to take in $238.5
million in operating revenues next year, a decline of
nearly $5 million, according to the budget approved
yesterday. In a cost-cutting move, the authority has
imposed a hiring freeze for next year, with staffing
levels already down 5 percent compared with 2007," the
Star-Ledger reveals.
Authority officials remain anxious about the continuing
decline in the racing business, with horse breeders and
owners proposing that the tracks should be allowed to
run slot machines. However, New Jersey based land
casinos adamantly oppose the plan, saying the
competition would hurt their business in Atlantic City.
Casinos are paying $90 million in exchange for the
tracks' agreement not to add slots before the end of
2011.
The bright spot for the horseracing fraternity has been
that income from Internet, phone and off-track wagering
is rising. The authority predicts such operations will
take in $9.3 million after expenses next year, a roughly
$220 000 increase over this year's expected results.
Horse race betting over the Internet is exempted from
anti-online gambling laws in the United States.
Despite the rise in wagering through these media, it is
not sufficient to "ensure the economic viability of
horse racing," said Carl Goldberg, chair of the sports
authority.
But the authority hopes that mobile 'on premises'
wagering could debut as early as January 2009, and will
help improve the bottom line.
The system requires users to download software to a
device that uses the Windows Mobile operating system.
The software, produced by Sona Mobile, provides
information on betting odds, horses, trainers and
jockeys, and allows users to place online bets.
Eventually, the authority expects to broadcast live
racing videos to mobile devices.
Tracks in Europe and Asia have offered mobile betting
software for three to five years, said David Schwartz,
director of the Center for Gaming Research at the
University of Nevada in Las Vegas.
Wagerers "might bet more because it will make it more
convenient," Schwartz said. Plus, he said, such software
allows tracks to hire fewer betting clerks and phone
operators.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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