MORE CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS ON ONLINE GAMBLING
PLANNED
7 March 2008
Barney Franks gearing up for another debate
The Washington news medium Politico reports that House
Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank
(D-Mass.), will use a hearing this spring to highlight
the headaches he says UIGEA anti-online gambling
regulations have created for banks and other financial
institutions.
At the end of 2007, and way over their original 270 day
deadline, the US Treasury and Federal Reserve published
draft proposals of regulations giving teeth to the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act which passed
in late 2006. The regulations have met with widespread
criticism, mainly that the law, which seeks to strangle
financial transactions with online gambling companies,
would place onerous requirements on the financial
institutions that oversee the flow of money - a point
Frank hopes his hearing will drive home.
“The banks have a lot of other things to worry about
right now,” Frank said, citing the ever-expanding
mortgage crisis and a host of other financial woes that
have beset the industry this year. “I don’t think poker
should be one of them.”
Frank introduced legislation last year to roll back
parts of the anti-online gambling law. At the time, the
Financial Services Committee chairman said he had no
plans to advance that repeal until a sufficient number
of colleagues would support it.
So far, 46 Congressmen have signed up to support the
Frank Bill, including Representative George Miller (D-Calif.),
a powerful ally of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).
And this week Representative Jim McDermott (D-Wash.), a
member of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee,
introduced a companion version to Frank's IGREA that
seeks to legalise, regulate and tax some forms of
Internet gambling.
He has argued the move would create a financial windfall
for the federal government.
The Frank hearing comes as federal regulators struggle
to decipher the law for banks and other financial
institutions required to block this flow of money to
foreign gambling sites. The Department of the Treasury
and the Federal Reserve issued guidelines last fall that
were intended to clarify what types of transactions
banks, credit card companies and other institutions
should block.
But many of those financial services companies, in
conjunction with gamblers, lawmakers and a broad cross
section of trade associations affected by the law, have
since flooded the Treasury and the Federal Reserve with
protest letters, arguing the clarification itself was
too vague.
In letters to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, a group of
congressional Republicans argued that banks will choose
to block every transaction that might be interpreted as
gambling, whether it is legal or not, if these
regulators do not do a better job of clarifying which
transactions banks must block.
A coalition of gambling interests, financial
institutions and outside trade groups has been working
with backers of the original law to tweak the current
rules, but most legislation on Capitol Hill remains
stalled due to a lack of broad interest in the issue.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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