THE IMPATIENT POLITICIAN
2 May 2008
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."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|