DELAWARE SPORTS BILL MOMENTUM CONTINUES (Update)
15 May 2009
Now the Senate has passed Gov.Markell’s
proposal
The news earlier this week that Delaware legislators
in the House had passed a sports betting bill (see
previous InfoPowa report) has been augmented by reports
that the Senate has also approved the bill by 17 votes
to 2.
The Senate approval was faster and smoother
than the governor’s first attempt to get the bill
through the House, which failed. He then submitted a
reworked and milder version which passed by a 30 to 4
margin and as progressed to the Senate.
On
Tuesday the Senate voted to suspend normal rules and
allowed the bill to be debated in the full chamber. A
short time later, the bill passed 17-2 with two
abstentions.
"I am very pleased that the senate
acted so quickly to pass the sports lottery legislation
and I very much appreciate the leadership from both
sides of the aisle," Gov. Markell said in a statement.
"In particular, I want to thank Senator Deluca as the
lead senate sponsor and the leadership in the house of
representatives who came together to get us closer to
our meeting our budget challenges."
Markell, who
has been a major backer of the bill, is expected to sign
the bill later this week and the target is to have the
betting system in place for the start of the NFL season.
Whenever it's signed, Delaware will become the
first state east of the Mississippi to allow sports
wagering. It's estimated that sports betting will
generate about $50 million annually for Delaware, which
Markell said will help with a projected $755 million
shortfall in next fiscal year's budget.
"This
will generate critical revenue to fund our core
commitments as a government, including public safety,
education and economic development," Markell said.
"Working together, this will also generate new revenue
to our partners, Delaware's three (casinos)."
The
format the of state's new sports betting system has
still not been determined.
The bill allows for
betting on single games, but it could be limited to
parlay betting by the state's Supreme Court, which
Markell has asked for guidance to determine which system
best complies with that state's constitution.
Delaware had a sports lottery briefly in the 1970s and
was grandfathered in — along with Oregon, Nevada and
Montana — under a 1992 federal law that bans states from
establishing sports gambling.
The state's three
casinos will get less of a cut of non-racing revenue,
but the addition of sports betting is predicted to more
than offset the reduction. The state will get 45 percent
of the revenue generated from sports and electronic
gaming, reports Associated Press.
In return, the
bill approved a commission that will study whether it's
feasible to bring live table gaming to Delaware,
something the casinos have been pushing for.
The
bill has been opposed by several sports leagues and
organizations, including the NFL and NCAA. NCAA
spokeswoman Stacey Osburn called sports wagering "a
problem, not a solution" to the state's to budget
problems.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said in a
statement: "We expect that everyone involved in the
administration of sports leagues — professional and
college — will review today's action and evaluate its
impact as other decisions are made by Delaware officials
and the Delaware Supreme Court,"
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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