Pritzker banking on $200 million from legal sports betting, but efforts to expand gambling have …

https://ift.tt/2SohtBC

Gov. J.B. Pritzker is counting on $200 million in licensing fees from legalized sports wagering to help plug a $3.2 billion hole in next year’s state budget.

But years of failed efforts to expand gambling in Illinois suggest his plan is no sure thing.

In his first budget address Wednesday, the new Democratic governor acknowledged the issue’s history, calling on lawmakers to set aside the squabbles over new casinos and expanded betting options at horse tracks that have derailed previous gambling expansion measures, and pass a stand-alone bill to legalize wagering on sporting events. If lawmakers act quickly, Illinois could be the first Midwestern state to do so after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year overturned a prohibition on state-sanctioned sports betting.

“Expansion of gambling is a perennial effort in this state, and often these proposals get bogged down in regional disputes and a Christmas tree approach,” Pritzker said in his speech to a joint session of the Illinois House and Senate. “But in those instances, we were talking about adding more riverboats or adding into other regions.

But allowing sports betting at any business that has video gambling terminals raises concerns about oversaturation of the market. State Rep. Mike Zalewski, a Riverside Democrat who chairs the House Revenue Committee and serves as point man on sports betting legislation, said policymakers need to find a middle ground.

“We have to balance the amount of people interested in offering it versus concerns about oversaturation, and that’s a very tricky balance,” Zalewski said.

“It would be really early in the process to say, ‘Yes, a hundred percent, we can do whatever the stakeholders want,’ or ‘No, there’s no way we would allow any of these different interests to get what they want,’ ” he added.

Zalewski said he plans to file a bill by mid-March that would serve as a starting point for negotiations.

While Pritzker has put down “a reasonable marker” for what he’d like to see, “I do get the sense he’s very willing to let us try to work it out for him and try to get to a place where we’re comfortable and he’s comfortable and we can get a bill on his desk,” Zalewski said.

Lawmakers have an incentive to act quickly on sports betting. The more than $200 million in revenue Pritzker is banking on is a key piece of his plan to patch the state’s budget hole while he pushes for an amendment to the Illinois Constitution that would allow for a graduated income tax, under which higher earners would pay a higher rate. That can’t go on the ballot for voter approval until November 2020 at the earliest.

Meanwhile, Illinois also has the opportunity to be the first state in the Midwest to legalize gambling on sports after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year overturned a prohibition.

Seven states —Delaware, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia — currently have legal sports betting, and it’s also allowed at tribal casinos in New Mexico, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. New York and Arkansas have passed laws allowing it, but casinos aren’t yet taking wagers. Illinois and 20 other states — including Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri and Kentucky — currently are considering legislation that would make it legal.

“Illinois could be the first state in the Midwest to seize on this opportunity, which of course could bring bettors in from neighboring states,” said Frank Manzo, policy director at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank with ties to organized labor and the construction industry.

The state would create the greatest number of jobs and bring in the most revenue by not placing overly restrictive limits on the number of available licenses, Manzo said.

For his part, Pritzker is optimistic that lawmakers will be able to deliver a sports betting bill to his desk this spring without it getting bogged down in other gambling issues.

“I believe we can get it done relatively quickly,” the governor said Thursday at an unrelated event.

dpetrella@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @PetrellaReports

01-All No Sub,02-Pol,16-Econ,18-Gaming,19-Legal,21-Sports,24-ILGA,26-Delivered,E Gambling,E VG,RK Client,HL,HL New,IGMOA Media Clips Update,IGMOA Media Clips Update ,RKPRS HL

Feeds,News,Politics

via Google Alert – illinois gambling https://ift.tt/1hJ3cxi

February 22, 2019 at 06:37PM

Leave a comment