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UK Gambling Law Shelved?
A shake-up of gaming
legislation that would’ve let casinos open terrestrially 24
hours a day and offer million-pound slot machine payouts, and
could have raised £1.5bn a year in tax, is now set to be
postponed until after the next General Election, and may never
be introduced at all. The legislation also made room for online
casino gambling from Great Britain, which would have been a
milestone in online player protection and regulation in the
nascent industry.
Plans for gambling reform were announced by Culture Secretary
Tessa Jowell last year, but the Government's crowded
Parliamentary timetable means a gaming law is not expected in
this autumn's Queen's Speech, which sets out legislation for the
coming year.
The gaming business is expected to be understandably upset as
the regime change would’ve seen Blackpool become Europe's
gambling capital with a £1bn complex planned.
(Online Casino News)
Tribal Gambling Increases
May 29, 2003
INDIANA – The national market for tribal gambling increased last
year, according to a new study, but it may not necessarily help
communities searching for new money.
As sovereign nations, tribes do not pay taxes on anything based
on tribal land, including casinos. State and local governments
instead negotiate some form of replacement revenue in a compact
submitted to the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs.
This year’s study found that people nationwide spent $14.1
billion in 2002 at Indian casinos, up 11 percent from the
previous year, according to Meister, who is a research analyst
for Analysis Group, based in Los Angeles.
Nationwide, 348 tribal casinos paid a total of $563 million to
state and local governments under their compact agreements,
according to Meister’s research. Numbers can be deceiving, he
said.
His study also tries to calculate the economic benefit from the
tribes buying goods and services in the community, as well as
providing jobs. Nationwide, tribal casinos spent $63 million on
local charities, he said.
Of the 30 states with some form of tribal gambling, many have
turned to the Indians for help and have met mixed success.
Arizona is looking at allowing Indians to increase the number of
slot machines allowed. Colorado was able to increase its
payments under the compact in return for allowing the Indians to
have blackjack. The California legislature is considering
cutting its request in half, which still would be a significant
increase in the amount the state receives from Indian gambling,
Meister said.
All of the states look to Connecticut, which receives more than
half of the nationwide total of payments from its compact with
the Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun casinos — two of the largest
casinos in the country.
(Gambling Magazine)
$7m for gambling services
May 28, 2003
THE NSW Government today revealed a $7 million grant to help
problem gamblers kick the habit.
Racing and Gaming Minister Grant McBride today said the grant
would be distributed to more than 50 gambling support services
across the state.
But it will be gamblers themselves who finance much of the
support services, with funds coming from a two per cent levy on
Sydney casino gaming revenue.
The paradox was not lost on Wesley Mission (WM), which will
receive more than $1 million to provide counselling and legal
advice for problem gamblers.
"(It) has been raised with us several times but we don't feel it
is inappropriate because we use it to assist people who have
developed problems," Bernard McNair, WM manager of counselling
services, said
"We don't use it to propagate or support gambling in any way and
if we didn't do what we do the problems would be much worse."
Wesley Mission general manager Elizabeth Orr said research
showed less than two per cent of the population suffered
gambling addiction but the problem was growing.
There were now dozens of services to assist problem gamblers,
compared to only one counsellor five years ago, she said.
The casino levy was imposed in 1995, creating the Casino
Community Benefit Fund (CCBF), and had so far contributed about
$64 million to community projects.
"About four or five years ago about $200,000 was allocated by
the state government to gambling rehabilitation services in this
state," he said.
"So in less than five years we have gone to $7 million, that is
(35) times more money being spent now than five years ago
because it is being recognised as a major problem in our
community."
Lifeline, Mission Australia, Sydney University's Gambling
Treatment Clinic and St Vincent de Paul are among the groups to
receive funding this year.
AAP
Gambling Bill Being Drafted
May 29, 2003
BOSTON -- Legalized gambling, seemingly dead after it was
soundly defeated in the House this spring, is about to resurface
in the Senate. Sen. Michael Morrissey, D-Quincy, is drafting
legislation that would allow an Aquinnah Wampanoag casino in
Southeastern Massachusetts and slot machines at several
locations across the state.
A gaming vote isn't expected until after the Senate concludes
this week's debate on a proposed $22.56 billion state budget
that would make deep cuts in education and local aid. The
Legislature must close a $3 billion shortfall for the 2004
fiscal year, which begins July 1.
Sen. Morrissey said it could take two to three weeks to write
the bill. "After we get through the budget and see how bad
things are, and we still haven't bottomed out yet, maybe people
are willing to reconsider it, maybe not," said Sen. Morrissey,
who co-chairs the Government Regulations Committee.
Other senators also are expected to push plans for slot machines
and commercial casinos if the issue hits the Senate floor. Sen.
Morrissey said the final bill should not restrict slot machines
to the state's racetracks. A number of state representatives in
the House, including some from the SouthCoast, voted against
putting slots at the tracks because it offered no economic
development opportunities for their districts.
Southeastern Massachusetts lawmakers said lobbying over the
gaming issue intensified this week. But even if a gambling bill
passes the Senate, it faces tough opposition. House Speaker
Thomas M. Finneran opposes the expansion of gambling, saying it
could hurt the state Lottery.
Gov. Mitt Romney has pushed a plan to allow slot machines for a
limited period of five years, rather than allowing full-fledged
casinos. In April, The House defeated a proposal to allow slots
at the state's four racetracks by a vote of 86 to 65.
"I think the House voted quite substantially against gambling,"
said Rep. Anne Paulsen, a Belmont Democrat and a leading
gambling opponent. "It was not close. It will be very difficult
to overturn it."
Sen. Mark C.W. Montigny, D-New Bedford, remains on the fence
about gaming. "I continue to be very skeptical about this as
proposed as manna from heaven," Sen. Montigny said. "The only
people who are pushing it are the lobbyists and those that will
make money from it."
Sen. Montigny said a number of questions need to be answered to
get his vote, including the location of the gambling parlors and
the effect on the state Lottery. The Lottery generates $900
million a year in aid to cities and towns.
"When there's desperation and blood in the water, that's when
the sharks in this industry come out in droves, and they are out
right now in droves," Sen. Montigny said. O'Leary, a gambling
critic, said "there is a significant amount of opposition" to it
in the 40-member Senate.
The Senate has yet to vote on a bill sponsored by Sen. Joan M.
Menard, D-Somerset, that would allow three commercial casinos
across the state -- including one in SouthCoast -- and slots at
the four racetracks.
There is also concern that opening the door to gambling could
lead to a proliferation of Indian casinos. Two other
Massachusetts tribes -- the Nipmuc in central Massachusetts and
the Mashpee Wampanoag on Cape Cod -- are believed to be close to
securing federal recognition. That would make them eligible to
offer whatever type of gambling is legal in the state.
But gambling supporters say slots alone could raise $500 million
a year, helping to save local aid and human service programs.
They want to recapture the $200 million a year that state
residents spend on casinos and slots in Connecticut and Rhode
Island. "We will try to put together a draft and present it to
the members of the Senate to see what their feeling is,"
Morrissey said.
(Gambling Magazine)
WASHINGTON
Internet gambling has taken the betting world
by storm, but efforts are underway on Capitol Hill to put an end
to online gaming.
Lawmakers are
crafting various measures that would make it illegal to use
credit cards or electronic funds transfers to pay for gaming
activities, and are hoping that banning revenue exchanges will
cut the bloodlines to the Net gaming industry.
"There's a good chance it could go somewhere this year but it
has the same problems it's had in the past, and that's that no
one really wants to get rid of all Internet gambling," said Dan
Walsh, a Washington lobbyist for the Interactive Gaming Council
(search).
"I don't think there are many members of Congress who get up in
the morning and worry about an adult waking up and once a week
betting $50 on a hand of blackjack," he added.
Those who oppose Internet gambling say it encourages minors to
bet, increases the likelihood of credit-card fraud, contributes
to addiction and poses jurisdictional snares. Some critics also
say offshore gambling sites could be used for money laundering
and could support terrorists or other criminals.
"The very nature of gambling, with its great potential for fraud
and corruption, demand that it be regulated as it now is in all
jurisdictions," Rep. Spencer Bachus (search), R-Ala., said in an
e-mail to Foxnews.com. "Cyber gambling is the crack cocaine of
gambling and will create a new generation of addicts unless we
stop it."
Gaming supporters denounce these arguments and claim gamblers
will find ways around the law. If properly regulated, they
argue, the flourishing industry can become more transparent and
the money trail can be more easily followed while providing
states with much-needed revenue.
"I think it's very dangerous to start regulating and prohibiting
activities on the Internet that are not, per say, illegal in the
bricks and mortar world," said Jeff Modisett, a consultant and
former attorney general of Indiana.
If a ban passes, "this would be the first time that Congress,
outside of the area of pornography, has tried to regulate the
Internet," said Dan Spiegel, a lawyer with Washington law firm
Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, which represents online
gaming company Virtual Holdings (search).
One bill, sponsored by Rep. Jim Leach (search), R-Iowa, makes it
illegal for Net gaming businesses to accept bank tools like
credit cards and electronic funds transfers.
"Internet gambling serves no legitimate purpose in our society,"
Leach said in a statement. "It is a danger to family and society
at large."
After the bill was approved by the House Financial Services
Committee in March, the House Judiciary Committee this month
removed provisions that would allow some forms of online gaming
like state lotteries and horseracing.
A sister bill to the Leach legislation sponsored by Sen. Jon Kyl,
R-Ariz., is supposed to be voted on in the Senate Banking
Committee sometime in June, and officials say they expect it to
pass the committee.
The White House has indicated that President Bush would support
the Kyl-Leach bill.
A bill sponsored by Bachus resembles the Leach bill and keeps
the carve-outs. It also eliminates a provision of the Leach bill
that requires U.S. officials to work with foreign governments to
determine if offshore gambling sites are being used for money
laundering.
The Bachus bill passed the House Financial Services Committee
last week and is headed to the House floor.
Bachus said the bipartisan majority in which his bill passed is
a "strong indicator of its probable success" in the House.
"However, 10 years of hindsight has taught me that in Congress,
passage of legislation is never as easy as it sounds."
A third bill by Rep. John Conyers (search), D-Mich., would
create a commission to study the legalities of online gaming and
the issues surrounding it.
Washington's efforts to choke terrorists' money supplies could
boost ban supporters' arguments that all possible money routes
should be cut off, especially when the FBI says organized crime
is operating through Internet gambling.
"Sort of in the postwar environment here and the continued
efforts against terrorism, we have a very significant desire to
see something happen on this," said House Financial Services
spokesman Scott Duncan.
But gaming supporters say there's no solid evidence terrorists
benefit from online gaming and taking away legitimate payment
methods will make it harder to follow the criminal money trail.
Online gambling businesses have a transaction number that shows
up on consumers' credit cards. Take away the cards and gamblers
will have to find back-alley ways to place their bets, say
supporters.
"All it's going to do is press online gaming into the backroom
speakeasies of cyberspace, just like alcohol and prohibition,"
said Robin Weissman, who works with Spiegel.
The Justice Department estimates that by the end of 2003, there
will be 1,800 gambling sites generating about $4.2 billion.
(FOX News)
Fire destroys Vegas casino that was
site of integrated gambling
May 30, 2003
BY KEN RITTER
LAS VEGAS--A historic casino that was once the only integrated
gambling spot in this city and played host to the likes of Sammy
Davis Jr. and Nat ''King'' Cole was destroyed Thursday by fire.
Three people were injured and about 100 others evacuated from
apartments in what were once the Moulin Rouge casino's hotel
rooms. The apartments were separate from the casino and weren't
on fire.
The Moulin Rouge opened in 1955 as the first and only integrated
casino in Nevada. Frank Sinatra, Cole and Davis were among
headliners who appeared in the Club Rouge showroom.
The casino closed after only six months, but in 1960, city and
gambling leaders met there to desegregate the Las Vegas Strip.
The long-closed property has had a string of owners and
renovation plans--and long has been a focus of preservationists.
This month, it was listed among 11 Nevada historic places in
danger of being lost to development and other pressures.
Firefighters arrived at the building north of downtown shortly
after 1 a.m. to find the roof engulfed in flames. The building
was gutted.
A damage estimate was not available, and the cause of the fire
was being investigated.
AP
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