Tag Archives: intrastate

New Jersey S1565 passes Senate budget committee

A bill to license and regulate internet gambling within the territorial borders of New Jersey easily passed a vote by the State Senate’s Budget and Appropriations Committee on April 3 by a vote of 11-0 (with 1 not voting and 1 abstention).  Now the bill heads to the floor of the Senate.

Senate Bill 1565 seeks to legalize internet gambling by way of supplementing New Jersey’s Casino Control Act with provisions related to the regulation of games on the internet. Casino games and poker would be permitted but not sports betting. The only entities that would be allowed to operate games on the internet are licensed Atlantic City casinos.

Sponsored by Senators Raymond Lesniak and Jim Whelan, S1565 is very similar to a bill that moved swiftly and easily through the legislature last year but failed to become enacted after Governor Chris Christie refused to sign it. In recent weeks there has been much speculation in both industry journals and mainstream media as to whether Governor Christie might now be ready to sign an internet gambling bill, but his office has not issued a statement on the matter.

No action on S1565 has been scheduled on the floor of the Senate yet, but a vote seems certain.

Legalized Games

S1565 would enable licensed Atlantic City casinos to operate all of the same games on the internet that they operate in their brick-and-mortar casinos.

Eligible License Applicants

The only entities who would be able to operate internet gambling in New Jersey are licensed Atlantic City casinos. Operators would be required to locate all equipment for conducting internet wagering in a secure location in Atlantic City.

Taxes and fees

Operators would be taxed at 10% of gross revenues from internet wagering. This compares to an 8% tax on gross revenues from brick-and-mortar operations.

The initial license fee would be at least $200,000 and then subsequent annual renewal fees would be $100,000.

Agency Duties

New Jersey’s Division of Gaming Enforcement would be responsible for recommending internet wagering regulations to New Jersey’s Gaming Control Commission. Additionally, the Division of Gaming Enforcement would create an Office of Internet Wagering to perform duties related to internet gambling regulation.

California’s S.B. 1463 proposes public-private partnership model for internet gambling operators

Internet gambling policy is clearly a priority issue in California. What is less clear is whether the important interests agree about the mechanics of regulation.

See our free special report about the proposed internet gambling policy in California, “The foundations of Internet Gambling Policy: California.”

The president pro tempore of the Senate, Darrel Steinberg, is one of the legislators who is deeply involved in the process. In August Sen. Steinberg issued a formal letter to notify “stakeholders” that the Senate would be unable to approve a bill before the end of 2011, but he promised that interested parties would continue negotiating so that an improved bill could proceed in 2012.

Steinberg fulfilled his promise on Feb. 24, 2012 by introducing S.B. 1463 – The Internet Gambling Consumer Protection and Public-Private Partnership Act of 2012. He was somewhat late in delivering though. His letter had forecasted a hearing would occur sometime in January. Furthermore, Feb. 24 was the final day on which new legislation could be introduced, which might suggest that the interested parties had still not reached consensus on some of the issues.

The new plan, contained in S.B. 1463, builds off the model that has been supported by co-sponsor Sen. Roderick Wright during the current and prior legislative terms.  Sen. Wright is another important legislator because he chairs the Senate Committee on Governmental Organization, which presides over internet gambling issues in the Senate.

Senate Bill 1463 –  “The Internet Gambling Consumer Protection and Public-Private Partnership Act of 2012.”

… to be inserted into California’s Business and Professions Code, Division 8, as a new Chapter 5.2

Classification as an “Urgency Statute”

S.B. 1463 has been classified as an “urgency statute.” (19990.96(c), SEC. 4). As a result it is subject to a different set of procedural rules than a typical bill would be.

A typical bill requires the approval of a majority of the membership of each house and does not become effective until after January 1st of the following year. But bills classified as urgent, like S.B. 1463, require approval of 2/3 of the membership of each house, although they need not wait until January 1 of the following year but instead become effective immediately upon enactment. (See California Constitution Article IV).

Public-private partnership

S.B. 1463 envisions that a licensed internet gaming facility should be structured as a public-private partnership between the state and a private operating organization. According to the bill’s findings and declarations section:

“The state’s interests are best met by a public-private partnership between the state and private entities, the terms of which would facilitate meeting the important consumer protection interests of the state while ensuring, through the success of the private entities, that the state receives the benefits of the licensing scheme as well as tax revenues that it would otherwise not receive.” (19990.02(h)).

Aside from this language, however, there is little else in the bill which provides specific parameters about how the public-private partnerships are to be created. Nonetheless, it is probably proper to infer that California’s Justice Department will receive broad discretion to negotiate the terms of the state’s partnership with its licensees.

Only poker

Poker is the only game that that will be permitted for an initial two-year period after implementation. (199990.14(b)).

After the initial two-year period, California’s Justice Department will have discretion to authorize the licensing and regulation other games as well. (Id.)

Intrastate only for now, but interstate play is envisioned later

A licensed operator will be able to offer games only to customers located within the territorial limits of the state or one of its Indian tribes. (19990.10).

S.B. 1463 envisions that cooperation with other states could become desirable later, but it does not give permission to any state agency to take action without prior approval of the legislature:

  • In the event that U.S. Congress were to enact a federal interstate framework for internet gambling, then California’s legislature may opt into or out of the federal framework by way of a majority vote of both houses. (19990.71(a)).
  • In the event that the U.S. Justice Department were to notify the California Justice Department in writing that interstate internet wagering is permissible, then California’s legislature may enter into agreements with other states to offer internet gambling by way of a majority vote of both houses. (19990.71(b)).

Additionally, the California Justice Department may offer provisional findings of suitability to entities who have obtained a license in other states. (19990.235).

Eligible licensees

Only four types of entities are eligible to apply for a license (19990.21(a)):

  1. An organization which already holds a gaming or poker license, and which has held the license for a period of at least three years preceding its application. (19990.21(a)(1)).
  2. A federally recognized California Indian tribe that operates a casino or cardroom, and which has done so for a period of at least three years preceding its application. (19990.21(a)(2)).
  3. A thoroughbred, quarter horse, or harness association licensed by the California Horse Racing Board for a period of at least three years preceding its application. (19990.21(a)(3)).
  4. An operator of an online advanced deposit wagering site which has regulated by the California Horse Racing Board for a period of at least three years preceding its application. (19990.21(a)(4)).

There is no limit on the number of licenses that may be awarded. (19990.21(a)).

Tribal participation

California’s Indian tribes are welcome to participate in the system, provided they meet the eligibility requirements for licensing (i.e. if the tribe has been operating a casino or cardroom for a period of at least three-years). (19990.21(a)(2)).

Any tribe that applies for a license must waive its sovereignty for the limited purpose of allowing the state to exercise jurisdiction over the tribe in order to evaluate its application. (19990.21(e)).

S.B. 1463 further envisions that the Governor’s office should consult with Indian tribes regarding additional issues:

“It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage the Governor, immediately following enactment of this chapter, to enter into meet and confer negotiations with interested tribal governments that have tribal-state gaming compacts with the state to resolve the questions related to exclusivity of tribal gaming, and to ensure that the signatory parties to compacts may exercise their rights under the compacts in a timely manner and that the state may commence the authorization of Internet gambling as provided by this chapter.” (19990.02(m)).

Fees and taxes

Application fees will be between $1 million and $5 million, as determined by the California Justice Department to cover anticipated costs of conducting background checks and evaluating suitability. (19990.22(d)).

Upon being awarded a license, a licensee must deposit a nonrefundable fee of $30 million with the state. (19990.58(a)).

  • The $30 million fee serves as a credit to the licensee. For a period of three years, the licensee’s monthly gaming tax on gross revenues will be deducted from this $30 million credit. (19990.58(a)).

Licensees will be taxed at a rate of 10% of their monthly gross revenues. (19990.58(b)).

  • “Gross revenues” is defined as “the total amount of money paid to a licensee pursuant to activities authorized under this chapter. Gross revenues shall not include player deposits and wagers.” (19990.05(l)).

Authority to modify license contracts after three years

Three years after a licensee has received a license, the Department of Justice will obtain the ability to renegotiate the terms of the agreement it has entered into with the licensee. The language of the bill states:

“…The state reserves the right to make reasonable modifications to the terms and conditions of licenses…. to balance the relationship between the licensees and the state.” 19990.26(b-e).

For now, it is probably too early to foresee whether the licensee will have true bargaining power to renegotiate or whether the negotiations will amount to unilateral demands imposed by the state.

General agency duties

S.B. 1463 grants primary authority for licensing and regulating internet gambling to California’s Justice Department. Otherwise, the bill is vague regarding the distribution of powers and functions between the Justice Department and other state agencies, including the California Gambling Control Commission.

The Justice Department clearly has responsibility for evaluating license applications as well as broad authority to promulgate a range of necessary regulations. Presumably, power to oversee the ongoing compliance of licensees will be delegated to the California Gambling Commission, but S.B. 1463 does not make this explicitly clear.

Necessary contacts with the state

Licensees and all of their subcontractors must be organized in California. (19990.22(b)(1)).

All facilities and bank accounts related to intrastate internet gambling must be located in California. (19990.22(b)(1)).

Credit card payments

S.B. 1463 differs from federal legislative proposals and those of other states in that it envisions players would be permitted to use credit cards to fund their gambling accounts:

“…The licensee shall submit to each credit card company with which it has credit card sales, information in an appropriate form and format so that the words “Internet gambling” may be printed on the purchaser’s credit card statement when a payment to a licensee is made by credit card payment.” (19990.35(c)(2)(C)).

DOJ gets out of the way (Memorandum Opinion on Internet Gambling)

A small fire was started in December when US Attorney General Eric Holder, through his Legislative Affairs Office, sent a letter to Senators Jon Kyl and Harry Reid. The subject of the letter was a Memorandum Opinion drafted by Holder’s Legal Counsel Office, addressing two very specific questions of federal law related to internet gambling.

The Memorandum Opinion is significant because it adopts a shocking new interpretation of federal law with regard to unsettled questions surrounding internet gambling. It used to be the official position of the US Justice Department that all gambling on the internet violates federal law. The former position inferred a very broad scope from the language of the Wire Act of 1961.

The new position adopted in the Memorandum Opinion takes a more literal reading of the Wire Act, limiting its terms to interstate wagering on sports, which was likelier the intent of Congress in 1961.

Presumably Holder’s Office of Legal Affairs sent the Memorandum to Senators Kyl and Reid because the the Senators had earlier in 2011 published a letter of their own in which they criticized Holder’s Justice Department for a lack of consistency and aggression in enforcing internet gambling law. The Senators requested that Holder either confirm the Justice Department’s traditional approach to the Wire Act or else explain any new approach to Congress. In that regard, the Memorandum Opinion speaks for itself.

The broad significance of the Memorandum Opinion is that if the Wire Act applies only to sports wagering, then state legislatures are free to license and regulate poker, casino games, and lotteries on the internet. The effect in media and government has been profound, and there are many indications that policymakers in the state and federal governments are having serious discussions about the prospects of legalization.

For an in-depth exploration of the Memorandum Opinion, please see an article I wrote for Global Betting & Gaming Consultants of the UK: US Government Moves out of the States’ Way.

See also: Memorandum Opinion of the Attorney General’s Office of Legal Counsel: Whether Proposals by Illinois and New York to Use  the Internet and Out-of-State Transaction Processors to Sell Lottery Tickets to In-State Adults Violate the Wire Act

See also: Letter from Attorney General’s Office of Legislative Affairs to Senators Jon Kyl and Harry Reid (please note, this is a large file– 4.3 Mb)

 

Nevada begins accepting applications for interactive gaming licenses

Nevada’s Gaming Control Board gave official Notice on November 22 that it is now accepting license applications for interactive gaming.

According to the Notice, “Due to an increasing level of interest, applications for [license] approvals may be submitted to the Gaming Control Board prior to the passage of said regulations.”

Applications are available on the Gaming Control Board website for licenses a) to manufacture interactive gaming products, b) to operate interactive gaming, c) to operate as an interactive gaming service provider, d) to operate as any service provider seeking to share in the revenue from games.

Chairman Lipparelli says applications “should be treated in the same fashion as for any nonrestricted gaming license.”

States’ Rights and Internet Gambling: American policy will avoid European problems

European Parliament has approved a non-legislative resolution that is supposed to help alleviate the problem of fragmented markets for internet gambling across the EU.

The problem is that European nations have been enacting their own unique laws for internet gambling without regarding the intentions of other European nations. For example, although some nations feel a free market approach to licensing is the best approach, others feel the only desirable approach to a socially risky activity such as gambling is strict market control by a government monopoly. So a situation that arises is that a nation legalizes internet poker through its national lottery operator, but customers choose to play with a foreign company instead, thereby frustrating national policy.

The solution Parliament offers is a weak one, because ultimately Parliament is powerless to enact a law that would uniformly regulate internet gambling across the entire EU. The most Parliament can do is urge the individual nations that they must cooperate better with one another.

Meanwhile the United States is on course to avoid similar problems because its policies would prohibit operators from serving customers who are located in states where internet gambling remains illegal.

For a more thorough comparison of the American approach to the European approach, please see the following article I wrote last week for my good friends at Casino City: States’ Rights and Fragmented Internet Gambling Markets

The following End Notes accompany the Casino City article

On October 6, 2011, European Parliament’s Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer protection approved “Report on Online Gambling in the Internal Market” (2011/2084(INI)) by a vote of 30-1, with 3 abstentions. Authored by Jürgen Creutzmann (ALDE, DE), the report contains a non-legislative resolution calling for stronger cooperation among European Member States. The report awaits a vote from the entire European Parliament, which is anticipated sometime in November.

The two policy proposals pending in the 108th U.S. Congress are H.R. 1174 – The Internet Gambling Regulation, Consumer Protection, and Enforcement Act; and  H.R. 2366 – The Internet Gambling Prohibition, Poker, Consumer Protection, and Strengthening UIGEA Act of 2011.” Both bills are incubating in subcommittees of the U.S. House of Representatives. Rumors speculate that the bills may also be on the radar of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (the “supercommittee”).

Report from Nevada’s Public Workshop on Draft I-gaming Regs

Nevada’s Gaming Control Board held a public workshop Monday, Sept. 26 to discuss the Gaming Commission’s draft regulations for interactive gaming and the public comments they generated.

A report from journalist Howard Stutz is available via Las Vegas Review Journal: Talks on Internet poker regulations downright peaceful.

According to the report, the public comment submissions concerned little more than “minor cleanup language revisions and changes.”

The report also says Gaming Control Board Chairman Mark Lipparelli expects to have a revised draft of the regulations available in two weeks, and that Lipparelli indicated: “the planned timetable for the regulations would be for additional public hearings at the control board’s and Nevada Gaming Commission’s November meetings, followed by adoption votes in December.”

For the Bettor Good was not present at the meeting and cannot vouch for the accuracy of the Review Journal‘s report.

Drafts of interactive gaming regulations published in Nevada (Regulation 5A, pursuant to AB 258)

In 2001, by a unanimous vote in its Senate and a nearly unanimous vote in its Assembly, the State legislature of Nevada enacted a law giving the Nevada Gaming Commission power to adopt regulations for the licensing of “interactive gaming.” (2001 Statutes of Nevada, Page 3075 (Chapter 593, AB 466))

Although the 2001 statute stated that the Gaming Commission may adopt regulations, it forbid the Commission from doing so until it could determine that interactive gaming can be operated in compliance with federal law. Ten years after enactment, the Gaming Commission still had not begun the process of adopting regulations.

Then in the spring of 2011 Nevada’s lawmakers presented an amendment ordering the Gaming Commission to proceed with adopting regulations anyway. Once again the bill passed swiftly through the legislature with nearly unanimous approval. (2011 Statutes of Nevada, Page 1668 (Chapter 302, AB 258)).

The 2011 enabling statute prevents “interstate” interactive gaming licenses from becoming effective until either a) U.S. Congress enacts a law legalizing licensed games or b) “The United States Department of Justice notifies the Board or Commission in writing that it is permissible under federal law to operate the specific interactive gaming for which the license was granted.”

The 2011 enabling statute authorizes interactive gaming on an “intrastate” basis only. It also envisions that interactive gaming licenses should be obtainable only by “resort hotels” which already hold a nonrestricted license to operate gaming in Nevada.

On August 1 the Commission published a draft of proposed regulations to license and regulate interactive gaming. See Regulation 5A. (And also Regulation 3.100, Regulation 4.030, Regulation 8.130, and Regulation 14).

Although the legislature’s enabling statute defines “interactive gaming” broadly, the Gaming Commission proposes to license and regulate only poker on the internet.

See Also: Global Betting & Gaming Consultants: Nevada Favors Resorts… (Sept. 19, 2011)