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Where’s the Payoff in Gambling?

Written by Phyllis Schlafly

For those who promote legalized gambling as a means of economic development or revitalization, or as a painless way to pay for public schools, the recent news from Atlantic City, NJ, is sobering.

Dominated by its famous Boardwalk, the beach resort is familiar to Americans from the popular game of Monopoly, the Miss America pageant, and the Democratic Convention that nominated Lyndon B. Johnson for president. Almost forty years ago, when casino gambling was prohibited by every state except Nevada, New Jersey voters succumbed to a slick campaign that promised to remake the fading resort into Las Vegas East.

For awhile it seemed to work, as people from all over the northeast rode buses to Atlantic City to sit for hours in front of mesmerizing slot machines. But casino revenues have fallen steadily to where they were 25 years ago, and this year four of Atlantic City’s 11 casinos closed their doors, with a fifth expected to follow soon.

The closed casinos have eliminated 8,000 jobs in a city whose unemployment rate was already twice the national average, and the assessed value of the unoccupied properties will have to be sharply reduced. And no property was bigger or fell harder than the gargantuan Revel Casino Hotel, which was custom designed for high-rollers who never showed up.

What can be done with a 57-story, hermetically sealed glass building with 1,400 hotel rooms and 10 swimming pools occupying 20 acres on the Boardwalk? When it filed for bankruptcy a second time last month, the owners declared the value of the property was worth less than 20% of what it cost, telling the bankruptcy judge that the casino is “a melting ice cube.”

The $2.4 billion it cost to construct that now-useless “glass elephant” was greater than the taxes New Jersey collected from all the other casinos in the past eight years. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie had the chance to pull the plug on the project four years ago, but instead he doubled down, committing $261 million of state funds to see it through to completion.

Atlantic City parallels what happened in Alton, Illinois, where my husband and I lived for 44 years raising our six children. A riverboat casino was touted as the new “services” economy to replace the manufacturing plants that once supported over 10,000 families there.

After the politically connected original investors cashed in their chips a decade ago, Alton’s casino steadily declined to about half of its original revenue. Along the way, a local family-owned business was devastated when a trusted employee embezzled over $100,000 to support her gambling losses “on the boat,” as people still say although the so-called boat never leaves the dock anymore.

While Christie was bailing out the soon-to-collapse Revel Casino, he also committed New Jersey to enter the untested field of internet gambling, which enables people to lose their life’s savings in one fit of depression, without even leaving their office or home. Internet betting preys on the compulsive gambler because it invites him to feed his habit in secret, without criticism by family or friends.

Gambling over the internet was deemed illegal based on a 1961 law called the Wire Act. As recently as 2007, the FBI was warning Americans that it is against the law to gamble over the internet, and the operators of online virtual casinos were prosecuted.

But in another example of the Obama Administration changing a law without congressional approval, its Department of Justice surprisingly announced just before Christmas 2011 that many forms of internet gambling are legal after all. Obama’s DOJ declared that the Wire Act prohibited sports betting, but implied that other forms of gambling (such as online poker) may not be considered illegal under the Wire Act.

At that time – nearly three years ago – the size of online gambling was estimated to be already immense, between $6 billion to $100 billion a year. Chris Christie obviously salivated at the prospect of collecting a share of that money for New Jersey, projecting $180 million the first year — almost as much as the state now takes in from casinos.

But the state’s actual revenue from internet gambling this year was only a little over $9 million, which is 95 percent less than Christie expected. Meanwhile, more conservative states (such as Texas) have held the line against gambling expansions.

The lesson of New Jersey should not be lost on Republicans who are vetting potential presidential candidates for 2016. Some of the Republican “donor class” may be considering Chris Christie, who is not a conservative, as someone who could control the federal budget after eight years of Obama’s deficit spending.

Like the liberal Republicans who are currently running for governor of two other blue states, California and Illinois, Christie offers himself as a non-ideological pragmatist who can manage the state’s finances. The catastrophe of Christie’s bad bet on gambling, both virtual and bricks-and-mortar, proves yet again that there simply is no such thing as a viable “social liberal, fiscal conservative.”




The Push to Expand Gambling Continues

From ILCAAAP

The horse racing industry wants slots at racetracks.   However, in states like Maryland that have slot machines at racetrack casinos, crowds overshadow the small number of racing fans. Read more.

Slots at racetracks do not help horse racing

In Delaware, the Legislature passed a $10 million bailout for the racetrack casinos in July.  Delaware Park racetrack casino cut purses in the middle of the racing season because of the decline in subsidies from slots and cut racing days last year.  Read more.

Harrah’s is closing two casinos in Atlantic City and Tunica.  In Illinois Harrah’s Metropolis riverboat wants to move the casino into a convention center and build a mote to technically be on water!  Local officials support the move because almost half of their revenue comes from the casino! Read more.

Illinois casinos want to limit the number of video gambling parlors, which they say is cutting into their profit.  The Illinois Casino Gaming Association is supporting SB3144, which was amended to limit the parlors, but would also double the number of video gambling machines at truck stops in Illinois.  Read more.

Currently, truck stops are among the most profitable video gambling establishments in the State.  These locations are open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, where local residents can gamble all night on 5 gambling machines.  Truck stops accounted for 10 of the top 20 establishments with the most video gambling losses in June, 2014. (View chart)

Illinois Legislators should look at what is happening in Atlantic City say NO MORE GAMBLING.  Four casinos will close and almost 10,000 casino workers will lose their jobs.    Read more.

A recent editorial in the Times Leader sums up the problem of gambling, “Legalized gambling is ultimately a supplement, not a panacea.  The money raised from it is not reliable enough to build long-term annual budgets.  Politicians need to stop looking at it as a pot of gold, and start seeing it for what it is:  A roll of the dice.”

Why Opening a Casino Is a Terrible Idea

A 2010 Philadelphia Federal Reserve survey of casinos and economic development found that 80 percent of Detroit casino customers came from the Detroit metropolitan area and 84 percent of Illinois riverboat-casino gamblers were state residents.

There is little evidence that legalized gambling will do anything for a state’s economic development, other than provide a regressive non-tax form of revenue. Read more.

A Good Way to Wreck a Local Economy: Build Casinos Read.

TAKE ACTION

  1. Attend Candidate Forums and ask Candidates for Legislature and Governor about their position on gambling.  Ask them to take a position for NO MORE GAMBLING.
  2. The fall Legislative Veto Session will be held AFTER the November election.  The dates are November 19 – 21 and December 2-4.  Ask your current State Senator and State Representative to OPPOSE SB 3144 that doubles the number of video gambling machines at truck stops.
  3. Share this Alert with your faith community and ask them to PRAY.



A Good Way to Wreck a Local Economy: Build Casinos

Written by David Frum

Baltimore is a troubled city, as you know from The Wire. Like many troubled cities, Baltimore has turned to casino gambling as its solution. On August 26, a new Caesar’s casino will open on the site of an old chemical factory, a little more than 2 miles from the famous Inner Harbor and Camden Yards baseball stadium. Yet there’s already reason to expect the casino to disappoint everyone involved: the city looking for tax revenues, the workers hoping for jobs, the investors expecting hefty returns.

Outside of Las Vegas—now home to only 20 percent of the nation’s casino industry—casino gambling has evolved into a downscale business. Affluent and educated people visit casinos less often than poorer people do for the same reasons that they smoke less and drink less and weigh less.

Unfortunately for the casino industry’s growth hopes, downscale America has less money to spend today than it did before 2007. Nor is downscale America sharing much in the post-2009 recovery. From a news report on the troubles of a recently opened Ohio casino:

Ameet Patel, general manager of the property, says the softness in casino revenue that he and other operators have seen has been driven by a key demographic: women older than 50 who used to bet $50 to $75 per visit. The weak recovery has squeezed their gambling budgets, and their trips to casinos are fewer, he says.

What’s true in Ohio applies nationwide. Casino revenues had still not recovered their 2007 peaks as of the spring of 2014, when again they went into reverse in most jurisdictions. Moody’s now projects that casino revenues will drop through the rest of 2014 and all of 2015, slicing industry earnings by as much as 7.5 percent.

Weaker earnings are being divided among ever multiplying numbers of casinos. Baltimore’s casino will be the fourth to open in Maryland, with a fifth soon to rise down the Potomac from Washington, DC. Maryland’s casinos compete with a clutch of new casinos in Philadelphia and Delaware.

Why so much building? Cities are authorizing more casinos for exactly the same reason that the existing casinos are losing business: the weak national economy. Casinos promise a new and easy flow of revenues to hard pressed local governments.

The promise however comes increasingly hedged with fine print.

The casino market is nearing saturation, if it is not already saturated. Two casinos have closed in Mississippi this year. Four have closed or will soon close in Atlantic City, including the glitziest hotel on the boardwalk, Revel.

Casinos that do stay in business yield less to their towns and states. Revenues from Maryland’s first casino, in Perryville, at the northern tip of Chesapeake Bay, have already dropped 30 percent from their peak in 2008, and are expected to decline even more rapidly in future as competitors proliferate.

Yet the truly bad news about casinos is not found in the tax receipts. It’s found in the casinos’ economic and social impact on the towns that welcome them.

Until the late 1970s, no state except Nevada permitted casino gambling. Then Atlantic City persuaded its state legislature to allow casinos, in hope of reviving the prosperity of the battered resort town. Hotels sprung up along the seafront. Thousands of people were hired. And the rest of Atlantic City … saw no benefits at all. All these years later, it still has desperate trouble sustaining even a single grocery store.

No one should look to casinos to revive cities, “because that’s not what casinos do.” So explained the project manager for a new Wynn casino rising near Philadelphia. He’s right, but it has taken a surprisingly long time for city governments to acknowledge a fact that was well understood by the 19th-century Americans who suppressed gambling in the decades after the Civil War.

The impact of casinos on neighboring property values is “unambiguously negative,” according to the economists at the National Association of Realtors. Casinos don’t encourage non-gaming businesses to open nearby, because the people who most often visit casinos do not wander out to visit other shops and businesses. A casino is not like a movie theater or a sports stadium, offering a time-limited amusement. It is designed to be an all-absorbing environment that does not release its customers until they have exhausted their money.

The Institute for American Values has gathered the best evidence on the social consequences of casinos. That evidence should worry any responsible city government.

People who live close to a casino are twice as likely to become problem gamblers as people who live more than 10 miles away. As casinos have become more prevalent, so has problem gambling: in some states, the evidence suggests a tripling or even quadrupling of the number of problem gamblers.

While the gaming industry argues that the total number of problem gamblers remains small, that small minority is crucial to the industry’s profits: One Canadian study found that the 75 percent of casino customers who gamble most casually provide only 4 percent of casino revenues. A range of studies reviewed by IAV estimated that between 40 to 60 percent of casino revenues are earned from problem gamblers. And as Amy Zietlow observed in an important study commissioned by IAV, those problem gamblers increasingly are drawn from the ranks of the vulnerable elderly. Half of casino visitors are over age 50, but casinos market themselves to the over 70 and even over 80 market, to whom gambling offers an escape from boredom and loneliness into a hypnotic zone of rapid-fire electronic stimuli.

As casino expansion reaches its limits, the towns and cities that turned to gambling to escape their problems may discover that they have accepted a sucker’s bet: local economies that look worse than ever, local residents tempted into new forms of self-destructive behavior, and a dwindling flow of cash to show for it all.


This article was originally published in the Atlantic.




STOP Chicago’s Push for World’s Largest Casino

Please take a few minutes today to act on this important issue!

With 3.5 weeks to go before the Illinois General Assembly adjourns for the summer, state lawmakers are considering hundreds of bills.  Among the issues up for debate is the perennial proposal for gambling expansion. 

SB 1739, the most troubling gambling bill has two amendments, one of which they are hoping will pass: 

Amendment 3:  Chicago Casino–A private manager would be hired to run the Chicago casino on behalf of the state.  The city of Chicago would select the site and acquire land by eminent domain or by condemnation, and $900 million would be used for the acquisition, development, construction, and land for the mega-casino. The casino would have between 4,000-10,000 gambling positions. Existing casinos have 1,200 positions. This could make Chicago home to the largest casino in the world!

Amendment 4:  Land-based casinos authorized in Chicago, Vermillion County, Lake County, Winnebago County, and in one of the townships in Cook County. In this amendment, the Chicago casino would have 4,000 to 6,000 gambling positions. Furthermore, the Gaming Board would be unable to suspend, revoke, or restrict the Chicago casino license.

Electronic gambling at 5 racetracks 7 days a week, with 600 gambling positions for racetracks in Cook County, 450 gambling positions for tracks in Will County, and 175 positions for the Rock Island County track (And positions will increase to 450 when live racing is conducted). Fairmount Racetrack is excluded from having slots. Slot machines that simulate table games would be legalized at racetracks. 

TAKE ACTION: Click HERE to contact your state senator and tell them that we do not need more gambling in Illinois. 

–> Your voice is vital if we hope to stop a Chicago casino and/or additional casinos from coming to the Land of Lincoln. <–

Background

The social costs to the community are enormous. Gambling can lead to debt, depression, foreclosure, bankruptcy, divorce and even suicide. Stories abound of gamblers leaving minor children unattended at casinos. Senior citizens and adolescents can be particularly susceptible to gambling addiction. It is difficult to measure the serious negative impact on children touched by gambling (directly or indirectly) who should instead be taught personal responsibility, financial accountability and moral values. 

The State of Illinois has a serious revenue shortfall which politicians think they can fix by expanding gambling, but in order for the State to profit, it needs to create thousands of losers. This is not good public policy.  With the potential to increase gambling addictions which lead to bankruptcy, divorce and even suicide, state lawmakers and the governor have done Illinois residents a great disservice. 

Click HERE to watch an IFI News Report on the problems of gambling expansion.

Click HERE for additional information on the harms of gambling. 

Click HERE for a report on gambling from the Republican Party of Texas.

Click HERE for an article on why South Carolina reversed it’s law promoting video slot machines.


Click HERE to support Illinois Family Institute.   Contributions to IFI are tax-deductible. If you would rather send a check, please make it payable to Illinois Family Institute, and mail it to us at: P.O. Box 88848 Carol Stream, Illinois  60188. 

We also accept credit card donations by phone at (708) 781-9328.




A Tax Payer Funded Casino in Chicago?

State lawmakers may take a big gamble on expanding gambling in Illinois, again.

State lawmakers and political pundits are trying to once again promote the idea of a Chicago casino.  State Representative Robert Rita (D-Blue Island) is sponsoring SB 1739, and has two separate amendments.   

The “Chicago-only” amendment, would create a Chicago-owned casino with up to 10,000 spots for gamblers, which would eclipse China’s 546,000 square foot Venetian Macao casino as the largest casino in the world.  The other amendment would add a total of five new casinos across the state and allow slot machines at horse tracks — creating “racinos.”

This issue has continued to struggle for approval over the years for a number of reasons, including concerns about corruption and political hiring.

Take ACTION: Click HERE to contact your state legislators to urge them to stop expanding predatory gambling in Illinois.  




Signs the U.S. Gambling Industry is Suffering

Bloomberg’s Brian Miller reports on the U.S. gambling industry on Bloomberg Television’s “Market Makers.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Lawmakers who continue to advocate to expand gambling fail to understand that it is an unstable source of revenue. Revenue is down at casinos in Illinois and Missouri. The St. Louis Business Journal article, Video gaming terminals, aging market drive down casino revenue, noted:

The target market is aging and slot machines don’t provide the same level of appeal to the younger generation, who grew up on technology and video games.

 




Illinois Senate Considering Truck Stop Casinos

State Senator Dave Syverson (R-Rockford) has sponsored SB 3144, a bill to double the number of video gambling machines at truck stops.  This would legalize up to 10 video slot machines at truck stops.  

SB 3144 was called for a vote last week, but fell 3 votes short of passing.  The bill has been put on “postpone consideration,” which means it can come up for another vote in the near future.

Take ACTION: Click HERE to contact your state senator to urge them to stop expanding predatory gambling in Illinois.  

  • SB 3144 opens the door for further expansion, with social clubs and bars also asking for more machines.  
     
  • The sponsor said they want out of state truckers to be able to gamble when they stop. Long-haul truck drivers need to sleep between runs.  Gamblers tend to lose track of time and gamble longer than they planned.  Truck drivers, who gamble for long hours and are sleep deprived pose a danger to other drivers traveling on the many Interstate highways through Illinois.
  • Gambling addicts drive like drunk drivers.  Doubling the number of machines at truck stops will increase the number of people who are gambling and will impact public safety.
  • Truck stops already have an advantage in that LOCAL people and truck drivers can gamble ALL NIGHT on the video gambling machines that operate non-stop, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Gamblers are losing millions of dollars in video gambling machines at truck stops in Illinois.  The sponsor predicted the State could get an additional $6 to $7 million a year in revenue which means that Illinois residents and truckers would have to LOSE $24 – $28 Million more a year!  The cost is too high.  




Gambling Action Alert

This week, State Representative Robert Rita (D-Blue Island) introduced two amendments to SB 1739 that would expand gambling in Illinois. 

SB 1739 Amendment 3Chicago Casino–A private manager would be hired to run the Chicago casino on behalf of the state.  The city of Chicago would select the site and acquire land by eminent domain or by condemnation, and $900 million would be used for the acquisition, development, construction, and land for the mega-casino. The casino would have between 4,000-10,000 gambling positions. Existing casinos have 1,200 positions.

Revenue for the city would be used for capital expenditures, public pensions, and/or educational purposes. Cook County and the south suburbs would receive part of the revenue for capital expenditures or public pensions, and part of the revenue is designated for grants to school districts and for capital construction. 

SB 1739 Amendment 4Land-based casinos authorized in the city of Chicago, Vermillion County, Lake County, Winnebago County, and in one of the townships in Cook County. The Chicago casino would have 4,000 to 6,000 gambling positions. The Gaming Board cannot suspend, revoke, or restrict a license for the Chicago casino.

Electronic gambling at 5 racetracks 7 days a week, with 600 gambling positions for racetracks in Cook County, 450 gambling positions for tracks in Will County, and 175 positions for the Rock Island County track (This will increase to 450 positions when live racing is conducted). Fairmount Racetrack is excluded from having slots. Slot machines that simulate table games would be legalized at racetracks. 

The Illinois Gaming Board is required to submit a report to the General Assembly regarding the feasibility of conducting electronic gambling at the state fairgrounds in Springfield.  

TAKE ACTION: Click HERE to contact your state representative and state senator and tell them that we do not need more gambling in Illinois.




Springfield Adds Even More Gambling

The Illinois House and Illinois Senate were in session just one day in January, yet they managed to pass a gambling expansion bill.  

The Senate amended an unemployment bill (SB 11) and transformed it into a gambling expansion bill on January 30th.   SB 11 extended Internet wagering on horse racing for three more years and expanded the number of Off Track Betting parlors for race tracks located in Cook County (6 additional parlors).   The Senate passed SB 11 before the governor gave his State of the State address, and the House passed the bill after the speech.  Governor Quinn signed the bill into law that same afternoon.  

Increased competition is making it more difficult for casinos to keep locals employed and pass along hefty payments to host states-which are the two biggest selling points for allowing gambling in the first place. However, this isn’t stopping Illinois and other states from trying to expand gambling.  Click to read the article.

With pension issues out of the way and the state in dire need of cash, gambling proponents are working to pass a massive gambling expansion bill this year.   The bill would also include a city owned casino for Chicago, land-based casinos in Rockford, Danville, Lake County, south suburbs of Chicago, and slot machines in Chicago airports.   The Associated Press reported the bill would allow current and future casino license holders to apply for an online gambling license.  Click to read more.

I spoke with Rep. Rita, who said the Internet gambling language might have been in the Senate version of the bill (SB 1739), but he did not want Internet gambling included in the House version he is working on.  

State forecasters told Illinois lawmakers casino revenue has declined, and will probably continue to do so.  Click to read more.

Americans lost $119 billion gambling last year – more than any other countryClick to read more.

Please NOTE:  State Representative Robert Rita (D-Blue Island), the sponsor of the massive gambling expansion bill (SB 1739), is holding public hearings on his bill.   The next one is scheduled for Monday evening, February 17th, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at the Tinley Park Convention Center, 18451 Convention Center Drive.  This hearing is related to a casino in the South Suburbs.  If you live in the South Suburbs, plan to attend. Click for information on the Convention Center.

 




Video Slot Machines for Tinley Park?

Please take a few minutes today to act on this important issue!
 
According to a recent article in the Southtown Star newspaper, elected officials in the Village of Tinley Park are planning to pass an ordinance to allow video gambling machines within city limits. The vote may come as early as the next village board meeting on January 7, 2014.
 
The social costs to the community are enormous. Gambling can lead to debt, depression, foreclosure, suicide, bankruptcy and divorce. Stories abound of gamblers leaving minor children unattended at casinos, and senior citizens and adolescents can be particularly susceptible to gambling problems. It is difficult to calibrate the serious negative impact on children touched by gambling (directly or indirectly) who should instead be taught personal responsibility, financial accountability and moral values.
 
Further, gambling operations attract corruption, money laundering, loansharking and other criminal activities.  It is not good for Tinley Park, or any other community.
 
Take ACTION: Click HERE to email Mayor Edward Zabrocki and the Village Board of  Trustees to encourage them to vote down any proposal that would bring slot machines into this family-friendly community.  Then call the village officials listed below at (708) 444-5000.
 
Tinley Park Village Officials:

Mayor Edward Zabrocki 

Trustee David G. Seaman

Trustee Gregory J. Hannon

Trustee Brian S. Maher

Trustee Thomas J. Staunton Jr.

Trustee Patricia A. Leoni  

Trustee T.J. Grady

Background

In 2009, the Illinois General Assembly passed and Governor Quinn signed into law, a bill allowing liquor-serving establishments to have up to 5 video gambling machines. The law allows for cities and counties to pass ordinances banning these. Over 60 communities and counties have passed bans, thereby preventing local family restaurants, corner taverns, VFW’s and bowling alleys from turning into mini-casinos. Video gambling is rightly called the “crack cocaine” of gambling. There’s no skill required, and studies have found that it takes approximately one year to become severely addicted, versus 4 years of other forms of gambling. 

The State of Illinois has a serious revenue shortfall which politicians think they can fix by expanding gambling, but in order for the State to profit, it needs to create thousands of losers. This is not good public policy.  With the potential to increase gambling addictions which lead to bankruptcy, divorce and even suicide, state lawmakers and the governor have done Illinois residents a great disservice.

Click HERE for additional information on the harms of gambling. 




Gambling Action Alert

From Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction Problems

Racetrack owners and horsemen may have reached a deal on Advance Deposit Wagering (Internet betting on horse racing).  This form of wagering will expire on January 31, 2014, without legislative action.   The “deal” extends Internet gambling for three more years, adds 6 more Off Track Betting parlors for racetracks located in Cook County, and adds a tax on winnings to provide more funding for the Illinois Racing Board.  

Gambling interests are still pushing for slots at the tracks with the same arguments that they cannot compete with other states that have racetrack casinos. 

Look what happened in New Jersey when a new owner, who was “a lifelong harness racing fan”, turned things around at the track.  This year, despite the fact the Meadowlands does not have slot machines and must compete for the best horses with tracks that do have slots that augment purses, the new owner and his team managed to grow wagering significantly essentially by working hard, thinking differently and making customer service a priority. 

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration released a study this week that a Chicago casino anchoring redevelopment at the former Michael Reese Hospital site would be more economically viable for the city than a presidential library for Barack Obama or a cluster of convention hotels.

Gambling interests and legislators will try to pass a massive expansion bill (SB 1739) as a way to increase revenue for the State and the City of Chicago.  Gambling is an unstable source of revenue that has not and cannot solve the financial problems.  

Stricter Rules needed for Video Gambling 

The Illinois Video Gaming Board will create a blacklist and seek stricter licensing rules.  The Chicago Tribune reported Chairman Jaffe said potential loopholes could “essentially be opening the door to organized crime,” undermining what is supposed to be a tightly regulated industry.

Jaffe publicly complained at the meeting that the gaming board has had trouble getting officials in some jurisdictions to aggressively prosecute gambling offenses…he said he wants lawmakers to give the gaming board the latitude to bring cases to different prosecutors or the attorney general.

TAKE ACTION

Contact your state legislators and Governor Quinn and ask them to oppose ALL gambling bills. CLICK HERE




IFI Submits Testimony Opposing 24-Hour Gambling

On Thursday morning, IFI Board Member and long-time pro-family leader Karen Hayes testified before the Illinois Gaming Board in opposition to a proposal that would allow 24-hour, non-stop gambling 7 days a week at casinos in Illinois.  This is a copy of  her testimony: 

Chairman and members of the Illinois Gaming Board,

My name is Karen Hayes, and I’m here today on behalf of the Illinois Family Institute to strongly urge you to again reject any attempt to embrace round-the-clock legalized casino gambling.

As our public gatekeeper of legalized gambling in Illinois, we appeal to you to firmly oppose removing the very minimal gambling hour limits currently in place.  Keeping a definitive end to the day of casino gamblers avoids troubling non-stop never-ending round-the-clock access, temptation and exploitation of the most vulnerable gamblers which include senior citizens, women, and young adults. There would be nothing to stop problem gamblers from literally gambling for days.  

To be clear, as a statewide non-profit and non-partisan pro-family ministry, firm reliance on time-tested Judeo-Christian principles is the foundation of what we support and advocate as good public policy.   This includes Jesus’ admonition that we can’t serve both God and money, and the Apostle Paul’s warning that the “…the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.”    Today those griefs include the harmful consequences to Illinois families.  I know a former addicted gambler whose young family was directly threatened as a result of his out-of-control gambling.   The threat wasn’t theoretical, it wasn’t speculative, it wasn’t included in any study, and there were no public hearings about it — but it happened right here in Illinois.

Gambling, which was once widely accepted as vice and plainly understood to be harmful to individuals, families, and local communities, has already been expanded beyond anyone’s imagination in just a few years. Unfettered access to legalized casino gambling despite the increased harm is a bad bet for Illinois, and should continue to be roundly rejected. 

It’s easy to foresee the causes and effects of non-stop gambling:  

Non-stop round-the-clock access to legalized casino gambling will promote more gambling addiction;

Which will cause more harm to Illinois individuals and families;

Which will result in increased social costs, at a rate of $3 for every $1 gambled;

Which will lead to more “revenue enhancements”/taxes;

Which will put an even heavier burden on Illinois families;

Which will increase desperation and lead to more non-stop round-the-clock gambling.

In other words, this bad bet fosters more bad bets.  Any hope of an increase to the so-called “entertainment value” of non-stop round-the-clock legalized gambling just isn’t worth the non-stop round-the-clock price we will all share.

If I may add another timely concern I think for all Illinois citizens.  Just two months ago, Pew Research Center announced findings of economists Douglas M. Walker and Peter T. Calcagno; and the bottom line was reported as this:

“When casinos come to town, an increase in public corruption is likely to follow.”  Furthermore, “Mississippi led the list (of most corrupt states) … followed by Louisiana, Illinois and South Dakota.  At the same time, none of the five states with the lowest corruption rates had legalized casino gambling during the study period.”  

With due respect, it’s hard to fathom any serious regulation if all time constraints are thrown out. This proposal only increases the favored odds of profiteers and decreases the odds of their necessary losers, and it will be even more harmful to Illinois families.  In fact, with such minimal, lenient hour restrictions currently in place, this Gaming Board may do well to seriously consider rolling them back instead.

Thank you for considering our concerns.


Help us protect marriage & family!
Click HERE to support IFI’s work in the public square. 




New Proposal for Non-Stop Casino Hours

From Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction Problems

Illinois casinos have petitioned the Gaming Board to allow 24-hour, non-stop gambling 7 days a week.  The Illinois Gaming Board turned down 24 hour gambling at casinos three times before, because of all the opposition they received from many of you. 

However, the General Assembly and governor approved 24 hour video gambling at truck stops.  Now the casinos want to stay open 365 days a year with round the clock gambling.  Some people will gamble longer than 24 hours straight.  We have heard of people gambling at casinos 36 to 72 hours without stopping. 

Read this article, Policing gamblers who cannot police themselves,about a 33 man who was on the self-exclusion list in Philadelphia.  He was escorted out of the casino after he had been there for 70 hours!  Another time he was picked up during a two-day bender at the casino only after his wife called the casino to report him.  Another time the casino turned him away 91 hours later!  

Some gamblers will only go home when the casinos close.  There are over 10,000 people on the self-exclusion list at Illinois casinos!  If the casinos are allowed to have non-stop, around the clock gambling, some will gamble much longer than 24 hours! 

The Gaming Board rejected 24 hour gambling three other times because of wide spread opposition from the public.  

The public is invited to speak at the hearing, which will be held in Chicago on Thursday, September 19, at 10:00 p.m.  The hearing will be held at 160 N. LaSalle in the 5th floor Auditorium. 

To get on the agenda to speak, you must submit a written request to Board Secretary Monica Biddings. All requests must be received by September 12, 2013.   Those addressing the Board will be given 5 minutes to express their views.  Speakers needing more than 5 minutes should indicate that in their request and state their basis.  The Board also asks that those speaking state in their request if they are for or against 24 hour gambling at riverboat casinos. 

If you cannot attend the hearing in Chicago, please write a letter to the Illinois Gaming Board.  State that you are against 24 hour gambling at riverboat casinos.

TAKE ACTION: Click HERE to send a message to the Illinois Gaming Board secretary stating your opposition to 24 hour casino gambling.




Keep Calling the Governor to VETO Gambling Bills

The Governor has not taken action on the following gambling expansion bills.  Keep calling the Governor’s office at (800) 642-3112 and ask that he VETO these bills:  

House Bill 996 is an expansion of charitable gambling that also allows video gambling machines in the same facility, turning the events into full casinos.  Gambling companies, not charities, will rake in most of the money.   The Department of Revenue does not have enough investigators to adequately monitor and enforce this law.   

House Bill 1140 legalizes electronic raffle machines in bars, which would be under local control, not regulated by the Illinois Gaming Board, and could be ripe for corruption.   

House Bill 1570 expands video gambling in restaurants that have Off Track Betting Parlors.  

House Bill 2520 expands gambling and increases the danger of drinking and driving by legalizing Poker Runs as charitable gambling.  Participants travel-usually on motorcycles–to 5 or locations-usually bars-where they draw a playing card to assemble a poker hand.   

Senate Bill 2234 allows electronic vouchers to be used in video gambling machines instead of cash.  Vouchers make it easier and faster for people to lose money and gamble away winnings.  

In January, the Illinois Gaming Board denied licenses to social clubs.  Rather than follow the law, Legislators passed Senate Bill 2371 to legalize video gambling in thousands of private clubs, both for profit and non-profit.   

Take ACTION:  Click HERE to send a message to Governor Quinn asking him to veto the above gambling bills.  You can also call his office at (800) 642-3112.

Background
Governor Quinn has signed SB 1884 to legalize Advanced Deposit Wagering, SB 1738 to expand video gambling, and SB 70 to exempt veterans and retail liquor establishments closer than 100 feet from a church or school if the original liquor license was at the location first.    

The massive gambling expansion bill, SB 1739 was not voted on in the House, but could be called for a vote during the fall Veto Session, which is scheduled for October 22-24 and November 5-7.  This article shows the back room negotiations that go on every time there is a gambling bill.  The last line is very telling–Handing Rita this hot potato at the last minute was probably a sign from someone that powerful people didn’t want the measure to pass.  




Gambling Action Alert

Backroom deals are being cut on a massive gambling expansion bill (SB 1739). This 500+ page bill adds 5 new casinos, authorizes video slot machines at existing racetracks (creating 6 new racinos) and would make Illinois one of the first states to legalize gambling from home on the Internet.  Illinois already has 10 casinos, 6 horse race tracks, video slot machines and Lottery terminals in our local neighborhoods.

Take ACTION:  Click HERE to send your lawmakers an email or a fax to tell them “NO MORE GAMBLING.”  This is your chance to speak up before it’s too late and before it’s rammed through the legislature in back room deals!  

Other Gambling News:  

As part of their “negotiations”, SB 1884 was amended to grant sanctions for companies that conducted illegal Internet wagering on horse racing after the Advance Deposit Wagering pilot program ended on December 31, 2012.

Xpressbet and TwinSpires, two of the four companies licensed to conduct Advanced Deposit Wagering, continued to place bets on horses in January, and the Racing Board reported their actions to the Attorney General’s office.   SB 1884, Amendment 1 allows these companies that conducted illegal gambling to keep their licenses and distribute winnings, with no legal action taken, provided they pay taxes.  Gambling companies should follow the law, not flaunt the law and change it to correct past illegal activity.  Click HERE to read the full article in the Springfield State Journal-Register 

A group of Chicago area pastors, opposed to the massive gambling expansion bill, sent a letter to Attorney General Lisa Madigan.  The letter calls gambling an “unstable source of revenue” and questions oversight of a Chicago casino.   Click HERE to read the full article in the Springfield State Journal-Register 

Area chambers of commerce located in or near towns that have casinos have joined forces to fight gambling expansion.  Chamber leaders from Aurora, Elgin, Des Plaines, Joliet and Naperville issued a joint letter opposing SB 1739.  Click HERE to read the full article in the Naperville Sun

Determining how much casinos should pay in taxes is the “logjam” that’s stalling the gambling bill in the House, according to various press reports.   Click HERE to read the full article in the Springfield State Journal-Register   SB 1739 lowers the tax rate, with separate taxes for table games and slot machines.  The higher the revenue generated, the lower the taxes.  Currently all gambling revenue at casinos is taxed at the same rate, with higher taxes for higher revenue generated. 

Take a moment to read Professor John Kindt’s op-ed on the impact of giveaways to Big Gambling. Click HERE to read Professor Kindt’s op-ed in the Illinois Times