SESSION OF
2000
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
SENATE BILL NO. 667
As Amended by Senate Committee on
Federal and State
Affairs
Brief
(1)
The bill would authorize the Kansas
Lottery to conduct games on "electronic gaming machines" at
qualified parimutuel racetracks. The bill would earmark all revenue
from those games and establish an oversight framework involving
both the State Lottery and the Racing and Gaming Commission. Major
provisions of the bill include the following.
- The bill would require the
executive director of the Lottery to enter into contracts with
qualified parimutuel licensees for the operation and management of
electronic gaming machines at racetracks.
- The contracts could not limit the
days or hours of operation or the number of the gaming
machines.
- The contracts would be for the
term of the existence of the Lottery and would renew automatically
with each extension of the Lottery.
- The gaming machines could not
include any casino table games.
- Progressive games would be
permitted.
- Voters in the county in which the
racetracks are located would have to approve the question of
allowing electronic gaming machines.
-
- The question could be placed on
the ballot by the County Commission or as a result of a petition
signed by at least 10 percent of the voters who voted for Secretary
of State at the last election for that office.
- Oversight and regulation of the
electronic gaming operations would be provided by both the Lottery
and Racing and Gaming Commission.
- The Lottery and Racing and Gaming
Commission would be authorized to examine the books, papers, and
other documents, and inspect machines and facilities to determine
compliance with the act.
- Any person providing electronic
gaming equipment or services would have to be licensed by the
Racing and Gaming Commission.
- The Racing and Gaming Commission
would have to require an annual audit of each operator contracting
with the Kansas Lottery. The audit would have to be conducted by a
licensed accounting firm approved by the Commission at the expense
of the operator.
- Three years after electronic
gaming machines begin operating at each track the Racing Commission
would be required to prepare an economic impact report for the
Legislature. That report would have to:
- detail the costs and benefits of
lottery gaming machine operations;
- include information regarding the
use or distribution of net and gross machine income;
- provide information regarding
comparable electronic gaming machine operations in nearby states;
and
- present competitive market
analyses, tax benefits, payroll, capital investment, and other
matters as required by the Commission.
The cost of the report would be
financed from the Electronic Gaming Machine Operation and
Regulatory Fund.
- The Lottery would hold the license
for all software programs utilized for the games. The track
owner/manager would be the sublicensee.
- The Lottery would approve the type
of gaming machines used. The Racing and Gaming Commission would be
required to issue a certificate of authority for each machine
before it could be used.
- Electronic gaming machines would
have to pay out an average of at least 87 percent of the amount
wagered, be linked to a central communication system, and be
on-line and in constant communication with a computer located in an
office at the racetrack.
- Tracks where gaming machines are
located would have to meet statutory requirements for live
racing.
- Net machine income (wagers minus
winnings) would be distributed as follows:
- 1 percent for the Lottery and
Racing Commission's regulatory expenses;
- ½ percent to the State
Gaming Revenues Fund (the fund to which Lottery and Parimutuel
revenue are currently credited);
- 1½ percent to the county in
which the games are conducted;
- 3½ percent, or a minimum of
$1.6 million per year, for live horse racing purse supplements
allocated to quarterhorse and thoroughbred accounts (amounts
allocated to each of the accounts would be based on the average of
the preceding three years' live race starters in the
state);
- 3½ percent for purse
supplements for live dog racing;
- 20 percent to improve access for
Kansans to learning and information (that amount is to be allocated
via appropriation to Regents Universities, Washburn University,
community colleges, local libraries, and school districts);
and
- the balance to the track
owner/managers.
- The bill would create a
competitive grant program administered by the Department of Social
and Rehabilitation Services for pathological gamblers (the same
provision was in HB
2013 as passed by the Senate).
- Electronic gaming machine games
would be exempt from sales tax.
- No taxes, fees, charges,
transfers, or distributions could be made or levied against net
machine income, except as provided by the act.
- County home rule power would be
limited regarding electronic gaming devices.
- Statutory authority for the Kansas
Lottery would be extended until July 1, 2007.
Background
The bill was requested for
introduction by Senator Vidricksen. Major proponents of the bill
are the licensed parimutuel track owner/managers with facilities in
Kansas City, Wichita, and Frontenac. At the hearing before the
Senate Committee on Federal and State Affairs, testimony in favor
of the bill was presented by representatives of: Kansas Racing,
L.L.C.; Kansas Greyhound Association; Kansas Thoroughbred
Association; and the Kansas National Education Association. The
Kansas Chamber of Commerce and Industry presented testimony in
support of allowing parimutuel facilities to operate electronic
games of chance, but expressed concern about the potential impact
on revenue going to the State Gaming Revenues Fund. Written
testimony in favor of the bill was presented by the Kansas
AFL-CIO.
Opposition to the bill was
presented at the Senate Committee hearing by representatives of:
the American Legion, Stand Up for Kansas' Kansas Clubs and
Associates; Thoroughbred Owners for Improved Racing; Kansas Bowling
Proprietors Association; and Kansans for PariMutual
Racing.
The major proponents of the bill
presented proposed amendments to the Senate Committee. Those
amendments were adopted by the Committee and include the
following:
- Excluding table games and video
lottery machines (as defined in existing law) from the definition
of electronic gaming machines, thereby preventing those games from
being conducted under the bill;
- A definition of "progressive
game" allowed under the bill;
- Eliminating the requirement that
the central computer for the electronic gaming machines be located
in a Lottery Commission office at the track;
- Increasing the number of live dog
races by one race per day, from 12 to 13, and increasing from 52 to
60 the number of days of live horse racing required at those tracks
where electronic gaming machines are located;
- Specifying the minimum number of
live thoroughbred and quarterhorse races required per
day;
- Earmarking 20 percent of moneys
in the new Live Horse Racing Purse Supplement Fund for transfer to
the existing Horse Breeding Development Fund and requiring that the
balance in the new fund be expended upon recommendation of the
thoroughbred and quarterhorse breed organizations with the approval
of the Racing and Gaming Commission;
- Requiring transfer to the State
Gaming Revenue Fund of amounts in excess of those required to cover
Lottery and Racing Commission regulatory costs;
- Eliminating the allocation of
revenue to problem gambler programs in lieu of allocating ½
percent of net revenue to the State Gaming Revenues
Fund;
- Authorizing, but not requiring,
use of moneys in the State Gaming Revenues Fund for the problem
gambling grant fund;
- Including provisions from HB 2013
regarding the problem gambling grant program;
- Requiring fingerprinting of
owners, officers, and employees of applicants for licensure as
electronic gaming machine equipment or services
providers;
- Adding conviction of two or more
acts of violence in the last five years as grounds for denial of an
electronic gaming machine equipment or services license;
and
- Making revocation, suspension, or
denial of an occupation or gaming license grounds for denial of a
license to be an electronic gaming machine equipment or services
provider.
In addition, the Committee amended
the bill to require an annual audit of the electronic gaming
machine operations of each track contracting with the Kansas
Lottery and an economic impact report for each track where
electronic games are operated after the games have been in
operation for three years.
The Division of the Budget's
fiscal note for the introduced version of the bill states that the
Kansas Lottery estimates that approximately $213.7 million in
revenue would go to the Electronic Gaming Machine Fund each year.
That amount of net machine revenue would result in the following
distribution:
- $2,137,200 to the Electronic
Gaming Machine Operations and Regulatory Fund (to finance Lottery
and Racing Commission regulatory expenses including the economic
impact study);
- $1,068,600 to the problem gambler
program (changed by Committee amendments to go to the State Gaming
Revenues Fund);
- $3,205,800 to counties in which
tracks are located;
- $7,480,200 to the Live Horse
Racing Purse Supplement Fund;
- $7,480,200 to the Live Dog Racing
Purse Supplement Fund;
- $42,744 to the Kansas Education
Enhancement Fund; and
- $149,604,000 to the track
owner/managers.
According to the Division's fiscal
note, the Lottery estimates expenditures of $185,087 annually to
operate the electronic gaming machine games. Those expenditures
would be financed from the Electronic Gaming Machine Operations and
Regulatory Fund. The Racing and Gaming Commission estimates
expenditure of $1,886,386 from the Regulatory Fund during the first
year the games are in operation and $1.8 million annually during
the second and subsequent years. The estimate of annual operating
costs of the Racing and Gaming Commission does not include the cost
of the economic impact report that would be required by the Senate
Committee amendment to the bill after the third year of operation
of the electronic games.
Committee amendments provide that
any amount in excess of the amount required by the Lottery and the
Racing and Gaming Commission would be transferred to the State
Gaming Revenues Fund. The Budget Division's fiscal note states that
the excess in the Regulatory Fund in FY 2001 is estimated to be
$64,727. Under current law when receipts to the State Gaming
Revenues Fund exceed $50 million, the excess is transferred to the
State General Fund.
A different approach to
authorizing the Lottery to conduct video lottery games at licensed
racetracks is contained in HB
3047. That bill had not been heard in the House Committee on
Federal and State Affairs at the time the Senate Committee acted on
SB 667.
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/bill_search.html