[Press Release] PPA Testifies Before CA Senate Committee (02/09/10)
By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010
By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010
By Poker Players Alliance
Monday, October 5th, 2009
Some say legalization could bring revenue; tribes don’t want competition
The proponents of legalizing online poker are holding their cards close to their vests as they prepare to introduce a bill to the Legislature this winter.
Proponents are touting lawful California-based Internet poker available only to Californians as a balm for the state’s aching budget — and say the benefits include regulation, taxation and safety.
But the vast majority of 59 tribes that have the monopoly on gaming are opposed to the encroachment on their franchise.
The only other entities that can offer gambling in California are about 90 cardrooms as well as the California State Lottery, its affiliates and a handful of horse-racing tracks.
Online gambling is prohibited by federal law under the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006. The law allows for some exceptions, one of which is intrastate gambling, where the operator and all the players are in the same state.
That is what proponents want California to explore.
The effort to get someone to carry online poker legislation started in the summer, but proponents weren’t able to get an author to carry a bill by the end of the last session.
“We just ran out of time, and the legislators just had too much going on with the budget,” said Patrick Dorinson, spokesman for the Morongo Band of Mission Indians, which operates Morongo Casino Resort Spa, off Interstate 10 in the Southern California desert. Dorinson said proponents expect to have a legislator carrying a bill when the new legislative session starts in January.
Despite online gaming being illegal, it is still available. If an online gambler is willing to create an arm’s-length transaction, that gambler can find a way to play poker online.
“People are going online and playing poker right now. We should all be focusing on the idea that this is something whose time has come, and let’s ask the question: How do we get it right?” Dorinson said. “We want to protect California consumers that are playing right now.”
And by regulating Internet poker, the state potentially can take a cut of the action, he said.
“Let’s regulate it, and the state should get a cut of it. There is a lot of money sloshing around now and the state is not getting any of it.”
If online poker became legal in California, it could open the door to legal battles over the tribes’ exclusive deals to offer slot machines, lottery games outside of the state lottery and “percentage and banking” games such as blackjack.
Tribal operations do not have an exclusive deal to offer poker games, but there is the question of how tribes will react to what they consider a bad-faith move.
Native American tribes have the exclusive right to negotiate with the state for gaming compacts, and that issue is quite clear, said Doug Elmets, spokesman for the United Auburn Indian Community, which owns Thunder Valley Casino near Lincoln.
He called online poker “a misguided concept, and it is inconsistent with California law,” Elmets said. “There are clearly bitter feelings about this. All this effort did was wake a sleeping giant. The large casinos do not want this.”
Native American tribes have huge clout in the Legislature, where tribal lobbying and potential tribal campaign contributions have gone from nonexistent a decade ago to being major players today.
The state might find a potential revenue stream from online poker, but that windfall could come at the cost of the revenue the state gets from tribal gaming, said Howard Dickstein, a partner with Sacramento law firm Dickstein & Zerbi.
“It creates a serious issue depending on whether the Internet machines constitute a violation of tribal compacts, and the tribes stop paying in their hundreds of millions of dollars annually,” Dickstein said.
The state collects a piece of tribal gaming revenue through compacts with the tribes. California casinos had revenue of $7.4 billion in 2008, down from $7.8 billion the year earlier.
Sacramento Business Journal – by Mark Anderson Staff writer
By Edward Sifuentes, North County Times
Tuesday, September 9th, 2008
excerpt:
The Pauma Band of Mission Indians launched a virtual casino on its Web site last month; it offers video slot machines, table games and card games.
By CardPlayer.com
Friday, September 5th, 2008
excerpt:
The California bill that would tax and regulate an intrastate online poker industry will not go any further in 2008.
The bill, A.B. 2026, introduced by Assemblyman Lloyd Levine, has been put on the inactive legislative file by its author at the request of Poker Voters of America, who pushed for the law.
By Dawn Withers, The Salinas Californian
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
excerpt:
Gamblers can start betting on poker games today at the new Banker’s Casino card room in downtown Salinas. But the privilege may not last long.
After months of negotiations between the business owners and city officials, Salinas Police Chief Dan Ortega signed off Wednesday on an interim card room permit that allows Banker’s Casino on Monterey Street to open for business for about 60 days.
By Matt Villano, San Francisco Chronicle
Thursday, July 31st, 2008
excerpt:
Last year around this time, Central Valley poker superstar Jerry Yang was celebrating his $8.25 million victory in the main event of the World Series of Poker. This year, Yang is giving back as the main celebrity attraction at two tournaments in cardrooms within a short drive of the Bay Area.
By Andrew Luria, CBS13
Thursday, July 24th, 2008
California may become the first state to legalize online poker after the federal government banned online gambling, taking advantage of a loophole in federal law. Andrew Luria reports.
Click here to watch the video:
[CA] CBS13 – Video: California May Legalize Online Poker (07/22/08)
By 4Flush.com
Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008
excerpt:
A proposal to legalize online poker in California made its way through the Senate Governmental Organization Committee last month and is now on its way to the Senate Appropriations Committee to be voted upon in August.
By Shari Geller
Wednesday, July 16th, 2008
excerpt:
The bill by California Assemblyman Lloyd Levine (D-Van Nuys) which would lead to the legalization of intrastate online poker in California has cleared a significant legislative hurdle and is on its way to the Senate Appropriations Committee in August, its final stop before coming before the full State Senate for a vote. If the bill is passed, and signed by the governor, California would become the first state to legalize intrastate online poker for its residents.
By Bob Pajich
Monday, July 14th, 2008
excerpt:
The proposed California law that would be the first step toward allowing online poker rooms in California made it through its first committee, and its sponsor, Assemblyman Lloyd Levine, hopes to see it lead to a law that would give the residents of his state a place to play online poker regulated by a governmental party in the United States.