Slots
plan takes on life of its own
As Reported by The Associated Press
HARRISBURG
- Forget what you know, or think you know, about slot machines coming
to Pennsylvania.
A discussion
that was dominated originally by putting the machines at horse racing
tracks has stretched to involve plunking slots down at off-track
sites or using the revenue to subsidize everything from US Airway's
leases at Pittsburgh International Airport to convention centers
and an ice arena.
For years, gambling
forces have tried to get slots legalized in Pennsylvania.
The push renewed
when Gov. Ed Rendell spoke about it during his campaign last year,
then gained momentum once he took office in Harrisburg. With slots
on the horizon, the state's horse racing commissions were flooded
with applications for a racetrack license from investors who wanted
to get rich on slot machines.
But if the path
to legalizing slots has been a roller coaster in the past, the ride
doesn't seem to be ending this year.
Already one Senate bill has died in the House, and one House bill
is stalled indefinitely in the Senate.
Now, state Sen.
Vincent J. Fumo, D-Philadelphia, has a new idea for a slots bill
that is already being dismissed by Rendell and Thompson.
The whole idea
here has been to tax the slots revenue to help pay for public education
and lower property taxes statewide. In addition, by putting slots
at tracks, the state's struggling horse industry would be pulled
up by its bootstraps. Purses would balloon, drawing better racehorses
and, hence, bigger bets.
The Senate bill
advocated legalizing slot machines at eight racetracks to eventually
generate about $800 million from slots. That money was to be combined
with revenue from a higher income tax to lower property taxes by
$1.5 billion statewide.
But the GOP
balked at the 34 percent income tax hike that Rendell proposed,
so the governor compromised.
The House bill
that then passed in July was geared to lower property taxes by $1
billion, plus extra money for special projects, such as to help
pay for an expansion of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia
and a new hockey arena in Pittsburgh.
The method this
time was to put slots at nine tracks and two off-track facilities,
one each in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
So Fumo, who
crafted the first Senate bill, has another turn.
The Democrat
wants to allow slots at the six racetracks that are already licensed
and award another half-dozen or so slots licenses to parties that
own, or can build, an off-track facility in a prime location to
tap gambling revenue.
Fumo has a proposal
he hopes to introduce in the coming weeks, his staff said. While
Democrats have solidly supported the previous slots bills, they've
needed the support of a few Republicans to pass them.
The idea may
not be the last that Pennsylvanians hear about, however: It is being
met with skepticism that it expands gambling too far for most lawmakers
to support.
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