West Virginia Lottery Commission Sets Sports Betting Rules

West Virginia’s lottery commission has set its rules for sports betting in the state, and its director says the goal is to have sports wagering underway by football season.

The rules were approved at an emergency meeting Thursday, media outlets reported. West Virginia Lottery Director Alan Larrick said the rules give the state’s five casinos plenty of time to become familiar with the regulations.

“We’re trying to do everything we can to get sports betting available by football season — that’s what our goal is,” Larrick said. “We don’t know if we’re going to make it or not, but we’re going to try.”

West Virginia passed its sports betting law earlier this year, shortly before the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a federal law that had banned most sports betting.

The rules spell out what information casinos have to supply to the Lottery and what they need to do to stay within compliance, Larrick said.

“Our focus is going to be auditing, so we can be sure the numbers that are given by the casinos are accurate,” he said. “Then, we can base our (tax collection) on the correct number.”

Regarding security, the rules task casino operators to have controls in place to uncover any unusual betting activity “and report such activity according to the integrity monitoring system procedures” that were approved by the commission.

Additionally, casinos have to make sure off-site wagers are from people actually present in West Virginia at the time of the wager. The operator is required to use geolocation technology “to reasonably detect” the location of whoever is accessing sports betting online.

Sports betting on casino premises has to be done from a booth located in a sports wagering lounge, or sportsbook, that meets necessary requirements, or other locations as approved by the Lottery, the rules say.

But casinos need to construct those facilities first, so the rules also address interim sports betting licenses for casinos. This allows them to get in on the sports betting action even if their sportsbook is still under construction, Larrick said.

Gov. Justice Issues Special Session Call, But Hot Topic Issues Not Included

Updated: May 21, 2018 at 2:30 p.m.

 

Gov. Jim Justice has issued a call for a special session that will coincide with May interims. Lawmakers are being asked to address clean-ups to various bills passed during the 2018 session.

Among the bills included on the call is a measure establishing the Department of Arts, Culture and History. After a bill dismantling the Department of Education and the Arts — of which West Virginia Public Broadcasting is a part — was passed by the Legislature during the 2018 regular session, Justice signed the bill. Earlier this year, Justice had proposed reorganizing and placing agencies under a new department. According to a news release, the commissioner of Culture and History would become the “curator” of the new department, with that person reporting directly to the governor.

 

Justice has also asked for the passage of a bill amending a recently approved law that, among other provisions, doubles the amount of death benefits provided to surviving family members of first responders. The law — originally set to go into effect July 1, 2018 — would become retroactive to January 1, 2018 and provide death benefits to families of Pratt Volunteer Firefighters killed on March 24.

 

The call also lists supplemental appropriations bills related to the West Virginia National Guard, the state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, the West Virginia State Police and the funding of partnership coordinators to “develop defense industry opportunities” for West Virginia businesses.

 

Additional measures called for in the special session can be found in a news release from the governor’s office.

 

However, much attention has been focused on issues not included as part of the governor’s special session agenda — including the implementation of an integrity fee to the state’s new sports betting law and a fix to the medical cannabis program.

 

 

The Controversy Over An Integrity Fee to Sports Betting

 

Just days before the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision that makes sports betting legal, Justice announced an agreement that called on casino owners to pay professional sports leagues an “integrity fee.”

 

“This was a difficult negotiation between many different parties, but the outcome will be very good for the State of West Virginia as well as the sports leagues,” Gov. Justice said in the release issued Thursday, May 10.

 

However, casino owners say there was no agreement and the announcement from the governor was premature. Some lawmakers also questioned whether the governor violated open meetings laws.

 

 
 

Following the dust-up over the meeting and the premature announcement of an agreement, Justice said he was unsure whether he would ask lawmakers to address the integrity fee in a special session. An integrity fee is essentially a fee owed to professional sports leagues for wagering that takes place on their respective games and events.

 

“I think there needs to be some additional discussion. I don’t know if there’s a way to do it without legislation, but I’m an open book. I’m not trying to do anything behind any doors. All I’m trying to do is help West Virginia,” Justice said earlier this week.

 

However, legislators — including those in the Republican majority’s leadership — continue to say there is no interest in addressing the integrity fee.

 

“We do not see — speaking from the Senate’s perspective — any path towards the state injecting themselves into this private negotiation,” Senate President Mitch Carmichael said earlier this week.

 

House Speaker Tim Armstead echoed those sentiments in a written statement late Monday afternoon.  

 

“I’ve had no members of the Legislature – on either side of the aisle – express support for an integrity fee, and I don’t see it becoming an issue in a special session,” Armstead said. “If the racetracks and professional sports organizations reach some agreement privately between themselves, then that’s something they can do on their own. But I do not see the Legislature getting involved in this matter.”

 

But questions remain about Justice’s motivations for wanting to include the integrity fee in the new sports betting law.

 

According to Justice’s latest financial disclosure — required under state ethics laws — various companies related to The Greenbrier are listed as those under which he conducts business. While the casino housed at The Greenbrier Resort would have been subject to the terms of the agreement announced prematurely by Justice, the facility has also hosted a PGA golf tournament, as well as off-season trainings by the NFL’s New Orleans Saints and the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans. It is unknown how much revenue the professional sports leagues’ use of the Greenbrier’s facilities brings in for the business.

 

Multiple requests for comment on the integrity fee, clarifications on Justice’s financial holdings in the Greenbrier, and his business relationships with professional sports leagues have gone unanswered.

 

Emails seeking clarification on the ownership of the Greenbrier Classic — a PGA event held at the resort’s golf course — are also still unanswered.

 

Additionally, calls on Friday requesting comment from the Saints and Pelicans — who share an owner — on the teams’ business relationship with the Greenbrier haven’t been returned.

 

 

Saving the State’s Medical Cannabis Act?

 

While many have paid attention to the debate about Justice’s desire to add an integrity fee to the state’s sports betting law, Democratic lawmakers — particularly in the House of Delegates — have focused their attention on saving the state’s medical cannabis program.

 

A bill passed in 2017 created the program, but advocates and lawmakers in support of the program say it is flawed, including a mechanism for the state to legally collect revenue from the program while still following federal law. In a news release last week, the state Treasurer’s office proposed two options for banking solutions for the medical cannabis program.

 

A proposed fix to the medical cannabis program failed on the final night of the 2018 regular session, with House Speaker Tim Armstead stalling  and refusing to act on the measure as the clock ticked toward midnight. The fix had passed the Senate hours earlier.

 

Some lawmakers, particularly Democrats in the House of Delegates, want the issue to be revived in a special session.

 

“It’s really time sensitive. There is a need for this, the public wants it, the public demands it. It came through the House with overwhelming bipartisan majorities and it should be taken care of,” said Del. Mick Bates, who serves as minority vice chair of the House Finance Committee.

 

In anticipation of a special session call, the West Virginia House Democratic Legislative Committee started a petition to include a fix to the medical cannabis law. The committee says they have collected 668 names who support the issue being included in a special session.

 

However, Speaker Armstead says lawmakers have yet to present a solution that addresses the banking solutions needed to make the program work in conjunction with federal law.

 

“I think any attempt to address the medical marijuana issue in special session right now would be premature. I don’t think any of the proposals, including those offered during the regular session or last week by the Treasurer, go far enough to address the concerns over conflicts with federal money laundering laws,” Amstead said in a written statement Friday afternoon. “Because supporters have not come forward with a piece of legislation that truly addresses the federal issues, I don’t think we should begin spending $35,000 a day on a special session to address this.”

 

But Bates says there is talk among the Democratic caucus to force the issue to be taken up, including the possibility of gathering a supermajority of lawmakers in both chambers to call themselves back to work to address it.

 

“If the governor and the legislative leadership does not move on it, then there will be efforts to move them. The first step in that process is the public petition. But there are other things we have planned if we can’t get the attention that it deserves,” Bates said.

 

The state constitution allows lawmakers to gather a three-fifths majority of each chamber to address issues without the governor adding a bill to a call on a special session.

 

Requests for comment from the governor’s office on the issue of medical cannabis went unanswered.

 

 

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Gov. Justice allowed a bill dismantling the Department of Education and the Arts to become law without his signature. In fact, Justice signed the bill. 
 
An earlier version of this story also stated that lawmakers could call themselves back into session on matters not listed on the governor’s call with a two-thirds majority. In fact, it would require a three-fifths majority of each chamber. 
 

W.Va. Set for Sports Betting After SCOTUS Decision, But Integrity Fee Has No Traction in Legislature

Following a U.S. Supreme Court decision today, West Virginia is set to have legal sports betting. State lawmakers passed a bill earlier this year in anticipation of the court’s ruling on a case from New Jersey.

 

Gov. Jim Justice announced last week that he’d reached a deal for casinos to pay a fee to professional sports leagues to help them protect the integrity of their games. Casino operators, however, said the meeting with Justice ended without a deal, and they continue to oppose the fee.

 

A special legislative session is expected to coincide with interim committee meetings this weekend. But Senate President Mitch Carmichael says there’s no interest in the Legislature to address the integrity fee.

 

“We do not see — speaking from the Senate’s perspective — any path towards the state injecting themselves into this private negotiation,” Carmichael said.

 

During the regular legislative session earlier this year, leagues had lobbied unsuccessfully for the fee to be part of the law.

Gov. Justice Says Casinos Will Pick Up Sports Betting Fees, Casinos Say There's No Agreement

West Virginia’s Gov. Jim Justice says state casinos will be responsible for paying sports betting “integrity fees” if a new law comes to fruition. However, the announcement appears to have come prematurely from the governor’s office.

 

Justice said in a news release that representatives of the state lottery, professional sports leagues and casinos reached a tentative agreement on the fees following a Wednesday meeting.

 

“This was a difficult negotiation between many different parties, but the outcome will be very good for the State of West Virginia as well as the sports leagues,” Gov. Justice said in the release.

 

But casino owners and the state’s gaming association say there is no deal as of yet.

 

The statement from Justice’s office didn’t provide details of the agreement. The governor’s office didn’t respond to requests for additional comment.

 

The National Basketball Association and Major League Baseball have been asking states to give them 1 percent of the total amount wagered on their games, which would pay for costs associated to ensure the integrity of the games and their outcomes.

 

 

West Virginia lawmakers this year approved sports betting at the state’s five casinos and on approved mobile apps in the event that a U.S. Supreme Court case from New Jersey leads to the repeal of a ban in most states. The final version of West Virginia law did not call for the fees in question.

 

Justice says he insisted from the start that casinos pay the fees.

 

Some legislators and others are questioning whether the meeting took place illegally under the state’s open meetings law. There is no record of an announcement on the Secretary of State’s webpage that compiles a list of meeting announcements involving government agencies.

 

Del. Shawn Fluharty of Wheeling, a Democrat, said he is looking into filing suit in Kanawha County Circuit Court over the unannounced Wednesday meeting. He says that could lead to an injunction to prevent the issue being part of a special legislative session.

 

The Legislature is slated to return to Charleston for interim meetings May 20 through 22. Many legislators are expecting a special session to coincide with those meetings. However, Fluharty said there is little interest among lawmakers to tweak the new sports betting law.

 

“There is zero appetite from both sides of the aisle for this to happen,” Fluharty said. “There was no traction during the [regular] session.”

 
Representatives of professional sports leagues, the West Virginia Lottery Commission and the governor’s office met Wednesday to discuss the matter.

 
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

U.S. Supreme Court Case to Determine Future of Sports Betting in W.Va.

Gov. Jim Justice says a bill will become law to permit sports betting at the state’s five casinos in the event that a U.S. Supreme Court case leads to the repeal of a nationwide ban.

It would allow sports betting at West Virginia licensed casinos and on Lottery Commission-approved mobile device applications.

The state would collect 10 percent of gross receipts. Bettors would have to be at least 21.

Later this year, the court will decide New Jersey’s challenge to a law banning sports betting in most states.

Supporters say it will create jobs and tax revenues and bring sports betting into the open.

Critics say it will increase gambling and addictions and could compromise integrity of sporting events.

Justice says he’s asked the Legislature to consider partnering with major sports leagues.

Governor Signs Controversial Bills, Adds Women to PEIA Task Force

Gov. Jim Justice signed two controversial bills into law Friday, March 9, on the penultimate day of the 2018 legislative session.Sports betting will now…

Gov. Jim Justice signed two controversial bills into law Friday, March 9, on the penultimate day of the 2018 legislative session.

Sports betting will now be permitted at five West Virginia casinos and on mobile devices. And if seven or more people claim mineral rights to a single tract of land, natural gas drilling can occur if 75 percent of those owners say so, also known as co-tenancy.

Under the sports betting law, casinos will charge people to bet on sports, and the first $15 million collected will go to the state lottery fund, with the rest going to the Public Employees Insurance Agency’s stability fund. Supporters said the bill would regulate an unregulated activity and attract visitors to the state. The NBA and Major League Baseball have said the plan doesn’t protect consumers or prevent players from betting on their own sports, in addition to lacking proper safeguards.

The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to decide in June whether to strike down a federal ban on sports wagering. Gov. Justice indicated a willingness to work with sports leagues and said he’d ask the Legislature to “look at the advantages” of such an arrangement.

“This approach will allow us to develop a relationship with all the major sports leagues so that it is beneficial to everyone,” he said in part in a press release, adding that he hoped the law here would “model legislation that the entire country can use and duplicate.”

Supporters of the co-tenancy law, set to take effect July 1, said the measure is key to further development of the natural gas industry in West Virginia. Its critics have said it essentially forces non-consenting landowners to allow drilling when it is unwanted.

Also Friday, Justice added six new members to the group studying long-term solutions to the public employees health insurance program after a lawmaker noted only two of the 23 original members were women.

“Now certainly that’s probably just a small oversight of our governor, because why would a man who coaches a girls basketball team only appoint two women to a panel that impacts women’s health care and children’s health care,” said Sen. Bob Beach, a Democrat from Morgantown, who asked colleagues to sign a letter asking the governor to appoint six more female members.

The governor will name them Monday, he said in a press release.

Task force members currently include two insurance executives, educators, health administrators and union leaders. State lawmakers participating are Senators Mitch Carmichael, Robert Plymale and Craig Blair and Delegates Eric Nelson, Roger Hanshaw and Mick Bates. Bates and Plymale are Democrats, and the others are Republicans.

The group is set to meet Tuesday and must submit its finding by December.

The nine-day statewide teacher strike that ended Tuesday began partly over once-proposed changes to PEIA that would have increased costs to some members. The PEIA finance board voted last month to freeze those changes, and Gov. Justice pledged to assemble a group to find long-term fixes to the agency.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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