David_1
846
2013/02/24 08:51
#301617
Manne wrote:
The fast-tracked Bill AB114 removes previous restrictions requiring federal approval for interstate online poker compacts, but imposes a five-year “bad actor” lockout.
Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval signed Assembly Bill 114 into law Thursday, allowing the Silver State to enter into interstate agreements for online poker without federal legislation.
The law also places a 5-year restriction on companies that operated online poker in the US after UIGEA was passed in 2006. Such “bad actor” provisions ensures companies entering the state’s new market will not have to compete with market leader PokerStars.
Less than a month ago, Sandoval urged the legislature to move forward with a law that would allow the Nevada governor to make agreements with other states where online poker is legal, like Delaware.
The Nevada Legislature rushed the bill through, in a race to beat New Jersey as the US online gambling hub. It passed the both houses of the Legislature unanimously earlier in the day.
Under the law, there’s a $500,000 licensing fee though Assembly Majority Leader William Horne, D-Las Vegas, who sponsored the bill, had proposed a $1 million fee.
In certain instances, the Nevada Gaming Commission could alter the price tag, though the fees can be no more than $1 million and no less than $150,000, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal. A license renewal would cost $250,000.
Horne estimated that online gaming could bring in $3 million in tax revenue to the state.
Nevada Governor Signs Poker Bill into Law | Pokerfuse Online Poker News
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"In reality it was a conditional acceptance," Rich Muny, vice president of player relations at the Poker Players Alliance, wrote in a victorious email to the association’s members.
Online poker has other powerful supporters. "It is great to see a modern, global company like PokerStars interested in investing in our state and teaming up with one of the iconic Boardwalk casinos," state senator Ray Lesniak told NorthJersey.com. "These kinds of opportunities can be transformative and provide more proof that New Jersey – not Nevada – can be the hub for a new wave of growth in the gambling industry. PokerStars is the biggest company in online poker, and we should welcome them bringing their American headquarters to New Jersey." Since Black Friday, poker advocates — many of whom still have tens of thousands of dollars still locked up in the shuttered sites — have been trying to get online gambling legalized. When that effort failed at the national level, advocates turned to a state-by-state strategy.
So far, just Nevada and Delaware have passed laws legalizing online poker within their borders. The trouble is, you need a lot of players in order to have a decent poker game. Places like Nevada and New Jersey, which have established themselves as gambling destinations, have a better shot of attracting a sizable enough player pool.
If New Jersey legalizes online poker, it’ll be in a two-way race with Nevada in order to lure players. The new market could be just what Atlantic City needs to reverse seven straight years of falling casino revenues.