Texas Republican Legislator Introduces Bill Enabling Casinos, Sports Gambling
Posted on: February 4, 2023, 07:04h.
Last updated on: February 6, 2023, 12:23h.
A Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives has introduced a bill that would pave the way for limited gaming properties in the Lone Star State. The legislation would also allow for sports wagering.
State Rep. Charlie Geren (R-Fort Worth) filed the proposal on Friday. The bill is known as House Joint Resolution 97.
Geren’s bill would allow for as many as seven destination casinos. They are called “destination resorts” in the legislation. They include two casinos in the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston regions, as well as one each in the Corpus Christi, McAllen, and San Antonio regions.
The locations were selected because they are areas that promise the “greatest positive economic impact from destination resort development,” according to the bill.
The proposed locations would also serve as “tourism amenities and facilities, including hotels, restaurants, meeting facilities, attractions, entertainment facilities, and shopping centers,” according to the bill.
The legislation would also allow some of the state’s race tracks to use existing pari-mutuel licenses so they could open destination casinos. Under the legislation, the tax on gross gaming revenue at the casinos would be 15%.
Many Democrats traditionally have backed opening destination casinos. Three months ago, Sen. Carol Alvarado (D-Houston) filed a bill similar to Geren’s in the Senate.
Increased Republican Support
Geren’s legislation apparently demonstrates the increasing support among some Republicans to approve limited gambling.
Last month, Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan (R) backed limited “destination” casinos in the state. These properties would include hotels, golf courses, and entertainment halls. Fellow Republican Gov. Greg Abbott also softened his stand on casinos last year. Now, he says is open to considering them.
Hundreds of pro-gambling lobbyists are working on the issue in Texas. Las Vegas Sands is a key player. The casino company alone employed 74 lobbyists in Texas in December.
Two-thirds of both the House and Senate would need to back a gambling bill before it is sent to the state’s voters in November for final approval. If the voters support the referendum, the state’s constitution would be amended.
Dan Patrick’s Role
But so far, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R), who presides over the Senate, has yet to show he would back casino-enabling legislation.
In December, Patrick said he doesn’t “see any movement” on the gambling issue, KXAN, a Houston TV station, reported.
Dan Patrick, whose strong control over the Texas Senate provides him with the power to determine the fate of any casino gambling legislation, which will only pass if he explicitly, or at least implicitly, supports it,” Rice University professor Mark P. Jones recently told Casino.org. Patrick may acquiesce given the growing support for limited casinos, Jones added.
Yet, past efforts at approving casinos in Texas failed in the legislature. Many opponents rejected gambling on moral grounds.
Public Wants Casino Vote
But Geren said an overwhelming number of Texans now support a statewide vote on casinos.
“Polling over the last year makes it clear that more than 85% of Texans want the right to vote on this issue, Republicans and Democrats alike,” Geren was quoted by the Dallas Morning News.
Some 75% of Texas residents surveyed by the University of Houston in January backed Alvarado’s bill.
Some 69% of born-again Christians who participated in last month’s survey support the passage of Alvarado’s casino bill, and 61% of Evangelical Protestants questioned support its passage.
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