The Tennessee General Assembly on Tuesday became the first to interactive-only sports betting legislation when the Senate approved HB 1 (a substitute for SB 16), 19-12, just six days after the House ed it, 58-37. The bill would allow sports betting over the internet and via mobile apps, meaning consumers could bet from their phones or computers anywhere in the state, and that there will be no physical sports betting locations in the state.
Because several minor amendments were added to the bill in the Senate, the bill was sent back to the House for concurrence, which it got Tuesday afternoon, 51-40. Most states require a ed bill to go to Senate and House leadership for signatures and then on to the governor for action.
Governor Bill Lee has indicated that he won’t sign HB 1, but he will let it become law without his signature.
Governor opposed to gaming expansion 4z4p5i
“The governor has said he does not believe that the expansion of gambling is best, but he recognizes that many in the legislature found this to be an issue they want to explore further,” Lee’s Press Secretary Laine Arnold was quoted as saying in the Tennessean Tuesday. “He plans to let this become law without his signature.”
Representative Rick Staples (D-District 15) filed the bill before Thanksgiving, and it was the first bill pre-filed ahead of the 2019 session. It’s undergone several iterations and seen many proposed changes, a key one being an official league data” to grade wagers on any in-game market — marking the first victory for the leagues for their expansive lobbying efforts to effectuate a legislative mandate for such a requirement.
At one point during the bill’s journey, a proposal was made to ban prop bets on college sports was added in the House in early April.
According to the Times Free Press, the Tennessee Education Lottery will oversee/regulate sports betting and licensure. Legal TN sports betting is estimated to raise $41 million annually for the lottery, $7.6 million for local governments and $2.5 million for gambling addiction programs, which based on other states’ experiences seems ambitious.
Tennessee becomes the fourth state to have a bill that has ed both chambers of a state legislature. During April, Montana, Indiana and Iowa all ed sports betting bills that are on or headed to their respective governor’s desks.
Of Tennessee’s eight border states, both Mississippi and Arkansas have legal sports betting, though Arkansas has not yet launched. Mississippi was the third state to launch last summer. Its Tunica-area sportsbooks are on the Arkansas border and less than an hour’s drive from Memphis. Those sportsbooks will likely see a decline in business once Tennessee launches, as Mississippi does not allow for state-wide mobile sports betting, so patrons must go to sportsbooks to bet.
Arkansas voters legalized sports betting in November, but the launch has been delayed as regulations are in the works.
Our neighbors in TN just ed legislation authorizing mobile sports wagering. AR is missing out on millions in tax revenue by our delay. $340M is illegally wagered in AR each year on mobile sports betting. It’s time to legalize, tax, and regulate. https://t.co/W8TTxxGH6p
— Alex Gray (@alextylergray) April 30, 2019