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HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Top Republicans in Pennsylvania’s state Senate are pressing sweeping gambling legislation that would allow slot machine-like terminals in thousands of bars, restaurants, nonprofit social clubs and other businesses that hold liquor licenses.

Slot machines are legal at Pennsylvania’s licensed casinos and have been a part of the legal casino gambling scene here since the start. In fact, the state’s initial casino legislation, passed in 2004. (AP) — Top Republicans in Pennsylvania’s state Senate are pressing sweeping gambling legislation that would allow slot machine-like terminals in thousands of bars, restaurants, nonprofit social clubs and other businesses that hold liquor licenses.

It appears unregulated gambling machines with a questionable legal status are spreading across Pennsylvania like never before. According to an expose appearing this week on PennLive.com, the machines have popped up at convenience stores, gas stations, and various restaurants and bars on main streets all over small-town Pennsylvania. State lawmakers made a number of amendments to horse track security bill authorizing both the use of 61,000 slot machines at racetracks and other new casino locations across Pennsylvania. Lawmakers rushed the bill through the House and Senate over the Fourth of July weekend, then quickly became law before any real opposition to casino gambling had a chance to oppose it. PA online casinos are up and running, and growing fast. If you are 21 years or older and inside Pennsylvania state lines, you can now enjoy online slots, table games, and video poker from your desktop computer or mobile devices. This page contains all the information you need to start playing at online casinos in PA.

The legislation could deliver new gambling tax dollars to a state treasury hurting from stay-at-home and shutdown orders issued by Gov. Tom Wolf to fight the spread of the coronavirus.

It also seeks to banish thousands of unregulated cash-paying “skill” game terminals from a wide array of establishments in Pennsylvania, including laundromats, pizza parlors, grocery stores, corner stores and bowling alleys, that do not have liquor licenses.

No Senate vote had been scheduled as of Tuesday as Senate Republican leaders worked to build enough support for it to pass. The bill is opposed by two erstwhile adversaries: casino owners in the nation’s No. 2 commercial casino state and Georgia-based Pace-O-Matic, maker of the software in most common skill terminals, marketed as Pennsylvania Skill games.

Wolf, a Democrat, is taking a dim view of it, warning in a statement from his office that state programs already fed by a “multitude” of legal gambling options, from slot machines in casinos to online lottery games, could lose dollars. He opposes the bill in its current form, his office said Tuesday.

Under a draft amendment, more than 10,000 bars, restaurants, hotels, golf course clubhouses and nonprofit social clubs with liquor licenses could install the so-called video gaming terminals, or VGTs. Counties that host casinos and municipalities could still vote to keep the machines out.

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Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, framed the bill not necessarily as an expansion of gambling, but as a way to get forms of unregulated gambling under control.

“The overall goal is to bring into the light the tens of thousands of unregulated games of skill and VGT devices that are out there in Pennsylvania today,” Corman said Tuesday.

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Senate Republican budget analysts projected that taxing the VGTs could yield $200 million to $250 million a year, Corman said.

A major trade association for bars and restaurants, the Pennsylvania Licensed Beverage and Tavern Association, is asking its members to contact senators to support it.

The bill comes as distributors of VGTs — including executives from Golden Entertainment Inc. of Las Vegas — and Pennsylvania Skill games are giving tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions to lawmakers and political organizations.

A political action committee backed by a Williamsport-based coin-op machine distributor, Miele Manufacturing, which assembles Pennsylvania Skill games, has given more than $100,000 to lawmakers and political committees going back to last year.

Wolf, at least, might be sympathetic to banishing the skill games: His administration has accused the proliferating skill machines of siphoning more than $200 million in revenue last year from the Pennsylvania Lottery.

While the bill might leave legal room for Pace-O-Matic games in licensed-liquor establishments, the company sees it as a death knell.

“We can’t compete with them,” spokesman Michael Barley said. “Their games are flashier, more appealing. They look like things you would find in a brick-and-mortar casino. … Our games are slower, more methodical.”

(Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

(Redirected from United States state slot machine ownership regulations)
Laws restricting noncommercial ownership/use of mechanical & digital games of chance

This is a list of potential restrictions and regulations on private ownership of slot machines in the United States on a state by state basis.

StateLegal Status
AlabamaClass II machines legal
AlaskaAll machines legal
ArizonaMachines 25 years or older legal[1]
ArkansasAll machines legal
CaliforniaMachines 25 years or older legal
ColoradoMachines before 1984 legal
ConnecticutAll machines prohibited
DelawareMachines 25 years or older legal
District of ColumbiaMachines before 1952 legal
FloridaMachines 20 years or older legal
GeorgiaMachines before 1950 legal
HawaiiAll machines prohibited
IdahoMachines before 1950 legal
IllinoisMachines 25 years or older legal
IndianaMachines 40 years or older legal
IowaMachines 25 years or older legal
KansasMachines before 1950 legal
KentuckyAll machines legal
LouisianaMachines 25 years or older legal
MaineAll machines legal
MarylandMachines 25 years or older legal
MassachusettsMachines 30 years or older legal
MichiganMachines 25 years or older legal
MinnesotaAll machines legal
MississippiMachines 25 years or older legal
MissouriMachines 30 years or older legal
MontanaMachines 25 years or older legal
NebraskaAll machines prohibited
NevadaAll machines legal
New HampshireMachines 25 years or older legal
New JerseyMachines before 1941 legal
New MexicoMachines 25 years or older legal
New YorkMachines 30 years or older legal
North CarolinaMachines 25 years or older legal
North DakotaMachines 25 years or older legal
OhioAll machines legal
OklahomaMachines 25 years or older legal
OregonMachines 25 years or older legal
PennsylvaniaMachines 25 years or older legal
Rhode IslandAll machines legal
South CarolinaAll machines prohibited
South DakotaMachines before 1941 legal
TennesseeAll machines prohibited
TexasAll machines legal
UtahAll machines legal
VermontMachines before 1954 legal
VirginiaAll machines legal
WashingtonMachines 25 years or older legal
West VirginiaAll machines legal
WisconsinMachines 25 years or older legal
WyomingMachines 25 years or older legal

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Slot

References[edit]

  1. ^Arizona State Legislature ARS §13-3309 paragraphs D&E

External links[edit]

Texas Slot Machine Dealers

  • U.S. Slot Machine Laws & Statutes by State, Gameroom Show

Pa Gambling Machines In Bars

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