LINCOLN — A pair of legislative proposals to legalize online sports gambling in Nebraska brought out supporters and opponents Wednesday.
Legislative Bill 13 and Legislative Resolution 3CA would set the stage for Nebraskans to vote on legalizing online sports betting this November. Introduced by State Sen. Eliot Bostar of Lincoln, he claimed legalizing the practice would generate approximately $32 million in state revenues per year.
State lawmakers are looking at ways to increase state revenues to make room for property tax relief in a special session called by Gov. Jim Pillen. Bostar argued the state currently loses out on a major revenue source offered by online sports betting, with many Nebraskans traveling across state lines to Iowa, where the practice is legal.
“We’re paying the cost, but we’re not getting the revenue,” Bostar said.
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Voters legalized casino gambling in 2020 through a referendum, and Bostar said that paved the way for other forms of gambling to expand. Most of the people who testified in support of Bostar’s proposals Wednesday were involved in the referendum.
Opponents of Bostar’s proposals largely pointed to the morality of fostering gambling addictions in the state. Nate Grasz with the Nebraska Family Alliance called gambling addiction the “next public health crisis,” and Huskers coach Tom Osborne said Bostar’s proposals would only contribute to the speed and convenience of such addictions.
“We are not going to gamble our way out of our property tax problem,” Grasz said.
U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts, who has actively opposed expanded gambling in Nebraska for two decades, told reporters Wednesday that legalizing online sports better has the effect of turning every phone computer or tablet into a gambling device.
He said he was particularly troubled that the companies that offer online sport betting try to make the action on the applications fast, which he said makes them addictive. The phone and computer apps allow betting not just on the final score, but on action within the game, such as whether a team will get a first down on its next drive.
“So the whole point of these applications has been (to be) very fast moving, very similar to a slot machine,” he said. “That leads to addiction.”
At the state Capitol, Bostar acknowledged the dangers of gambling addictions, but countered that many Nebraskans already gamble online, and claimed there are roughly 64,000 mobile sports betting accounts based in the state. Several testifiers also noted that keep online gambling illegal leaves riskier alternatives as the only options for participants.
Lance Morgan, CEO of Ho-Chunk Inc., the economic development arm of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska that led the 2020 referendum effort, called Nebraska the Wild West when it comes to online sports betting.
Sen. Tom Brewer of Gordon, who sits on the General Affairs Committee, said while he doesn’t want to support gambling, he is more concerned with the decreasing population in his district, which he attributed to property tax increases.
Brewer noted that Bostar’s proposals would raise state revenues to allow for tax relief without requiring many of the cuts to state programs Pillen suggested in his plan. He asked several opposing testifiers to propose alternative revenue sources in place of legalizing online sports betting. But few ideas were suggested.
“We’re at a critical point now where we have to figure out a solution,” Brewer said.
World-Herald staff writer Henry Cordes contributed to this report.
Our best Omaha staff photos & videos of July 2024
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LeeAnn Johnson, 11, tries to encourage passing motorists to visit their lemonade stand in front of the Ma Fleur daycare near 30th and Ida Streets in Omaha on Thursday, July 25, 2024.
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Milk Ruiz, left, Jade Monroe, Nevaeh Parker and Grace Johnson, all of Omaha, cool off and rest before the Fourth of July parade in Ralston, on Thursday, July 4, 2024.
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Fireworks follow the Omaha Storm Chasers game at Werner Park in Papillion on Wednesday, July 3, 2024.
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People play with glowsticks as they watch fireworks after the Omaha Storm Chasers game at Werner Park in Papillion on Wednesday, July 3, 2024.
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Edward Pierce, left, buys some lemonade from Ta’Vio Johnson, 14, in front of the Ma Fleur daycare near 30th and Ida Streets in Omaha on Thursday, July 25, 2024.
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Ta’Vio Johnson, 14, pours a cup of lemonade for a customer at their lemonade stand in front of the Ma Fleur daycare near 30th and Ida Streets in Omaha on Thursday, July 25, 2024.
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Sonia Daniel, 10, tries to encourage passing motorists to visit their lemonade stand in front of the Ma Fleur daycare near 30th and Ida Streets in Omaha on Thursday, July 25, 2024.
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From left: Sonia Daniel, 10, and Ta’Vio Johnson, 14, try to encourage motorists to visit their lemonade stand in front of the Ma Fleur daycare near 30th and Ida Streets in Omaha on Thursday, July 25, 2024.
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The two buildings at the bottom of the photo at the Southside Terrace apartments in Omaha will soon be demolished as part of phase I of the Southside Terrace Redevelopment project on Tuesday, July 9, 2024.
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Milton Kitchen, of Omaha, right, hands out water balloons to a group at a hydrant party on 28th and Harrison Street in Omaha, on Wednesday, July 3, 2024.
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Tethloach Ranley, of Omaha, grates cured egg yolk onto tartare with pickled shallots paired with nettle tortillas chips and local corn crackers for the first course from V. Metz at the Battle of the Chefs at Long Walk Farm in Council Bluffs, on Sunday, July 7, 2024.
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Vicki Nordskog, of Atlantic, Iowa, left, Denise O’Brien, of Atlanta, Iowa, and Marcus Josephson, of Griswold, Iowa, grab plates from V. Metz’s second course at the Battle of the Chefs at Long Walk Farm in Council Bluffs, on Sunday, July 7, 2024.
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The Corvette Club drives down Main Street at the Fourth of July parade in Ralston, on Thursday, July 4, 2024.
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Michelle Alfaro, head chef of Sauced by Alfaro, left, and Joe Alfaro, co-owner of Sauced by Alfaro, celebrate winning in the first round of the Battle of the Chefs at Long Walk Farm in Council Bluffs, on Sunday, July 7, 2024.
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Amy Beyersdorf, physical therapist, left, puts down a plastic ring after testing Buddy McClinton, center right, on motor skills while Ashley McClinton, right, smiles at a follow-up appointment at Women’s Methodist Hospital in Omaha, on Wednesday, July 10, 2024.
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Heartland of America Band “Raptor” performs during Jazz on the Green at Midtown Crossing’s Turner Park in Omaha on Thursday, July 11, 2024.
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Amanda Petersmith carries her daughter, Josie Petersmith, both of Omaha, on her shoulders while walking in the Heartland Pride Parade on Capitol Avenue in Omaha, on Saturday, July 13, 2024.
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Omaha Storm Chasers’ Ryan Fitzgerald (22) tags out Toledo Mud Hens’ Akil Baddoo (63) at second base during the first inning of a baseball game at Werner Park in Papillion on Saturday, July 13, 2024.
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Achyuth Kalluchi, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, left, and Jordan Rowley, associate professor at the College of Medicine’s department of genetics, cell biology and anatomy, sit for a portrait at UNMC’s Durham Research Center in Omaha, on Tuesday, July 16, 2024.
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Terence “Bud” Crawford embraces Tydale “TK Mafioso” Tiller outside B &B Sports Academy in Omaha on Saturday, July 20, 2024. Hundreds gathered in North Omaha to celebrate Crawford before his next fight in Los Angeles against Israil Madrimov.
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Jack Met of AJR performs at the CHI Health Center as part of their “The Maybe Man Tour” in Omaha on Sunday, July 21, 2024.
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Nebraskans listen to community members speak during a town hall on Gov. Jim Pillen’s proposed property tax plan at the University of Nebraska Wick Alumni Center in Lincoln on Monday, July 22, 2024.
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