Michigan Lawmaker Ready To Take A Swing At Sports Betting Bill

Search

Member
Handicapper
Joined
Sep 18, 2006
Messages
18,959
Tokens
The long wait for a sports betting bill in Michigan is about to end.

Legal Sports Report obtained a draft of a bill being prepared by Rep. Brandt Iden, which he intends to introduce next week.

While it took a few months longer than anticipated to work out the details, Iden’s proposal is mostly reasonable compared to the borderline outlandish provisions appearing in some nearby states.


What’s in the MI sports betting bill?

The new MI sports betting legislation would authorize both mobile and land-based wagering at the state’s 23 tribal and three commercial casinos.

Additionally, it would:

Establish a Division of Sports Betting and a state Sports Betting Fund.

Permit sports betting including on professional and collegiate teams including: single-game bets, teaser bets, parlays, over-under, moneyline, pools, exchange betting, in-game betting, in-play bets, proposition bets and straight bets.

Impose a fee of $200,000 for an initial license (renewable for $100,000 annually); $50,000 annually for suppliers.

Tax sports betting revenue at a rate of 8%.

Iden did note that he anticipates some changes to the final language between now and introduction.

Minor concession to leagues

For bets on the outcomes of games, the bill would permit licensees to use any data supplier, provided the data does not originate from:

Live event attendees in violation of terms of admittance

Automated computer programs that compile data from the internet in violation of terms of service

For in-play wagers, however, the bill would require operators to use official league data upon request from the sport’s governing body.

The draft does not include an integrity fee payable to leagues or any limitations on collegiate betting.

Disbursement of fees and taxes

The draft bill goes into great detail on how the state would use MI sports betting revenue.

55% to the State Sports Betting Fund, which will pay $1 million annually into a Compulsive Gaming Prevention Fund

30% to the city in which a sports betting licensee’s casino is located for local development

5% to the Michigan Transportation Fund

5% to the Michigan Agriculture Equine Industry Development Fund


Path forward for MI sports betting bill
Iden is also the sponsor of a Michigan online gambling bill introduced in March. It has been delayed in the House Ways and Means Committee that he chairs due to concerns expressed by the executive branch.

The sports betting bill starts in the House Regulatory Reform Committee, but he expects it to advance swiftly to Ways and Means.

Iden previously told LSR that he intends for sports betting to join his package of gambling bills in Ways and Means, and to push them toward passage together in June.




https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.legalsportsreport.com/32607/michigan-sports-betting-bill-2019/amp/
 

Official Rx music critic and beer snob
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
25,128
Tokens
Since all of the Michigan casinos are indian-owned except for Detroit, it'll be interesting to see who will get that sportsbook business (will hill?)
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2019
Messages
1,770
Tokens
Michigan is a state that would fuck it up.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,476
Messages
13,451,880
Members
99,417
Latest member
go789click
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com