Indiana Legislature Likely to Consider Online Casino Gaming Next Year

Indiana Legislature Likely to Consider Online Casino Gaming Next Year

Indiana may consider legalizing iGaming as early as next year, according to a casino executive and a key legislator behind the state’s 2019 expanded gaming law.

Indiana iGaming legalizationState Sen. Jon Ford (R-Terre Haute) speaks during an Indiana state Senate session last year. Ford, one of the key lawmakers behind expanding gaming in the state, believes a bill to allow online casino gaming could happen when the legislature reconvenes next year. (Image: Lauren Chapman/IPB News)

President and CEO Dan Lee said on a call last week that he believes the Hoosier State may take up it when the legislature reconvenes next year. He was speaking with investment analysts to discuss second-quarter earnings. Colorado, too, may consider expansion, he said, as states look to battle fiscal issues caused by the COVID-19 crisis.

There are pressures on state budgets like never before, and yet internet gaming is more socially acceptable,” Lee said. “Everybody is like, ‘Well, why not? We already have regular casinos. We already have sports betting that you can do online. Why wouldn t we allow you to play a slot machine online?’ And so, it s a good source of revenues to states.”

Indiana is no exception. According to Indiana’s State Budget Agency, the state’s general fund received just $15.4 billion in the fiscal year 2020, which ended in June. That was nearly $1.3 billion, or 7.8 percent, off projections.

Among the reasons for the shortfall was the for three months because of the coronavirus. The state’s riverboats generated just $200.3 million for the general fund, missing the projected $304.5 million by more than a third. The two racinos provided just $90.4 million to the state’s general coffer $41 million shy of what the state projected.

Not Just Budget

Financial concerns are one reason may consider online gaming. But state Sen. Jon Ford (R-Terre Haute) said Wednesday there are other reasons for the state to consider it as well. Neighboring statewide as soon as later this year.

Another reason would be market opportunities for the casinos.

Sports wagering opened up a whole new demographic to our casinos,” Ford told Casino.org. “It’s well-documented across the country the younger generations are not going to brick and mortar casinos quite as much.”

Ford added that he prefers an incremental approach that would first look to add mobile casino gaming, such as slots and traditional table games, then look to add online poker later. That approach started even before sports betting was allowed when the state approved daily fantasy sports.

Even with the coronavirus pandemic, has quickly become one of the top sports betting states in the country, behind only , , and . After taking its first bets last September, the state’s sportsbooks surpassed $1 billion in total handle last month.

“I knew that there would be a market there, and that we would attract people to sports wagering,” Ford said. “I don’t know that I thought it would necessarily have gone as smooth as it did.”

Indiana’s legislature meets annually, and next year is a budget year for state lawmakers, meaning they will be responsible for passing a two-year spending plan during the four-and-a-half month session.

An expanded gaming bill would only need simple majorities to pass in both chambers.

iGaming Growth Slow, But Coming

Indiana’s sports betting law allows the casinos to operate a retail sportsbook at the casino or off-track betting parlor and partner with up to three mobile providers, also known as skins.

Full House’s online sports betting partners are BetAmerica, which has already launched Indiana, Smarkets, and Wynn Resorts. Lee told analysts he expects those two to roll out in Indiana sometime this quarter if football season kicks off.

CFO Lewis Fanger told analysts the agreements with those three are just for sports. Full House would likely look to get the online gaming license for itself. But if something happened, it could then look to extend those agreements to mobile casinos, too.

“What strongly appears is that sports wagering is the small piece of the pie,” Fanger said. “It s the online casino itself where you see significantly more revenue being generated.”

Lee doesn’t see online gaming as cannibalizing the brick-and-mortar businesses. Commercial and tribal casinos generate more than $60 billion in revenue in a normal year, Lee said. And he believes – based on New Jersey’s performance – could generate up to an additional $20 billion annually.

While sports betting’s growth has been rapid since the US Supreme Court s PASPA decision two years ago, iGaming has not found similar traction. Currently, online slots and table games are available in Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Michigan has passed a law, but is working on the regulations for a pending launch.

“It s been slow to ramp up. But it s coming, and then I think you re going to have expansion of it,” Lee said. “And in almost every case, it s tied to brick-and-mortar.”

poses, Louisiana, with a population of 4.7 million, has 28 casinos statewide. That includes four tribal casinos.Not the First TimeExpanded gambling has been talked about in the Kentucky legislature for years, including during the two terms Beshear’s father Steve served as governor from 2007-2015. However, the bills have always met a dead end in Frankfort.In the 2019 session, (R-Erlanger) sponsored a bill that would legalize sports betting in the state. It passed the House Licensing, Occupations Administrative Regulations Committee, which Koenig chairs, but it did not get a vote on the House floor.While Koenig has not prefiled a bill in advance of the 2020 Kentucky General Assembly session, it’s a near certainty he will file a bill when lawmakers reconvene.  Aussie Horse Racing Trainer Banned for Pulling Down Compliance Officer’s Pants  Massachusetts Voters Reject Another Horse Racetrack Sportsbook Development  Spain’s Rash of Violent Gambling Hall Robberies May Be Nearing an End  UK Lawmakers Angry Over Plan to Delay £2 FOBT Betting Limits Until October 2019  NYRA Handle for 2019 Again Tops $2.1 Billion Despite Weather Forcing Fewer Races  Pennsylvania Lottery Games Go Online in May, Virtual Sports Betting Launches in June  MGM, Wynn Could Be Hampered by High Leverage in Recession  Encore Boston Harbor Fate to Be Decided By Year End, Massachusetts Regulators Will Rule in December  ‘Jeopardy! Greatest of All Time’ Viewers Barred From Betting on Outcome Due to Tournament Recording