Experts:
Gaming Growth Good Bet
New gaming jurisdictions
are emerging around the world, from Florida's
racinos to the United Kingdom's cyberspace domain.
But what seems to be the universal
characteristic of all of the new players is
that it takes longer to bring them on line than
most people anticipate because of legislative,
judicial and regulatory issues that spring up
while the details are worked out.
A panel on the concluding day of the Global
Gaming Expo at the Las Vegas Convention Center
on Thursday noted that gaming will be a part
of the landscape or expand substantially across
Florida, in various locations in Great Britain,
in Costa Rica, Chile, Panama, Mexico, Cambodia
and Vietnam.
One panelist even predicted that online gaming
-- banned in the United States -- would spread
across Europe until it becomes inevitable that
American lawmakers have to approve it to keep
up competitively.
Panelist David Schollenberger, head of the
gaming team at the Manches LLP law firm in London,
said he doesn't expect online casino operations
to try to stop American customers from gambling
on British casino web sites.
The United Kingdom approved online gaming as
part of its Gaming Act of 2005 approved earlier
this year.
The new British law was a disappointment to
many industry watchers because it only allowed
the addition of eight small casinos and one
regional property to some 200 already in operation.
The new law continued to ban casino advertising,
drinking and live entertainment in casinos and
has no provision to enforce gambling debts.
Scholenberger said it's likely to be 2006 before
any new casinos are on line as a result of the
modification.
The slow-down in Florida, said panelist Alan
Koslow, an attorney for Becker & Poliakoff,
Fort Lauderdale, is a result of the Florida
Legislature failing to pass enabling legislation
after the state's voters allowed casino gambling
at horse tracks in Dade and Broward counties
and Broward County voters, in March, voted to
implement casinos.
Koslow called Florida "a legal 'Twilight
Zone,' " after Florida's Senate and House
approved two different versions of enabling
legislation and couldn't resolve differences
before adjournment.
The two versions of the bill had differing
tax rates and didn't resolve whether the racinos
could have Class II or Class III slot machines.
The state's courts have threatened to implement
their own rules to enforce the will of the people
-- a move that Koslow said could lead to more
legal fights.
He predicted that it would take a year to 18
months to resolve, and in the meantime, other
Florida counties could become interested in
starting their own gaming properties.
Koslow suggested that a compromise on the differences
in Class II and Class III machines could be
resolved by allowing Class II devices, eventually
allowing a transition to Class III, which are
what is traditionally used in Las Vegas casinos.
But he added that if such a compromise is allowed,
Florida's tribal casinos could seek the same
transition.
Operators have been authorized to install 3,000
slot machines per track at Florida racinos.
Panelist Jack Mitchell, president of Thunderbird
Resorts, Poway, Calif., said as the gaming industry
grows in Macau, Korea, and the Philippines,
and comes on line in Singapore, it would only
be a matter of time before casinos emerge in
Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.
Mitchell recommended that casino operators
make contact with the leading families in those
countries to develop international partnerships
to get into those markets early.
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