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NC pro teams, leagues get more power under proposed changes to sports betting law

North Carolina's top-level professional teams will have a much bigger role in determining which mobile operators can obtain licenses to take sports bets under proposed changes to the sports betting law passed earlier this year.
Posted 2023-09-19T04:27:39+00:00 - Updated 2023-09-20T20:43:48+00:00
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North Carolina's mobile sports gambling law, which has not yet been enacted, would undergo significant changes if a new state budget proposal becomes law, according to a copy of the bill released Wednesdy.

It rewrites parts of North Carolina's new mobile sports betting law, which passed earlier this session and was signed into law by Gov. Roy Cooper. Mobile sports betting will not go into effect until 2024 under the law.

State lawmakers are expected to pass the $30-billion budget this week.

The new language strips out the limit of 12 mobile betting operators, but instead requires that operators have a "written designation agreement" with a professional sports team, the owners of certain major sports facilities or NASCAR or the PGA Tour.

No one wanted to take credit for the changes.

"I'm not familiar with that one," Moore said.

Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, pointed to the bill sponsors.

"I will tell you that the folks that were involved in negotiating sports betting are the folks that have been pursuing those changes," he said. "I don’t think we would have made any changes but for the support of the sponsors of the sports gaming legislation."

But the original bill's top sponsors — Rep. Jason Sane and Sen. Jim Perry — said they were not behind the changes.

"I didn't do that," Saine told WRAL.

Said Perry: "I saw the language when it came out."

The current law makes no mention of the "written designation agreement" in discussing how the North Carolina Lottery Commission is to license operators.

"The Commission shall authorize no more than 12 interactive sports wagering operators," is how the current law reads.

The change would give North Carolina's top-level professional sports teams — Hurricanes, Hornets, Panthers, NC Courage and Charlotte FC — as well as certain sports facilities in the state a big say in which operators can take bets.

"My general understanding is the teams in North Carolina felt that doing it that way would be more advantageous to us actually seeing some additional jobs created in North Carolina," Berger said.

Previously, operators did not have a relationship with a team, facility or league to be granted a license. Now they will have to have that agreement in place.

It's unclear if the change will allow for more, less or the same number of operators as the 12 previously allowed. The Lottery Commission has not yet awarded any licenses and is not even accepting applications at the moment.

The new language, however, seems to indicate that teams, facilities and leagues can only have a written designation agreement with one operator — and that operator must run the in-person sports book at the stadium, arena, track or golf course.

Under the law, up to eight facilities will be able to have sports books, including Raleigh's PNC Arena and Cary's WakeMed Soccer Park. Carolina Hurricanes general manager Don Waddell told WRAL previously that PNC Arena would have a temporary sports book as soon as allowed. A more permanent sports book is expected as part of a massive renovation at PNC Arena.

Another proposed change makes it clearer that North Wilkesboro Speedway would be allowed to have an in-person sports book since it "hosted at least one National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing All-Star Race occurring after January 1, 2022."

Mobile sports betting can begin as soon as Jan. 8 and no later than June 15. An exact date has not yet been set by the Lottery Commission, which has a meeting planned for Wednesday afternoon.

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