LD 1820
pg. 38
Page 37 of 39 An Act To Establish the Gambling Control Board To License and Regulate Slot Mac... Page 39 of 39
Download Bill Text
LR 2664
Item 1

 
Department of Public Safety with authority over all slot machine
licensing and distribution and registration. It is the intent of
the Legislature that all slot machine operators and slot machine
distributors be licensed by the Gambling Control Board pursuant to
the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 8, chapter 31. The Legislature
intends that the amendment effected by this Act be effective on or
prior to the effective date of the initiated bill. It is further
the intent of the Legislature that this bill extinguish any right,
title or interest, whether vested or inchoate, in any license,
registration, permit, privilege or entitlement that may have arisen
under Initiated Bill 2003, chapter 1.

 
Sec. B-9. Retroactivity. The Act applies retroactively to January 3,
2004.

 
Emergency clause. In view of the emergency cited in the preamble,
this Act takes effect when approved.

 
SUMMARY

 
This bill effectively amends Initiated Bill 2003, chapter 1 as
approved by the voters at referendum in November 2003, which
allows the operation of slot machines by certain persons who are
licensed to operate commercial harness horse racing tracks.

 
Part A of the bill establishes the Gambling Control Board
within the Department of Public Safety to regulate the operation,
distribution and maintenance of slot machines and the facilities
at which those slot machines are located. The Gambling Control
Board consists of 5 members who serve staggered 3-year terms and
who are appointed by the Governor. The bill maintains the
eligibility criteria for slot machine operators, but establishes
licensing criteria applicable to all potential slot machine
operators, thereby eliminating the initiated bill's automatic
licensing provisions. The bill reverses the liberalization of
harness horse track transfer regulations contained in the
initiated bill. The bill creates a framework through which the
Gambling Control Board will regulate and monitor slot machine
operators, distributors and gambling-related vendors and service
providers.

 
Part A maintains the distribution of the gross income from
slot machines, which is income after payback to players, as
proposed in the initiated bill. However, the bill also allows
the Commissioner of Administration and Financial Services to
establish a "compensation percentage." The compensation
percentage is defined as a percentage of the gross income
necessary to compensate the State for all administrative,


Page 37 of 39 Top of Page Page 39 of 39