Senate to
Forward Slots Proposal; House Begins Debate
By MIKE TORRALBA
Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS - The Senate moved closer
Wednesday to legalizing slot machine gambling in Maryland, while
a House committee heard familiar testimony from both sides of
the debate.
"If there's something new that we
haven't heard before, we'd like you to start with that," quipped
House Ways and Means Committee Chairwoman Sheila Hixson,
D-Montgomery, at the start of the hearing.
Last year, Hixson's committee buried
the slots bill.
Slots have found stronger support in
the Senate, which is scheduled to vote on a revised measure
today. Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr., D-Calvert, is
a powerful proponent of slot machine approval, and the Senate
has backed slots measures two consecutive years.
Gov. Robert Ehrlich, who introduced
this year's bill, says slots are urgently needed to repair the
state's aging public schools, and his measure would yield $100
million each year for school construction. Slots revenue also
would fund the Geographic Cost of Education Index, which helps
compensate school districts with higher operating costs and is
part of the Thornton law for improving public schools.
Maryland's horse racing industry also
could be saved with slots, Ehrlich said.
The governor did not attend the Ways
and Means hearing, as he did last week's Senate Budget and
Taxation Committee meeting.
Other administration heavy-hitters made
the case for slots: four Cabinet secretaries, including Budget
Secretary James "Chip" DiPaula Jr., as well as State Schools
Superintendent Nancy Grasmick.
DiPaula told lawmakers that legalizing
slots is vital to Maryland.
"The question is not 'Are Marylanders
going to play slot machines?'" he said. "It's only 'Where?'"
Also supporting the bill were labor
union members and racing industry workers and executives.
Slots opponents last week refused to
attend last week's Senate committee hearing, saying the
committee had become a rubber stamp for the bills. But they were
at the House committee hearing.
Baltimore businessman Noel Levy was one
of them.
"We don't need slots because you can
blow your money on lottery tickets with the same odds of
winning," Levy said, drawing applause from slots opponents.
The Ways and Means Committee is
expected to vote on the bill within a week.
The Senate's main change to the
governor's measure was to eliminate mention of specific
locations for slots parlors, leaving that to a committee. But
some senators tried Wednesday to return specificity to the bill.
Sen. George Della Jr., D-Baltimore
City, introduced four different amendments -- all of which
failed by wide margins. He said he was concerned the owners of
Pimlico Race Course, home to one of the nation's premiere
thoroughbred racing events, are planning to move the track.
Introducing a final amendment, Della said Maryland might as well
legalize casino gambling.
"Let's not bottom-fish here. Let's go
for the whole thing," Della said on the Senate floor. "Let's
generate some real bucks for our education system ... and let's
do it with casino gambling." |