EDITORIAL: No Illinois lawmaker should take a dime from the video gambling industry

Voters deserve to have public policy set by legislators who aren’t getting cash from one side of the debate.

SHARE EDITORIAL: No Illinois lawmaker should take a dime from the video gambling industry
Antonio Ruiz and Mike Sanduta play video gaming machines in 2014 during a break at work. Trattoria Peppino was the first restaurant in Elmwood Park to be issued a video gaming license.

Video gaming machines in 2014 at Trattoria Peppino, the first restaurant in Elmwood Park to be issued a video gaming license.

Sun-Times file photo

Gee, whiz, you folks in the video gambling business, could you hire us to be sales reps?

The money looks excellent, and we promise to write glowing editorials about video gambling and to fight any effort to tax it more.

Is that quid pro quo too close for comfort? Well, then, we have kids. Maybe you could hire one of our kids and hope nobody notices. And we’ll write glowing editorials about video gambling.

We’re joking, of course. But that, in a way, is exactly what’s happening right now in Springfield and at the county level. Elected officials are working for the video gambling industry — pulling in good money — and then, as legislators, participating in the big decisions about how to tax and regulate that very same industry.

Our worry meter is dialing up this week as big legislation involving the video gambling industry reaches a head in Springfield. Lawmakers are trying to slap together a last-minute package deal, Senate Bill 516, that would include legalized sports betting, more casinos and higher taxes on video gambling. The Legislature’s spring session is scheduled to end on Friday.

As a story in Tuesday’s Chicago Sun-Times by Jason Grotto of ProPublica Illinois and Dan Mihalopoulos of WBEZ Chicago spells out, financial links between lawmakers and the video gambling industry can pose the worst possible conflicts of interest, and it is for this very reason that a lot of folks opposed video gambling for years. The danger of dark influences has always been great.

With that in mind, allow us to make five points:

  • State Senate Minority Leader Bill Brady, R-Bloomington, should not be working for the video gambling industry in any capacity. It’s not enough for him to say he will always act in the public interest, even as he takes a cut from video slot and poker machines. Boy Scout pledges do not reassure us.
  • Senate Assistant Majority Leader Antonio Munoz’s son should not be working for the industry. Junior’s hiring by a business looking for friends in Springfield looks entirely suspect. This is a kid who left a city job — his dad is a Chicago Democrat — in which he repeatedly was suspended for failing to even show up. If the kid insists on keeping the job, maybe Dad should quit.
  • No elected official — we’re looking at you, state Sen. Tom Cullerton and Cook County Commissioners Deborah Sims and Peter Silvestri — should be allowed to have a direct or indirect financial interest in video gambling. The history of gambling in this state and country is just too shady.
Nymber_of_video_game_terminals.jpg

SOURCE: Illinois Gaming Board

  • Gov. J.B. Pritzker is going down the right road in seeking to further tax video gambling to raise an additional $90 million to help fund a much-needed $41.5 billion capital bill. The state’s roads and bridges are crumbling, and Illinois’ tax rate on video gambling is among the lowest in the country. The industry’s lobbyists, bouncing all over Springfield, are doing their best to block the tax hike even as they seek to rake in more money for the industry by trying to increase minimum bets from $2 to $4 and increase the maximum number of gambling machines at each location from five to six. Did we mention that Illinois already has more video gambling machines outside of casinos than any other state?
  • Video gambling laws in Illinois favor the industry, not the people of Illinois or taxpayers. The state does not even set aside money in licensing and administrative fees to cover the costs of policing the industry, which is what the fees were intended to do.

Who’s looking out for you when elected officials, even if only a handful, are directly or indirectly on the payroll of the video gaming industry?

This is an industry that pumped $230,000 into state and local elections last year.

No elected official — or even an adored offspring — should have one hand in the pocket of video gaming in Illinois.

SOURCE: Illinois Gaming Board

SOURCE: Illinois Gaming Board

RELATED

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com.

The Latest
Matt Mullady is known as a Kankakee River expert and former guide, but he has a very important artistic side, too.
When push comes to shove, what the vast majority really want is something like what happened in Congress last week — bipartisan cooperation and a functioning government.
Chicago Realtors said the settlement over broker commissions may not have an immediate impact, but homebuyers and sellers have been asking questions about what it will mean for them.
Chicago’s climate lawsuit won’t curb greenhouse gas emissions or curb the effects of climate change. Innovation and smart public policies are what is needed.
Reader still hopes to make the relationship work as she watches her man fall for someone else under her own roof.