AUGUSTA, Maine - Maine lawmakers are considering a bill that would expand the number of slot machines non-profit groups like legion halls are allowed to have to three. Gambling Board Director Patrick Fleming told the board that if the proposal becomes a reality, more staff will be needed for oversight.
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"The problem is that, for an inspector, these machines could be anywhere from Kittery to Madawaska," Fleming said. "And if they are only allowing them up to three in organizations, you are talking up to 50 new venues that will have slot machines in them."

Fleming says, under existing law, each slot machine needs to be inspected and regularly audited by board staff. He says existing staff is hard pressed to handle the slot machines located at Maine's two licensed casinos without adding to their workload.

The proposal is far from a done deal. A public hearing on the measure has not yet been scheduled

In a major blow for an expansion of gambling, the Senate majority leader said Monday that a proposal to legalize slot machines outside two Indian casinos is dead for this year.

Senator Bob Duff, a key player who controls the agenda with the Senate president pro tem in the Democratic-dominated Senate, said the proposal will not come to a vote in the chamber.
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"While this will be a difficult budget season, Connecticut's economy continues to recover,'' Duff said Monday. "The unemployment rate is down, and we continue to grow jobs. Former Speaker [Jim] Amann's idea of putting slot machines at off-track betting sites near the Massachusetts border is not the answer, and any expansion of gaming needs to be done in consultation with the tribes.''

Duff added, "With that said, this proposal will not be raised in the Senate.''

Tribes: Plans To Expand Slots Would Invalidate Revenue Deal
Tribes: Plans To Expand Slots Would Invalidate Revenue Deal
Duff's comments came after two spokesmen for the Mashantucket Pequot and Mohegan tribes told The Hartford Courant in interviews last week that the proposal would violate their revenue-sharing compacts with the state.

Under the compacts, the tribes have the exclusive right to operate slot machines in Connecticut. In return for that right, the casinos have agreed to pay 25 percent of their slot revenues to the state under a deal crafted more than 25 years ago by then-Gov. Lowell P. Weicker, Jr.

The issue of slots came up again this year because major competition in the surrounding states has been cutting deeply into the revenues that the state receives from the two casinos. Slot revenues peaked at $430 million in the 2007 fiscal year - before the deep national recession that was prompted by financial failures that included the collapse of the Lehman Brothers investment banking firm and the subsequent major downturn on Wall Street in 2008 and 2009.

Since the peak, slot revenues have fallen to a projected $267 million in the current fiscal year.

But the future is even more bleak as state officials project that the slot revenues will fall further to only $191 million during the 2018 fiscal year - after the $800 million, state-of-the-art MGM Resorts International casino opens just over the Enfield border in Springfield, Massachusetts.

With that competition on the horizon, Amann and some local legislators pushed for a plan to allow slot machines at the off-track betting parlors at the Bradley Teletheatre in Windsor Locks, Sports Haven in New Haven, and Shoreline Star in Bridgeport.

Amann served as House Speaker during the casino heyday, and he returned to the Capitol complex last week as a lobbyist for the former Shoreline Star dog track in Bridgeport that is seeking to gain slots.

Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun Reverse Wagering Trend In December
Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun Reverse Wagering Trend In December
Amann said Monday that he respects Duff's position because he made similar decisions when he served as House majority leader and then as Speaker of the House. But Amann said the battle is not over, and he will continue conversations about the bill because the stakes are high.

"In all due respect to the senator, he paints a rosy picture of the economy, but we are looking at deficits,'' Amann said in an interview. "It's about jobs. It's about revenues. It's about protecting Connecticut revenues.''

Despite Duff's comments, Amann said, "It's premature at this point. There's a lot of interest in the bill. It's a win, win, win for everybody. ... I respect the senator's decision as a leader, but I think he's wrong not to look further into it. ... In Massachusetts, they want to clean our clock.''

Nationwide, about 70 percent of parimutuels have converted to slot machines, including Yonkers Raceway and horse tracks in Florida, Amann said.

A longtime Milford resident, Amann testfied at a public hearing last week that "Milford jai alai was a very vibrant facility'' until competition from the casinos put it "out of business.''

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"the stakes are high" - for Amman and his clients. Expanding gaming within the state will only further weaken the Indian casinos and reduce their employment numbers.
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AT 6:12 PM FEBRUARY 09, 2015
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"This is a fight for the survival of Mohegan Sun, Foxwoods and our parimutuels,'' Amann said. "I don't understand why there isn't more urgency on this.''

Amann told legislators that doing nothing is not an option, saying that at least one of the parimutuel outlets could shut down.

"Over 4,000 jobs are in jeopardy now,'' Amann said, adding that new slots at Yonkers Raceway and Aqueduct raceway near John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City ''have taken away a huge market from Connecticut - 35 percent.''

With major new competition in New York and Rhode Island, some legislators say that Connecticut's casino heyday has passed and is never coming back. At the peak, Mohegan Sun contributed $229 million to the state coffers, while Foxwoods Resort Casino contributed $201 million in the same year.

But by the 2013 fiscal year, the Foxwoods revenue sharing to the state had fallen to only $138.5 million - the lowest total since the 1995 fiscal year when Foxwoods and the casino phenomenon were still in their early years.

According to state statistics, the slot money received by the state grew steadily every single year from the 1993 fiscal year until 2007 - a period of massive growth and profits at Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun.

State Rep. David Alexander, an Enfield Democrat, agreed with Amann on the need for urgency, saying that residents of Enfield and surrounding towns will simply head north on Interstate 91 as soon as the new MGM casino opens in Springfield. Some lawmakers also fear that Springfield will attract concerts that would have been staged in the Nutmeg State.

"The state of Connecticut is in competition,'' said Alexander. "We need to do all we can.''

State Rep. Peggy Sayers, a Windsor Locks Democrat who has been pushing to help the Bradley Teletheater in her hometown, said Connecticut needs to act now.

"We need to be pro-active and get this before the Boston and Springfield casinos are built,'' she said.

State Rep. Stephen Dargan, a West Haven Democrat who has served for more than 20 years as co-chairman of the legislative committee that oversees gambling, said the past three proposals for increased gambling in Connecticut have all failed in the legislature.

First, a plan to legalize the bingo-like keno games was originally signed into law by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy as part of the state budget, but it was rejected the following year due to a lack of support among legislators.

Second, an earlier plan to legalize keno by Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell was dismissed by the General Assembly. Third, a proposal to build a casino in Bridgeport failed in the state Senate in the 1990s under Republican Gov. John G. Rowland.

Despite Duff's comments about the bill being dead, Dargan said he expects the issue will continue to come up.

"I don't get excited. I've been around too long,'' said Dargan, who has served in the legislature since the Weicker administration. "Discussions will continue on this issue as the session continues.''

Saying that it's only February in a session that lasts until early June, Dargan referred to spring training by adding, "Pitchers and catchers haven't even arrived yet. It's early in the season.''

Dargan said the legislature needs move cautiously and make sure that no compacts are broken with the two tribes, which are major employers in southeastern Connecticut. He said that predicting the future for casinos and slot machines can be difficult as competition explodes in neighboring states - leading to the closure of four casinos in Atlantic City, which was once the undisputed kingpin of the industry on the East Coast.

"When or where is the saturation point of gaming dollars and what do we do about it?'' Dargan asked.

Gamblers wagered $24.4 million on slot machines at Presque Isle Downs & Casino during the week of Feb. 9-15.

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The amount returned to them was $21.8 million, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board reported.

The gross revenue -- the amount of gamblers' losses -- was more than $2 million, after subtracting $545,030 in free plays. Of that gross revenue, nearly $1.1 million went to the state and nearly $1 million to the casino.

During a comparable week in 2014, Feb. 10-16, gamblers wagered $30.2 million. The amount returned to them was $26.8 million.

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WATCH: A Toronto woman who missed the first bus to Niagara hit it big on the nickel slot machine Sunday. As Sean O’Shea reports, the huge payoff has made Family Day extra special.
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A Toronto woman who spent $5 on a slot machine in Niagara on Sunday is $1.03 million dollars richer today.

Casilda Pouk, 51, was playing the Mighty Millionaire nickel slot machine when she hit the jackpot. She had barely sat down and had only hit the machine for a third spin when she struck it big.

“It really is wow,” she told Global News in her North York home, surrounded by family.

“My husband can have that car he was dreaming of,” she said with a smile.

Pouk originally intended to go with family to Casino Rama, north of Toronto but bad weather caused a change of heart. She even missed the first casino bus to Niagara.

Armed with about $200 to play, Pouk quickly lost money on other machines. Until she found the lucky nickel slot machine which delivered an enormous payoff.

Pouk came to Canada in 1991 from the Philippines to work as a nanny. After jobs at a convenience store and a grocery chain, she began working as a cashier at McDonald’s on the overnight shift. Pouk still works at the restaurant 15 years later and she plans to return to work this week.

Relatives say Pouk, the youngest of 11 children, generously supports her family in the Philippines, sending back what she could even when money was tight. In light of the windfall, she’s now in a position to help even more. Her family sees the prize as a God-send.

“Maybe God helped her to help more of our family when they need it,” said her sister Maria Angelina Espanola, who said she cried when she heard news of Casilda’s winning spin.

An occasional casino player, Pouk says she may play again. Asked if it’s possible to see another big payoff she responded “you never know.”

Millennials love Las Vegas, but they're far less enamored with the casino world's hyper-profitable lifeblood, slot machines. So to hook young visitors back onto pulling the lever, the kings of the Strip are betting on a new strategy: making gambling look like a video game.
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A state Senate committee in Nevada is considering a bill that would allow casinos to add more skill-based gambling -- like playing Angry Birds, but for cash -- on top of the typical games of chance. And gambling's gamemakers are modeling slots after modern-day pastimes like Facebook poker and free-to-play games, which have won huge audiences outside the casino floor.

"You have as much chance getting a millennial into slot machines as you do getting your grandmother into playing 'Halo,' " said David Chang, chief marketing officer for Gamblit Gaming, which is developing games in what it calls the "emerging interactive entertainment meets gambling space." "Slots today are designed entertainment experiences, but for a completely different demographic, and that's people who grew up with slot machines."

Slots are one of the gambling world's best moneymakers: Big, loud, bright and cheap to run, no dealer or croupier required. They're also cash cows: Slots often offer a 60 percent profit margin, compared with the single-digit margins of traditional table games, a University of Nevada at Las Vegas paper said.

Millennials still enjoy the skill and social play of games like poker and blackjack, casino analysts say. But today's advanced, go-anywhere games on cellphones and social media have made pressing one button while seated at a bank of flashing slot machines seem primitive in comparison, and young gamblers haven't looked back.

Visitors to Vegas are trending younger, with the average age dropping from 50 to 45 since 2009, city data show. But travelers are flocking to Sin City more for the glitzy entertainment -- nightclubs, lounges, trendy restaurants -- than the big wager. The share of Vegas visitors who gambled during their stay fell to 71 percent in 2013, down from 83 percent four years back.

The days of "grand casino openings with people rushing to play the slots” are gone, Nevada's Gaming Control Board chairman A.G. Burnett said, according to the Las Vegas Sun. "The old style of slots simply needs to change. … This means adding skill and social elements to the slot mix."

Gamblit is working with casinos and regulators on concepts that would mash together the vivid play of mobile games with the random chance of slots.

Someone could download and play one of their games, like "Police Pooches vs. Zombie Cats: In Time," on their phones back home, wagering and playing with virtual credits, then switch to playing with real money when they've connected to the WiFi in an area where gambling is legal, like a Vegas casino.

The "real-money gambling platform" could also extend to large touch-screen tabletops, added in casino hot spots like lounges, bars and VIP suites -- wherever a young gambler could walk by and be persuaded to try their luck.

The typical casino "wants somebody to sit down in front of a slot machine and be at that slot machine for hours, interacting with that piece of entertainment for as long as possible. ... Millennials don't do that. They consume multiple streams of entertainment simultaneously," Chang said.

"We don't know when someone is going to want to engage, but we know there’s a very short window for their attention, and we want to maximize our chances of success on a bunch of different channels. ... We know millennials have no moral issues with gambling. They just haven't found products that are designed for them."

A rendering of one of Gamblit's touchscreen gambling tables. (Gamblit)
The challenge for adding skill into slots, the ultimate skill-less game, has always been that a player could get so good that the casino could end up losing out. But Chris LaPorte, who owns a Las Vegas arcade bar and develops casino games, told the Sun there are methods to make sure that, even in skill gaming, the house always comes out on top. "There is definitely a way — my way — for the casino to be happy, just as much as the customer is happy with their experience," he said.

The bad luck of the slots business has run counter to the precipitous rise of digital gaming, especially free-to-play games that make money through in-app purchases and have attracted a wider market than traditional video games. Two of the biggest, "Clash of Clans" and "Game of War: Fire Age," make more than $1 million a day, loot that went toward buying Super Bowl ads.

Some of the biggest gamemakers are taking cues from the mobile-gaming world to get young gamblers back on the casino floor. Bally Technologies, the world's oldest slot-machine maker, said last summer it would pay up to $100 million to buy Dragonplay, a five-year-old Israel-based developer of poker, slots and bingo games playable on Facebook and cellphones.

Others are simply thrashing in the dark. During the Nevada Governor’s Conference on Tourism in 2013, marketing consultant Chuck Underwood suggested executives could get 20-somethings in the door by offering rewards simply for showing up. “It’s what they grew up with," he said. "Everybody got a trophy."