Players of progressive slot machines may see bigger jackpots in the future thanks to some companies' desire to compete with large lottery payouts in other states.
The three-member Nevada Gaming Control Board conducted a workshop Wednesday on a petition by IGT and Bally Technology to change regulations that aim at get more players to spend their money on the progressive machines.

The proposed amended regulation would allow a Nevada company with a network of progressive machines to tie the Nevada progressive machines into the slots owned by the company in other states where gambling is legal.

If the regulation is adopted by the Gaming Commission, a company with progressive machines in Nevada would have to apply to state regulators to test the system and ensure it operates properly.

Dan Reaser, attorney for the two companies, explained that the jackpot increases in Nevada with each wager, and the larger pool of players would result in higher jackpots. Reaser said the jackpots would be the same in each state but would rise faster with more play.

But Senior Deputy Attorney General John Michela, representing the control board, said he believes Nevada law does not permit this type of new regulation.

Reaser told the board at its workshop that the commission has wide authority to approve the regulation, and Board Chairman A.G. Burnett said he disagreed with the opinion of the Attorney General’s Office.

“I don’t think it would be illegal,” Burnett said, referring to the suggested regulation change.

Board member Terry Johnson also said the law gives the commission a broad grant of authority.

The board did not take a vote and passed the issue on to the Nevada Gaming Commission to make a final decision about whether to adopt the proposed regulation change.

Commenting on the legal question, Burnett said there are three attorneys and one former state senator on the commission who could make a decision at the commission's Oct. 21 meeting in Las Vegas.

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Station Casinos Executive Vice President Kevin Kelley has resigned “to pursue other professional opportunities,” according to a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“The company expresses its gratitude to Mr. Kelley for his valuable service to the company,” the Oct. 3 filing says.

Kelley’s exit follows a three-decade career in the gaming industry that included jobs ranging from valet attendant to chief operating officer with three companies on two continents.

An attendee of UNLV’s hotel school, Kelley, 56, worked at Station through the 90s in various executive roles before joining the Hard Rock in 2003. He moved to Las Vegas Sands in 2007, where he served as senior vice president of the gaming giant’s budding Macau operations.

He rejoined Station in January 2008 to run the local operator’s day-to-day business. Kelley helped lead the company during its struggle through Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

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The Nevada Gaming Commission met Thursday in Las Vegas.

The issue: Five companies with applications for interactive gaming licenses needed deadline extensions because of a backlog of reviews of their systems for online poker play. Regulations impose a six-month limitation on previously approved licenses.

The vote: 5-0 in one consent vote

What it means: Two companies are operating live online poker sites — Station Casinos’ Ultimate Poker and Caesars Interactive’s World Series of Poker.

Five other companies have systems in the pipeline that were closing in on approval deadlines.

Extended to April were license applications for Las Vegas-based Boyd Interactive Gaming, a subsidiary of Boyd Gaming; GNLV Corp, operated by Golden Nugget; MGM Resorts Online, a subsidiary of MGM Resorts International; Z4Poker LLC, doing business as Z4Gaming; and Reno-based PNK LLC, doing business as M1 Gaming Reno though the Boomtown Reno Truckstop.

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CARSON CITY — The state Gaming Control Board has accused a Las Vegas slot machine route company of operating 10 slot machines at a bar without a license.
The three-count complaint filed Thursday asks that a fine of up to $30,000 be imposed and disciplinary action be taken against the license of Golden Route Operations.

The Nevada Gaming Commission would make the final decision.

According to the complaint, Golden Route paid $20,552 over a period of time to the owner of the Las Vegas bar from slot machine revenue. Neither had a state license to operate slots at the bar, according to the complaint.

The complaint, drafted by Deputy Attorney General Edward Magaw, said Golden Route never notified the board of the slot agreement.

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There's a new Benjamin in town, and the casino companies were ready for him.

For years, Las Vegas' gaming companies had been preparing for the Oct. 8 debut of a new $100 bill. In advance of its arrival, resorts and equipment manufacturers spent thousands of hours making sure every slot machine and money-taking device would accept them without a hitch.

It worked. Bosses at the biggest gaming companies say the transition so far has been smooth.

David Kubajak was among the first to find out about the new $100 bill.

As senior director of operations at JCM Global, which supplies more than 75 percent of the country's 850,000 slot machine bill validators, Kubajak got word from the U.S. Treasury Department about five years ago that Benjamin Franklin was getting a makeover.

The U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing relies on industry experts such as Kubajak for feedback on bill design. The Federal Reserve wants to make sure its design is secure and difficult to counterfeit.

About three years before the government planned to release the bills, officials sent Kubajak a design concept to review.

The agency is sensitive to JCM's needs. The company deals mostly with $100 bills and partners with some of the world's largest gaming companies, including IGT and Caesars Entertainment. Updating software can takes months.

In return, Kubajak's team signed multiple security agreements promising to keep their lips sealed about the new $100. Most JCM employees were prohibited from seeing the bills, and the Bureau of Engraving conducted monthly audits to make sure no information had leaked.

“It really is a top-secret, well-controlled process,” Kubajak said.

Once a final design was approved, the feds sent Kubajak bills for testing.

In February, a postman dropped off an average-looking package to JCM’s Las Vegas office. Kubajak was out, so Tom Nieman, vice president of global marketing, opened it. Inside the box, he found 1,000 crisp new $100 bills.

“I thought: ‘Geez, what is David getting into?’” Nieman said.

Nieman didn't know they were worthless.The bills lacked serial numbers so they weren't legal tender, but they were authentic enough that JCM could run them through bill validators to make sure their software recognized the new design.

Each updated bill includes a gold ink well and bell you can feel with your fingers. A 3-D strip occupies the lower-right corner and changes from green to gold when turned.

There also are covert, secret features that those in the know can't disclose.

“I am prohibited from discussing those because of the security agreements I’m under,” Kubajak said.

Almost every casino game, with the exception of most table games, requires a bill validator that can recognize $1 bills and three designs of $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100 bills dating to 1953.

U.S. currency never expires. If you put a $1 bill in a shoebox under your bed, it still will be valid 40 years from now.

Casinos call JCM all the time asking whether bills from the 1960s still work.

“Of course it’s OK,” Kubajak said. “It’s still valid U.S. currency.”

Although older bills eventually will be destroyed by the Federal Reserve and replaced with new ones, casinos aren't responsible for separating old bills from new ones.

Gaming companies upgraded validators in their slot machines about three months before the new bill's release. Most casino operators have contracts that include software upgrades for new bills, so the work came at no additional cost, Kubajak said.

Updating a slot machine is usually as simple as plugging a USB drive into it and pressing a button to upload the data. Each upgrade takes 45 seconds to a minute.

“You don’t need to be a rocket scientist,” said Mike Gatten, vice president of slot operations at MGM Resorts International's Aria. Gatten's team had to update 1,900 machines.

Casino employees also had to be trained on what the new currency looks like and how to detect counterfeits.

So far, there haven’t been many problems with the validators, Kubajak said.

That doesn't mean Kubajak can rest easy. More bill changes are coming down the pike.
The bills lacked serial numbers so they weren't legal tender, but they were authentic enough that JCM could run them through bill validators to make sure their software recognized the new design.

Each updated bill includes a gold ink well and bell you can feel with your fingers. A 3-D strip occupies the lower-right corner and changes from green to gold when turned.

There also are covert, secret features that those in the know can't disclose.

“I am prohibited from discussing those because of the security agreements I’m under,” Kubajak said.

Almost every casino game, with the exception of most table games, requires a bill validator that can recognize $1 bills and three designs of $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100 bills dating to 1953.

U.S. currency never expires. If you put a $1 bill in a shoebox under your bed, it still will be valid 40 years from now.

Casinos call JCM all the time asking whether bills from the 1960s still work.

“Of course it’s OK,” Kubajak said. “It’s still valid U.S. currency.”

Although older bills eventually will be destroyed by the Federal Reserve and replaced with new ones, casinos aren't responsible for separating old bills from new ones.

Gaming companies upgraded validators in their slot machines about three months before the new bill's release. Most casino operators have contracts that include software upgrades for new bills, so the work came at no additional cost, Kubajak said.

Updating a slot machine is usually as simple as plugging a USB drive into it and pressing a button to upload the data. Each upgrade takes 45 seconds to a minute.

“You don’t need to be a rocket scientist,” said Mike Gatten, vice president of slot operations at MGM Resorts International's Aria. Gatten's team had to update 1,900 machines.

Casino employees also had to be trained on what the new currency looks like and how to detect counterfeits.

So far, there haven’t been many problems with the validators, Kubajak said.

That doesn't mean Kubajak can rest easy. More bill changes are coming down the pike.

Kubajak already has information about new bills that will debut five years from now.

“We’re already working on the future,” he said.

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CARSON CITY — A casino in Pahrump has agreed to pay a $5,500 fine to the state Gaming Commission for failing to register its bartenders as gaming employees.The state Gaming Control Board filed the two-count complaint Monday against Stagestop Casino, owned by Shawn P. Jones.

Filed with the complaint was a stipulation signed by Jones on Monday to pay the fine and concede the violation. The stipulation must be approved by the Gaming Commission.

The complaint said an investigation started in June showed that seven of nine bartenders were not properly registered as gaming employees. It said Holmes had failed since October 2010 to submit reports on newly hired employees.

Holmes admitted to state agents he had not been tracking employees for several years, according to the complaint.

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