Current:Home > MyYoungkin amends Virginia ‘skill games’ legislation, takes other action on final batch of bills -Wealth Harmony Labs
Youngkin amends Virginia ‘skill games’ legislation, takes other action on final batch of bills
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:37:06
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has proposed a rewrite of legislation intended to legalize and tax skill games, adding stiff new restrictions that industry supporters argued would still amount to a de facto ban of the slots-like gambling machines hosted by small businesses.
The governor put forward amendments late Monday that overhaul a measure the General Assembly sent him in March, calling for a higher 35% tax rate on the receipts from the machines, and a provision allowing localities to prohibit them. The proposed changes also add placement restrictions on the arcade-style games, banning them within about a half-mile of churches, day cares and houses of worship, and seemingly excluding them in many metro areas that already host a gambling establishment such as a casino.
While skill-games supporters vowed to fight the proposed changes, Youngkin spokesman Christian Martinez said in a statement “the added protections” the governor is seeking address “serious concerns with the regulatory structure, tax rates, the number of machines, impact on the Virginia Lottery and broader public safety implications” of the legislation.
The skill-games bill was one of dozens Youngkin took action on late Monday, as he ran up against a deadline to act on measures sent to his desk during the regular session that ended March 9.
The governor, a Republican, vetoed measures that would have set up a prescription drug affordability board and allowed all localities to hold a referendum on raising sales taxes to help fund school construction. He amended a Democratic priority measure that aimed to protect the right to access contraception. And he signed off on measures expanding the state’s revenge porn law and establishing 18 as the minimum age for marriage.
Of the 1,046 bills sent to him this year by the Democratic-controlled General Assembly, he signed a total of 777, amended 116 — including the state budget — and vetoed 153, his office said. Youngkin has vetoed more bills in this year alone than any of his seven immediate predecessors did over their entire four-year terms, according to an accounting by the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project.
Lawmakers will reconvene in Richmond next week to consider his amendments. They could also attempt to override his vetoes, though Democrats would need Republicans to join with them to reach the necessary 2/3 vote threshold.
The skill games debate is a rare issue that has not fallen along partisan lines. A coalition formed to push for legalization this year centered the voices of the small-business owners who hosted the machines in establishments like gas stations and restaurants and shared in their profits before a ban first passed in 2020 took effect.
Rich Kelly, a restaurant owner and the president of the coalition, said in a statement Monday that Youngkin’s amendments were “devastating” and would effectively ban the machines by prohibiting them within within 35 miles of any casino, racetrack or gambling “satellite facility.” Virginia has casinos in Bristol, Danville and Portsmouth, and allows wagers on live horse races and another form of slots-like betting in historical horse race wagering parlors around the state.
Youngkin’s proposed 35% tax rate would also make skill games the highest taxed good in Virginia, Kelly said.
For years, policymakers in Virginia and around the country have been grappling with how to regulate the machines, which look similar to slot machines but involve an element of skill, their manufacturers say. Virginia lawmakers first voted to ban skill games in 2020 as they were opening the door to casinos.
Operators got a reprieve after then-Gov. Ralph Northam asked lawmakers to delay the ban by a year and instead tax the machines and use the revenue for COVID-19 relief. The ban took effect in July 2021 but was challenged in court and put on hold for a while amid that fight.
Bill sponsor Aaron Rouse, a Democratic senator from Virginia Beach, said in a statement that he would work to block Youngkin’s amendments and “do everything possible to make the interests of small businesses – not casinos or massive out-of-state corporations – a priority.”
A coalition opposing skill game legalization that counts the state’s casinos among its members said in a statement that it was still reviewing the amendments but it appreciated the governor’s “more thoughtful approach” to a measure that would have “led to an unprecedented expansion of gambling in Virginia.”
If both legislative chambers agree to Youngkin’s entire set of amendments when they meet next week, the bill as amended would become law. If lawmakers only accept certain amendments, the bill would be returned to Youngkin, who could either sign or veto it.
In other action late Monday, Youngkin approved a pair of mental health reform bills that stemmed from the death of Irvo Otieno, a 28-year-old Black man whose death last year while in custody at a state mental hospital sparked outrage and led to both legal charges and a wrongful death settlement.
Youngkin also sought amendments to two pieces of legislation that touch on organizations related to the Confederacy in a way that means lawmakers would have to approve them again next year before they could take effect. One of the bills would would have ended a tax perk currently enjoyed by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and the other would have ended the issuance of special license plates honoring Robert E. Lee and the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
veryGood! (73938)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- What to know about the debut of Trump's $399 golden, high-top sneakers
- Read the full decision in Trump's New York civil fraud case
- Prince William Attends 2024 BAFTA Film Awards Solo Amid Kate Middleton's Recovery
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Student-run dance marathon raises $16.9 million in pediatric cancer funds
- Colorado university mourns loss of two people found fatally shot in dorm; investigation ongoing
- Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Presidents Day 2024? What to know
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Alexey Navalny, fierce critic of Vladimir Putin, dies in a Russian penal colony, officials say
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- US senators to submit resolution condemning democratic backsliding in Hungary
- Major New England airports to make tens of millions of dollars in improvements
- Chrishell Stause Debuts Dramatic Haircut at 2024 People's Choice Awards
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Some video game actors are letting AI clone their voices. They just don’t want it to replace them
- Sylvester Stallone hired Navy SEALs to train daughters before they moved to New York City
- Joe Manganiello Makes Caitlin O'Connor Romance Instagram Official 7 Months After Sofía Vergara Breakup
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Premier Lacrosse League Championship Series offers glimpse at Olympic lacrosse format
Sophia Culpo and Alix Earle Avoid Each Other At the 2024 People’s Choice Awards
Megan Fox Channels Jennifer's Body in Goth-Glam Look at People's Choice Awards 2024
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
'Sounded like a bomb': Ann Arbor house explosion injures 1, blast plume seen for miles
Baylor Bears retire Brittney Griner's No. 42 jersey in emotional ceremony for ex-star
Convicted killer who fled from a Phoenix-area halfway house is back in custody 4 days later