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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Column: A Bad Bet: State Funds From Sin
Title:US WA: Column: A Bad Bet: State Funds From Sin
Published On:2011-04-02
Source:Seattle Times (WA)
Fetched On:2011-04-04 19:54:48
A BAD BET: STATE FUNDS FROM SIN

Lawmakers in Olympia have been jonesing for money lately. So this
spring they have come up with three big schemes for how to raise some
fresh cash. The three ideas are: drugs, booze and gambling. Kind of
gives new meaning to the phrase "the wages of sin."

"Are you guys trying to be the new Sin City or something?"

On the line from Vegas is Billy Gamble, aka William Thompson, aka the
Scholar of Sin. He teaches for the University of Nevada-Las Vegas,
and he writes on such topics as vice, gaming and how economics is
trumping values in politics these days.

So I figured he'd be perfect to ask about our state Legislature.

Lawmakers in Olympia have been jonesing for money lately. So this
spring they have come up with three big schemes for how to raise some
fresh cash.

The three ideas are: drugs, booze and gambling.

Kind of gives new meaning to the phrase "the wages of sin."

There's the proposal to legalize pot and sell it from the state
liquor stores. There's the idea to open the state to private liquor
sales. And last week, lawmakers from both parties introduced a bill
to bring into the state as many as 8,000 slot machines.

All feature the lure of hundreds of millions of dollars in new
revenue for a state budget that needs a fix.

And if that doesn't work, might as well have some fun, right?

What does it say about our Legislature that this is what they've come
up with, I asked Thompson.

"That they're desperate?" he joked.

Seriously, this is how it's going all over, he says. Politicians in
countless states are being cut off by the feds and feel they have
exhausted all other sources of money -- politically acceptable ones,
anyway. There's a sense that general taxes can't be raised and
too-deep spending cuts may hurt the state, so politicians feel as
hemmed in as a gambler on a losing streak.

"The economic equation is overwhelming," Thompson says. "So they're
casting about, and the standard objections against the sins are being
set aside because of the sheer need for money."

Or at least the chimera of money. I favor legalizing pot -- mostly
because it's such a waste of public resources keeping it illegal --
but the idea of installing the state as the approved dope dealer is a
huge stretch in the other direction.

"Legalize pot for the personal freedom, not for the money," Thompson
says (and I agree).

Likewise, bringing slot machines into the state might help some
cardrooms keep pace with the big Indian casinos (which don't pay
state taxes). But it might not do all that much for the state, Thompson says.

The state's take of the slots likely would be shifted from other
parts of the local economy, not from the Indian casinos, he says. The
retiree playing the slots on Aurora twice a week is more likely to
have spent that money at Wal-Mart, is how Thompson put it. It's
different in Vegas, where gambling draws out-of-state or even
international tourists.

"You'd mostly be hitting up your own seniors, your unemployed, the
people with welfare checks, in order to balance the budget," he said.

Plus, once states go all in with a sin, they tend to become pushers of it.

"You have to promote the sin once you start taxing it," he said. "It
will be 'save a school, play a slot machine.' "

In fact, the slot-machine bill, House Bill 2044, does earmark 50
percent of the slots revenues to K-12 education.

Is this what we're reduced to? People toking, drinking and gambling
are fine, as far as I'm concerned. And I don't blame the politicians
for getting creative -- they are desperate, after all. But there's
got to be a more dependable, broad-based way to pay for the
government we want. Counting on sin to prop up schools or health care
is just another way of chasing a bad bet.

Speaking of which, guess which state is the most in the hole
financially out of all 50? With a deficit, measured as a percentage
of the yearly budget, that is more than twice as large as ours?

Nevada.
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