Intrastate internet poker in California to be heard by Senate committee
An informal hearing titled "Examining the Public Policy and Fiscal Implications Related to the Authorization of Intrastate Internet Poker in California" will be held by California's Senate Governmental Organization Committee on Tuesday, February 9, 2010 at the State Capital (room 4203) in Sacramento from 9:30 a.m- 5:30 p.m. The hearing's agenda includes statements from Tribal Government leaders, card clubs, players, California Gambling Control Commission, internet service providers, and problem gambling/anti-gambling organizations. Public comment is slated last on the agenda where the people affected most will have its say to the Senate committee. By John Stathis, San Francisco Blackjack Examiner February 6, 2010
An informal hearing titled "Examining the Public Policy and Fiscal
Implications Related to the Authorization of Intrastate Internet Poker
in California" will be held by California's Senate Governmental
Organization Committee on Tuesday, February 9, 2010 at the State
Capital (room 4203) in Sacramento from 9:30 a.m- 5:30 p.m. The
hearing's agenda includes statements from Tribal Government leaders,
card clubs, players, California Gambling Control Commission, internet
service providers, and problem gambling/anti-gambling organizations.
Public comment is slated last on the agenda where the people affected
most will have its say to the Senate committee.
Poker, as in
blackjack, provides an advantage to players who depend on mathematics
to earn a profit and those who ignore the math will lose in the
long-run. The State Senate of California is exploring the feasibility
of revenue from the multi-billion dollar industry that is lost to
offshore online casinos. The Morongo Band of Mission Indians is
scheduled to make a pitch for the exclusive right to operate intrastate
internet poker in California. The tribes in California are loosely
enforced by the California Gambling Control Commission and disputes are
enforced by California Tribal Gaming agencies which is to say that the tribes are the fox guarding the henhouse. On September 11, 2009 the Kahnawake Gaming Commission of
the Mohawk Tribe near Montreal, Canada admitted cheating occurred at
Ultimate Bet from 6/03-12/07. A tribe in California running internet
poker can cheat players right under the California Gambling
Control Commission's noses and that is disturbing.
Many don't
desire a casino in their homes while it can be argued taxing online
poker will help California out of its budget woes. California can cut
out the middleman and run internet poker as it does with horse racing
now. The morality of the issue will begin in Sacramento February 9
where the politics of "making sausage" will rear its ugly head.
