Legislation allowing for a vote on a statewide lottery and the authorization of seven casinos for electronic gaming continued to stall on Thursday, two days after a late-night vote fell one-vote short of advancing.
The constitutional amendment — HB151 – failed to advance out of the Senate by one vote on Tuesday, after it was voted out of the Alabama House. The bill establishes an educational lottery, as well as limited electronic casino gambling at seven facilities spread across Alabama. As proposed, the constitutional amendment would allow for a special election to take place on Aug. 20.
He noted that 45 other states have a lottery. Only Alabama, Utah, Hawaii, Alaska, and Nevada do not.
The PCI said the legislation allows for electronic gaming that “mimics pinball, Skee-Ball, and pool” and are games that target children with no built-in controls.”