Politics & Government
House, Senate Prepare For Votes On Compromise Sports Wagering Legislation
Proposal builds on controversial gambling law adopted in 2007.

By Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector
April 28, 2022
TOPEKA — House and Senate negotiators may have removed stumbling blocks Thursday that threatened to derail legislation creating the opportunity for state or tribal casinos to operate in-person and online sports wagering in Kansas.
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The bill awaiting votes in both chambers included an unusual provision funneling 80% of state revenue from legal gambling on sports into a Kansas Department of Commerce fund that could be used to support establishment of a professional sports facility in Kansas. This section of Senate Bill 84 was intended to express support for movement of the Kansas City Chiefs across the state line from Kansas City, Missouri.
The state-owned casinos in Dodge City, Pittsburg, Mulvane and Kansas City, Kansas — established under control of the Kansas Lottery — would be permitted to operate sports books. Tribal casinos would be able to negotiate with state officials to engage in sports wagering.
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Rep. John Barker, R-Abilene, and Sen. Robert Olson, R-Olathe, said the legislation would first be put up to a vote in the House. The House previously approved a sports wagering bill with the minimum number of votes required, but the Senate didn’t proceed last month to a vote on that bill.
“I’ve got guarantees this will run in the Senate,” Olson said.
Negotiators addressed a key obstacle by deleting a provision in the bill that contemplated Wichita businessman Phil Ruffin would compensate owners of Kansas Star Casino in Mulvane if a court determined initiating a system of betting on historic horse races at a Ruffin facility in Sedgwick County violated existing gaming agreements.
Under an earlier version of the sports betting bill, Ruffin would have made a payment of approximately $70 million to Kansas Star Casino to cover violations of existing agreements and Ruffin would be reimbursed through gaming revenues.
Ruffin’s representatives contend the financial arrangement was unnecessary because betting on historic horse races was legal under parimutuel law in Kansas, because these devices weren’t equivalent to slot machines.
Other states offering this form of horse-race gambling rely on video of thousands of past races to enable gamblers to place bets on the outcome.
Under the pending legislation, the Kansas Lottery and the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission would share oversight of sports wagering. Each casino could operate up to three online sports wagering platforms. Betters on the casinos’ platforms would have to be physically located in Kansas to submit a wager.
The casinos could enter marketing agreements with professional sports franchises, including placement of kiosks at a team’s facility to allow fans to place bets. The casinos could enter marketing agreements with 50 businesses and entities, with one-fifth of the total reserved for nonprofit organizations. Sports gamblers involved in state-sanctioned betting would have to be 21 years old.
The bill would enable federally recognized Native American tribes to submit a request to the Kansas governor and Kansas Lottery director to operate a sports book “under the substantially same terms and conditions” applied to the state’s four casinos.
This story was originally published by Kansas Reflector For more stories from the Kansas Reflector visit Kansas Reflector.