Minnesota State Lottery officials are scrambling to craft a last-ditch deal that would stop legislators from slamming shut the lottery's foray into online ticket sales.
Lottery officials have been meeting daily with legislators to broker a compromise that would allow them to continue selling tickets online while prohibiting any new initiatives.
"I am hoping we can we reach some kind of common ground," state lottery director Ed Van Petten said. "I think there is a chance that people will finally look at the facts."
A bipartisan bloc of legislators is upset that lottery officials embarked on the sale of scratch-off lottery tickets online and at gas pumps without their approval. They say it is an unauthorized and dramatic expansion of state-backed gambling, the newest flare-up in a long and divisive battle at the Capitol.
A measure to immediately halt online and gas-pump lottery ticket sales sailed through the Senate in late April and awaits a final vote in the House, where support is strong. The intensifying fury over the issue is drawing a range of powerful lobbyists in the closing days before the final vote.
State Rep. Greg Davids, R-Preston, called the Internet games "online crack."
Rep. Jim Davnie, DFL-Minneapolis, said the lottery is "aggressively" recruiting the next generation of gamblers. "I don't think that is the purpose of government," he said. "I don't think that should be our role."
The venture into online sales is part of the lottery's effort to reach new audiences who are more comfortable with computers and less enamored of conventional paper tickets. Lottery officials contend that online and gas-pump ticket sales are merely marketing measures to help retailers skeptical of the new technology.