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The Minnesota Legislature is debating the largest expansion in gambling in 30 years. Much of the focus has been on sports gambling, but there is another important gambling issue in play — one that has brought virtual slot machines to every corner of the state.
A small but extremely important provision regarding these slot machines is contained in HF 1938, the House Omnibus Tax bill. This small provision reaffirms the intent of the 2012 Legislature that developed a compromise on the use of electronic pulltabs to finance the construction of U.S. Bank Stadium. Without this language contained in the 2023 Omnibus Tax bill, an unelected board (the Minnesota Gambling Control Board) will be empowered to ignore regulations established by the Legislature and future legislatures.
During the debate to construct a new football stadium in 2012, stadium supporters proposed what many believed to be a new and expanded form of gambling: an electronic pulltab. Money derived from this new form of gambling was proposed as a method to help fund the new football stadium in downtown Minneapolis.
Legislators, Native American Indian tribes and our anti-gambling coalition wanted assurance that this new form of gambling, the electronic pulltab, would not resemble nor "mimic" a slot machine. We received that assurance, and it was written into the authorizing legislation that allowed, for the first time in Minnesota, e-pulltabs. The beneficiary of these e-pulltabs would be the stadium and, later, various charities that sponsor such games in many of the state's bars and restaurants.
Over the past 10 years, gambling interests have ignored the will of the 2012 Legislature and designed e-pulltabs that very closely resemble slot machines, including what's called an "open-all" feature. This feature allows faster play and unveils the pulltab results with a single tap of a button — just like a casino's slot machine. Indeed, the fast-paced action of e-pulltabs is so similar to popular slot machine action that, according to Allied Charities of Minnesota, "every e-pulltab game in the state" now features this "open-all" provision.
Because this "open-all" slot machine feature was explicitly prohibited by the 2012 Legislature, this issue was adjudicated and a decision was issued in February 2023 by the Minnesota Court of Appeals. The 21-page ruling decreed that the "open-all" provision proved that the e-pulltabs didn't "closely conform to the paper versions" and were a clear violation of legislative intent.