Minnesota can wipe out what is now a multibillion-dollar black market on sports betting and transform it into legal, regulated industry that would benefit tribes — including poorer ones — and protect consumers while also generating funds for youth sports in disadvantaged areas.
While there are many details to be worked out, the positives outweigh the negatives enough that the state should take this opportunity.
Much has happened to upend the gambling landscape in recent years. In 2018 the U.S. Supreme Court, in a landmark ruling, struck down a federal law that had long prohibited most states from legalizing college and pro sports betting.
Since then, states have practically trampled one another moving in on what once was the province of bookies, offshore sportsbooks and the gambling mecca of Nevada. More than 30 states now offer some form of sports betting, including every state bordering Minnesota. And Canada.
Minnesota's lack of a legal sportsbook has done little to tamp down demand. At a hearing earlier this week, state Rep. Zack Stephenson, who chairs the Commerce Committee, noted that the black market on sports betting in this state rakes in an estimated $2 billion a year — all without regulation, taxes, limits or consumer protections.
That should change. While this Editorial Board recognizes the problems associated with compulsive gambling, there is also the reality that illegal sports betting continues apace. It is time to put up some guardrails for those who want to bet on the outcome of college and pro games and who will find a way, whether it's through offshore betting or just slipping across the state line.
This year there seems to be fresh momentum for such a shift. Stephenson, DFL-Coon Rapids, has done an impressive amount of legwork in crafting a bill. He has visited each of the state's 11 tribes in turn, talked to problem-gambling experts and traveled to Iowa to see how its sports betting works. He and Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington, who has done years of work on this issue, have joined forces to build a bipartisan coalition that just might get the job done.
HF 778 would extend tribal exclusivity to sports betting for what Stephenson said would be the "biggest [legal] expansion of gambling in Minnesota in 40 years."