Current:Home > ScamsBill would ban sports betting ads during games and forbid bets on college athletes-InfoLens
Bill would ban sports betting ads during games and forbid bets on college athletes
View Date:2024-12-23 11:36:42
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — The federal government would ban in-game advertising and bets on college athletes under a sports betting regulation bill proposed by two northeastern legislators.
Rep. Paul Tonko of New York and Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut introduced the bill Thursday. It’s designed to address what they say are the harmful effects of the rapid expansion of legal sports betting in the U.S. since 2018.
The measure also would forbid the use of credit cards to fund online gambling accounts.
The Democratic legislators say sports betting, now legal in 38 states plus the District of Columbia, has increased gambling addiction and other problems. Every moment of every game is a chance to gamble, Tonko said.
“That’s resulted in a frightening rise in gambling disorder, which has in turn enacted a horrific toll on individuals, many of whom have lost their home, job, marriage, and their lives,” Tonko said.
Blumenthal called the measure a matter of public health.
“It is a matter of stopping addiction, saving lives, and making sure that young people particularly are protected against exploitation,” Blumenthal said.
The legislation already faces strong opposition from the gambling industry, which has said for years that it should self-regulate sports betting advertising to avoid the federal government imposing standards on it.
The American Gaming Association, the gambling industry’s national trade association, said sports books already operate under government supervision, contribute billions of dollars in state taxes, and offer consumers protections that don’t exist with illegal gambling operations.
“Six years into legal sports betting, introducing heavy-handed federal prohibitions is a slap in the face to state legislatures and gaming regulators who have dedicated countless time and resources to developing thoughtful frameworks unique to their jurisdictions,” it said in a statement.
The industry has adopted sports betting practices that include some limits on advertising, but critics say they don’t go far enough.
Harry Levant, director of gambling policy at the Public Health Advocacy Institute at Northeastern University School of Law, compared gambling to drugs and alcohol in terms of potential addictiveness.
“With every other addictive product or substance, the government regulates the advertising, promotion, distribution, and consumption of the product,” he said. “With gambling, sadly, the exact opposite is occurring.”
The National Council on Problem Gambling says “gambling problems may increase as sports gambling grows explosively” across America.
The bill would prohibit operators from accepting more than five deposits from a customer over a 24-hour period, and check on a customer’s ability to afford depositing more than $1,000 in 24 hours or $10,000 in a month.
The bill also would ban “prop” bets on the performance of college or amateur athletes, such as how many passing yards a quarterback will rack up during a game.
And it would prohibit the use of artificial intelligence to track a customer’s gambling habits or to create gambling products including highly specific “micro-bets,” which are based on scenarios as narrow as the speed of the next pitch in a baseball game.
___
Follow Wayne Parry on X at www.twitter.com/WayneParryAC
veryGood! (65974)
Related
- Jeep slashes 2025 Grand Cherokee prices
- Beyoncé and Jay-Z's Attorney Slams Piers Morgan Over Airing Diddy Comparisons in Interview
- Will Hurricane Milton hit Mar-a-Lago? What we know about storm's path and Trump's estate
- Do you really want an AI gadget?
- Texas now tops in SEC? Miami in trouble? Five overreactions to college football Week 11
- Chiefs WR Rashee Rice is likely out for season after successful knee surgery
- Horoscopes Today, October 9, 2024
- Opinion: Let's hope New York Liberty vs. Minnesota Lynx WNBA Finals goes all five games.
- FBI offers up to $25,000 reward for information about suspect behind Northwest ballot box fires
- Riley Keough felt a duty to finish Lisa Marie Presley’s book on Elvis, grief, addiction and love
Ranking
- Is Veterans Day a federal holiday? Here's what to know for November 11
- In remote mountain communities cut off by Helene, communities look to the skies for aid
- DONKOLO: Bitcoin Leading a New Era of Digital Assets
- Jury selection begins in corruption trial of longest-serving legislative leader in US history
- Get Your Home Holiday-Ready & Decluttered With These Storage Solutions Starting at $14
- RHOSLC's Whitney Rose Shares Update on Daughter Bobbie, 14, Amid ICU Hospitalization
- Largest water utility company in the US says it was targeted by a cyberattack
- COGGIE: Ethereum Smart Contracts Leading the Transformative Power of Future Finance
Recommendation
-
NFL coaches diversity report 2024: Gains at head coach, setbacks at offensive coordinator
-
Early in-person voting begins in Arizona, drawing visits from the presidential campaigns
-
New York Jets next head coach odds: Lions OC Ben Johnson leading candidate
-
Rudy Giuliani’s son says dad gifted him 4 World Series rings sought by Georgia election workers
-
Disney Store's Black Friday Sale Just Started: Save an Extra 20% When You Shop Early
-
Accelerate Your Savings with $5.94 Deals for Car Lovers Before Amazon Prime Day 2024 Ends in a Few Hours
-
Escaped cattle walk on to highway, sparking 3 car crashes and 25 animal deaths in North Dakota
-
Unmissable Prime Day Makeup Deals With Prices You Can’t Afford to Skip: Too Faced, Urban Decay & More