Wednesday, October 19, 2011
 
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Lawmakers: Quinn's gambling plan won't pass

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[October 19, 2011]  CHICAGO (AP) -- Gov. Pat Quinn on Monday laid out what kind of gambling expansion bill he could accept, and it doesn't include slot machines at Illinois racetracks, a position sponsors say could imperil their push to add five new casinos in the state, including one in Chicago.

"If this were in bill form, it could not pass," Democratic Rep. Lou Lang of Skokie said of Quinn's suggestions.

Lawmakers in May passed a bill, with strong support from Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, that added five new casinos and slot machines at racetracks. But, they haven't sent it to Quinn because they fear his veto and had hoped to try to address his concerns. Quinn spent the summer talking to proponents and opponents of the bill, and Monday marked his first detailed comments about the pending legislation -- input lawmakers had been anxious to get.

Quinn urged lawmakers to craft a new bill and not pursue the original one they passed, because he said he would veto it if it's sent to him.

"Unless these principles are followed, there's no way I will approve a bill," Quinn said at a Chicago news conference.

Despite Quinn's concerns about slots at racetracks, he is amenable to allowing five new casinos -- one each in Chicago, southern Cook County, Rockford, Danville and Lake County. Quinn said, though, that he wants the Illinois Gaming Board to choose the location in Lake County rather than award a casino to the town of Park City, as lawmakers wanted. Quinn's proposal also rejected slot machines at Chicago's O'Hare and Midway airports, something lawmakers approved.

Lang said not allowing slots at the tracks could scuttle overall gambling expansion efforts because about a dozen lawmakers voted for the bill only because it included that provision.

Slot machines are something track officials contend they need to survive, to be competitive with other states, because the added revenue would help fatten winners' purses. The governor said not allowing slots at tracks is a way to avoid over-saturation in the market and hurting other casinos.

Republican Rep. Richard Morthland, of Cordova, voted for slot machines at tracks only to reinstate racing at the Quad City Downs in East Moline. He said he won't support gambling expansion legislation without it.

"Say bye-bye to my vote," he said.

Lawmakers don't have a lot of wiggle room when it comes to votes on gambling expansion. The initial gambling bill passed with few votes to spare, getting 65 in the House and 30 in the Senate. To override any potential veto action by Quinn, lawmakers will need a supermajority -- 71 in the House and 36 in the Senate.

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Quinn denied that a list of suggestions that will be unpalatable to some lawmakers was his backhanded way to kill gambling expansion, an idea he has never seemed too thrilled about.

Top Democratic lawmakers are figuring out what to do now that Quinn has made his suggestions public.

"We will be evaluating the governor's framework in light of what is passable by both chambers of the General Assembly. We look forward to developing the appropriate compromise with the governor and members of the House," said Rikeesha Phelon, a spokeswoman for Senate President John Cullerton.

Emanuel's office said they were anxious to work with Quinn. Emanuel lobbied lawmakers to pass the bill and put pressure on Quinn to sign it, saying the city of Chicago needs the money it would generate.

But Quinn didn't seem too keen on compromise.

"The bottom line is I'm the goalie, I'm the final word, and we're not going to have a willy-nilly gambling bill in Illinois that is not protecting integrity, that is way too big and excessive," Quinn said.

Democratic Sen. Terry Link, of Waukegan, another prime sponsor, said he was working on follow-up legislation that aims to keep slots at tracks but addresses some of Quinn's other concerns. Quinn's other suggestions included tightening up regulatory matters and banning campaign contributions from gaming licensees and casino managers.

Link said they can negotiate a bill if Quinn is willing to sit down to do it.

"We are not a mile apart; we might be half- or a quarter-mile apart," Link said.

[Associated Press; By DEANNA BELLANDI]

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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