A Pennsylvania legislative committee has passed a purely symbolic resolution urging Congress to scrap the federal ban on sports betting.
On Tuesday, the House Gaming Oversight Committee overwhelmingly approved HR619, which calls for an end to the 1992 PASPA sports betting prohibition and allowing states like Pennsylvania to regulate betting through its licensed casino operations. The resolution now heads for the House floor for another purely symbolic vote.
Pennsylvania is one of a growing number of states that would like to bring about PASPA’s demise, but only New Jersey has really taken this fight seriously. New Jersey’s legal champions will argue the state’s case (again) before the Third Circuit Court of Appeals next Wednesday (17).
PASPA restricts single-game sports betting to Nevada, while three other states – Delaware, Montana and Oregon – are limited to offering parlay wagers or pool betting. Delaware has also made legal runs at overturning PASPA so it can offer single-game wagers, but federal courts rejected the state’s last effort in 2009, after which the state effectively gave up.