Why the defeats of Propositions 26 and 27 are still wins for gambling

VC Star
 
Why the defeats of Propositions 26 and 27 are still wins for gambling
Super Slots

You can’t miss the brand-new casino on Highway 99 in the Sacramento suburb of Elk Grove. It’s the size of a Costco, with bright blue signs above the entrances, proclaiming, “Sky’s the Limit!”

That might seem like mere marketing, a sunny pun on the casino’s name, Sky River. But it describes the reality of gambling across California today: there are few limits on the action.

Back in 2000, when California voters approved casino gambling for Indian tribes, we were told that gambling here would be governed by strict limits. Only certain games would be permitted in California. Sports gambling and Vegas-style gaming would stay in Vegas. And tribal casinos wouldn’t show up in our big cities and suburbs. They’d be limited to Indian lands, in less populated regions.

2022 has made clear that we were fools to believe any of that.

Sky River’s opening is just one example of gambling’s unstoppable expansion across our state.

Tribes aren’t in fact limited to previously owned lands; they can buy new land so that they can build bigger, more accessible casinos. Sky River sits on land acquired by the Wilton Rancheria tribe through a federal trust process.

Today gambling is everywhere. California now has 81 Indian casinos, four privately operated race tracks, 20,000-plus stores selling lottery tickets, and 72 cardrooms, which are pushing for their own expansion.

Gambling money now fuels our politics, and casino ads dominate the airwaves. This fall, the Bay Area radio station, KGO-AM, wiped out its news and talk shows and relaunched as a sports gambling station, The Spread.

This year, the scale of gambling’s cultural reach became apparent through competing measures to secure sports gambling monopolies. Proposition 26, a ballot initiative, sponsored by tribes with big casinos, seeks a tribal monopoly on sports wagers, while also permitting roulette and dice games at tribal casinos. Proposition 27, sponsored by online gambling companies, seeks similar power over sports gambling for DraftKings and Fan Duel, while also allowing those firms to save on taxes.

Both measures trail in the polls and should lose. But these propositions aren’t defeats for gambling expansion. The more than $440 million spent on these campaigns — doubling the previous California record for campaign spending — is a show of force, serving notice that the gaming industry will eventually spend whatever it takes to expand.

The campaign ads double as normalizers of, sports gambling and advertisements that reach those too young to gamble legally. My three young sons, confronted with constant Prop. 26 and 27 ads on YouTube and sites with games for kids, have been asking me all kinds of questions about gambling.

This is not your father’s weekly bet. Online sports wagering isn’t putting a few bucks on the Rams game; it is an immersive, addictive environment in which you can bet throughout the game, compiling huge losses in seconds. The average gambling debt for male addicts exceeds $50,000.

It’s unclear how serious the problem is here; the state has produced little data on gambling’s size and impacts. What is clear, from visiting Sky River, is just how seductive 21st-century gambling can be.

On a Tuesday morning, half the tables were in use, and dozens of people sat in front of larger and colorful screens, playing various games. The 12-restaurant food court, offering sushi to street tacos, was opening up. At the bar, customers sipped drinks as they gambled on computer terminals.

Sky River’s opening has been celebrated in Elk Grove, which wants the visitors and the tax revenues; and by Wilton Rancheria, which fought for decades to restore its tribal status and to acquire land.

With the casino in place, the tribe should have a brighter future. Sky River is the closest casino to the State Capitol and to the south Bay Area. And the timing is perfect. So much ore gambling is coming to California that even the sky won’t be the limit.

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.