New mobile sports gambling legislation expected this week in North Carolina House - WRAL News

More than 150 bills have been filed in the North Carolina House this session, but bill drafters and lawmakers haven't yet completed work on legislation to legalize sports betting on electronic and mobile devices.

Betting on sports is legal in North Carolina at three tribal casinos. Virginia and Tennessee are among the two dozen states to legalize mobile sports gambling. Lawmakers in Georgia, Texas, Missouri and Vermont, among other states, are currently debating legalization.

Gov. Roy Cooper, an avid Carolina Hurricanes fan and attendee at Duke-North Carolina men's basketball games in Durham and New Orleans in the last year, has consistently backed sports gambling in recent years.

He told reporters last week that he expected the legislation to pass.

"We're working with trying to make sure we get good legislation that is fair to the taxpayers, but also recognizes something that is going on anyway," Cooper told reporters. "So we might as well get benefit for our schools and for our state out of it, so we'll see how it goes."
Proposed renderings for a potential remodel of Raleigh's PNC Arena have included a sportsbook or sports lounge. North Carolina's professional teams, including the Hurricanes, Panthers and Hornets, are in favor of legalizing sports gambling and have pushed for their own licenses in the new legislation.

"It's meaningful to our tenants that we have this," said Philip Isley, chairman of the Centennial Authority, which owns PNC Arena. "There's no big push on my part other than if you do this, the PNC Arena area, the Carter-Finley area is a really good place for this to have the first one in the Triangle."

The area's college teams, including NC State which plays men's basketball at PNC Arena, have not publicly declared their support or opposition to mobile sports gambling. Betting on college sports was stripped out of the bill by an amendment last year on the House floor. But supporters plan to allow betting on college sports in their new legislation this year.

"We've had months now to really have a chance to sit down, talk, see how this all fits into an overall economic development scheme," said House Democratic leader Robert Reives, who voted against the legislation last year and has not committed to voting for it this session.

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