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Kent
02-23-2008, 09:46 PM
Ohio Lottery hoping to have video Keno game ready by July 1 (http://www.talkohio.net/forum/../blog/?p=9)

CLEVELAND (AP) –
Proposed rules for the Ohio Lottery’s video Keno game won approval Friday, although some lottery commissioners were reluctant to be supportive.
The lottery hopes the new game will be ready by July 1 at certain restaurants and taverns with appropriate liquor licenses.
Unlike other online video games, Keno will occur every four minutes. Players will be able to wager on up to 10 numbers and try to match them to a random 20 numbers a computer selects from a field of 1-to-80.
Plans call for the Keno matrix to be displayed on a flat-panel monitor at each participating lottery location. Wagers can be as little as $1. A $10 play that matches 10 numbers can win $100,000.
The Ohio Lottery Commission voted 5-3 to approve the proposed rules, which now go to a legislative committee for review. Gov. Ted Strickland and lottery officials hope Keno eventually will improve lottery profit by $73 million a year.
Lottery commission member Jerry Seaman, of Delaware County, voted no and expressed concern about the game’s intent. “I’m not saying it is a casino game, but it seems heading in that direction,” he said.
Strickland in January announced the plan to expand the lottery’s scope with the online video Keno in bars and other venues statewide.
The governor said he distinguishes the proposed new games from video gambling machines outlawed last year because they will be “state-monitored, state-controlled and state-regulated.” Ohioans have voted against non-lottery gambling proposals three times.
Lottery commission member Erskine Cade of Cleveland, who voted for the Keno rules, said he and others on the commission were caught unaware by Strickland’s Keno announcement. Cade was critical of Ohio Lottery Executive Director Michael Dolan for not communicating those plans.
Dolan apologized and said he informed the commission once he found out Strickland wanted to promptly go public with the concept. “I wasn’t surprised by that,” Dolan said about the criticism. “I’m actually heartened by the amount of interest the commissioners showed.” He also discounted any concern that Keno might be viewed as a casino game. “We do these games everyday. The only real difference here is the nature of the draw. We want to be sure it is a system with integrity and reliability.” He said its development is modeled after lottery Keno in place in other states. He said Ohio’s research has mostly focused on Keno in Michigan.
He said players will be able to pick up printed game instructions and betting odds at Keno locations.
Lottery profit goes to Ohio education. The Ohio Department of Education is required to submit budget cuts, which has motivated starting up Keno.

Kent
06-29-2008, 06:15 PM
Well here is my question with concern of having Keno in Ohio. Why was it aligned with Michigan, and not Oregon?
The game is the game, but what I'm getting at is why hasn't the voters had a say in where the funds/profit will go? Do we not care?
If this is an interest, you really need to see how the profits in Oregon are used, and what the voters did.
Now what is it they did? They voted out state sales tax, across the board!
That's right, not state sales tax. The state gets the profits and in turn no freaking sales tax.
Now what about the schools? Give me a break, do they really see the funds it was said they would when the lottery started? Hell no they aren't, and as usual, us, we, the people, let it go and don't say a damn thing, but let someone talk about bringing gambling hee, holy crap!!

Lighten up people, people gamble in Ohio illegally every minute of every day. Prostitution is alive and well in Ohio and so is the bookie business, hell, we're jsut now realizing that these advance pay places are nothing more than legalized bookies and have taken some action, way to late, but some.

So let's get the keno going and then get it on the ballet to vote out sales tax. Let's make gambling legal and tax it. It's gong to develop jobs and that is something we need all over the state.
I don't even care if they make prostitution legal, go for it and make it legal and tax them like of home businesses, and make them get and stay as clean as possible and fine them heavily if they don't have the right paperwork on them all the time.

It's going to happen and really, isn't there a lot of other true crimes that we can have law enforcement dealing with?