HB 763

  • Virginia House Bill
  • 2022 Regular Session
  • Introduced in House Jan 11, 2022
  • Passed House Feb 15, 2022
  • Passed Senate Mar 02, 2022
  • Became Law Apr 27, 2022

Charitable gaming; electronic gaming is restricted to social organizations, etc.

Abstract

Charitable gaming; social organizations and social quarters; electronic gaming. Provides that the conduct of electronic gaming, defined in the bill, is restricted to qualified social organizations on their premises or other qualified organizations that lease the premises of a qualified social organization pursuant to the guidelines set out in the bill. The bill eliminates the exceptions related to the sale of instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards or the conduct of bingo games in current law for veterans and fraternal organizations. The bill provides that such qualified organizations shall be subject to two prohibitions that, under current law, apply to all other organizations, as defined in relevant law: (i) they are prohibited from selling instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards or conducting bingo games outside of their home locality and (ii) they are prohibited from offering such games at an establishment that has been granted a license by the Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority unless they hold such license. The bill provides that, with the exception of social organizations qualified under § 501(c)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code, all gross receipts attributable to electronic gaming shall be reported to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (the Department) and shall be subject to application, audit, and administration fees. Under the provisions of the bill, social organizations that are exempt from taxation pursuant to § 501(c)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code are permitted to conduct electronic gaming until such organizations reach $200,000 in electronic gaming adjusted gross receipts, defined in the bill, during any 12-month period. Such organizations are required to report their adjusted gross receipts to the Department and are subject to application, audit, and administration fees based on their adjusted gross receipts. The bill provides that application fees shall be paid to the Department by the qualified organization and that audit fees may be paid to the Department either by the qualified organization or the electronic gaming manufacturer that provides electronic gaming devices to such organization. The bill imposes on any person or organization conducting charitable gaming without a permit a civil penalty of not less than $25,000 and not more than $50,000 per incident. Finally, the bill sets out via a second enactment provisions that require qualified organizations permitted to conduct electronic gaming to report and pay all required fees to the Department based on such organization's electronic gaming adjusted gross receipts. The provisions of the first enactment of the bill requiring the use of a qualified organization's electronic gaming gross receipts for the purpose of reporting and payment of required fees has an expiration date of July 1, 2024. The provisions of the second enactment of the bill requiring the use of a qualified organization's electronic gaming adjusted gross receipts for the purpose of reporting and payment of required fees has a delayed effective date of July 1, 2024. This bill is identical to SB 403.

Charitable gaming; electronic gaming in social quarters; penalty; civil penalty. Provides that electronic gaming, defined in the bill as charitable gaming conducted primarily by use of an electronic device, is restricted to social organizations and is limited to such organizations' social quarters. The bill provides that all receipts attributable to electronic gaming shall be reported to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and shall be subject to application, audit, and administration fees. The bill eliminates exceptions in current law for veterans and fraternal organizations. Without the exceptions, such organizations shall be subject to two prohibitions that, under current law, apply to all other organizations: (i) they are prohibited from offering bingo, instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards outside of their home locality and (ii) they are prohibited from offering such games at a Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control-licensed location unless they hold the license. Finally, the bill imposes on any person or organization conducting charitable gaming without a permit, a civil penalty of not less than $25,000 and not more than $50,000 per incident and an additional criminal penalty of a Class 1 misdemeanor for any person who conducts or participates in electronic gaming without being permitted to do so.

Charitable gaming; social organizations and social quarters; electronic gaming. Provides that the conduct of electronic gaming, defined in the bill, is restricted to qualified social organizations on their premises or other qualified organizations that lease the premises of a qualified social organization pursuant to the guidelines set out in the bill. The bill eliminates the exceptions related to the sale of instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards or the conduct of bingo games in current law for veterans and fraternal organizations. The bill provides that such qualified organizations shall be subject to two prohibitions that, under current law, apply to all other organizations, as defined in relevant law: (i) they are prohibited from selling instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards or conducting bingo games outside of their home locality and (ii) they are prohibited from offering such games at an establishment that has been granted a license by the Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority unless they hold such license. The bill provides that all adjusted gross receipts attributable to electronic gaming shall be reported to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (the Department) and shall be subject to application, audit, and administration fees. The bill reduces the allowable audit and administration fee prescribed by the Department from 1.25 percent to 0.50 percent of gross receipts or electronic gaming adjusted gross receipts, as appropriate. The bill also provides that application fees shall be paid to the Department by the qualified organization and that audit fees may be paid to the Department either by the qualified organization or the electronic gaming manufacturer that provides electronic gaming devices to such organization. The bill imposes on any person or organization conducting charitable gaming without a permit a civil penalty of not less than $25,000 and not more than $50,000 per incident. This bill is identical to SB 403.

Charitable gaming. Provides that electronic gaming, defined in the bill as charitable gaming conducted primarily by use of an electronic device, is restricted to social organizations and is limited to such organizations' social quarters. The bill provides that all receipts attributable to electronic gaming shall be reported to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and shall be subject to application, audit, and administration fees. The bill eliminates exceptions in current law for veterans and fraternal organizations. Without the exceptions, such organizations shall be subject to two prohibitions that, under current law, apply to all other organizations: (i) they are prohibited from offering bingo, instant bingo, pull tabs, or seal cards outside of their home locality and (ii) they are prohibited from offering such games at a Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control-licensed location unless they hold the license.

Bill Sponsors (1)

Votes


Actions


Apr 27, 2022

House

Placed on Calendar

House

Enacted, Chapter 767 (effective 7/1/22)

Senate

Signed by President as reenrolled

House

Signed by Speaker as reenrolled

House

Reenrolled bill text (HB763ER2)

House

Reenrolled

Office of the Governor

Governor's recommendation adopted

Senate

Senate concurred in Governor's recommendation (37-Y 0-N 3-A)

House

VOTE: Adoption (54-Y 45-N)

House

House concurred in Governor's recommendation (54-Y 45-N)

Apr 13, 2022

House

Impact statement from VCSC (HB763H3)

Apr 11, 2022

House

Governor's recommendation received by House

House

Governor's substitute printed 22108174D-H3

Apr 03, 2022

House

Impact statement from DPB (HB763ER)

Mar 22, 2022

House

Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 22, 2022

House

Impact statement from VCSC (HB763H2)

Office of the Governor

Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 11, 2022

House

Signed by Speaker

Mar 21, 2022

Senate

Signed by President

House

Enrolled

Mar 11, 2022

House

Conference substitute printed 22107744D-H2

House

VOTE: Adoption (61-Y 35-N)

House

Conference report agreed to by House (61-Y 35-N)

Senate

Conference report agreed to by Senate (37-Y 0-N 3-A)

Virginia General Assembly

Amended by conference committee

Mar 02, 2022

Senate

Conferees appointed by Senate

Senate

Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N)

Senate

Read third time

Senate

Reading of substitute waived

Senate

Committee substitute agreed to 22107033D-S1

Senate

Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute HB763S1

Senate

Passed Senate with substitute (40-Y 0-N)

House

Senate substitute rejected by House 22107033D-S1 (0-Y 99-N)

House

VOTE: Rejected (0-Y 99-N)

Senate

Senate insisted on substitute (39-Y 0-N)

Senate

Senate requested conference committee

House

House acceded to request

House

Conferees appointed by House

Mar 01, 2022

House

Impact statement from DPB (HB763S1)

Senate

Reported from Finance and Appropriations (14-Y 0-N)

Feb 23, 2022

Senate

Rereferred to Finance and Appropriations

Senate

Committee substitute printed 22107033D-S1

Senate

Reported from General Laws and Technology with substitute (15-Y 0-N)

Feb 18, 2022

House

Impact statement from DPB (HB763H1)

Feb 16, 2022

Senate

Constitutional reading dispensed

Senate

Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology

Feb 15, 2022

House

Read third time and passed House (73-Y 26-N)

House

VOTE: Passage (73-Y 26-N)

Feb 14, 2022

House

Engrossed by House - committee substitute HB763H1

House

Committee substitute agreed to 22105618D-H1

House

Read second time

Feb 13, 2022

House

Read first time

Feb 11, 2022

House

Reported from Appropriations (16-Y 2-N)

Feb 07, 2022

House

Impact statement from VCSC (HB763H1)

Feb 04, 2022

House

Assigned App. sub: Commerce Agriculture & Natural Resources

Feb 03, 2022

House

Reported from General Laws with substitute (19-Y 2-N)

House

Referred to Committee on Appropriations

House

Committee substitute printed 22105618D-H1

House

House committee, floor amendments and substitutes offered

Feb 01, 2022

House

Subcommittee recommends referring to Committee on Appropriations

House

Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute (6-Y 2-N)

House

House subcommittee amendments and substitutes offered

Jan 31, 2022

House

Impact statement from DPB (HB763)

Jan 28, 2022

House

Impact statement from VCSC (HB763)

Jan 26, 2022

House

Assigned GL sub: Subcommittee #3

Jan 11, 2022

House

Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22104079D

House

Referred to Committee on General Laws

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
Committee substitute printed 22107033D-S1 PDF HTML
Conference substitute printed 22107744D-H2 PDF HTML
HB763ER PDF HTML
Governor's substitute printed 22108174D-H3 PDF HTML
HB763ER2 PDF HTML
CHAP0767 PDF HTML

Related Documents

Document Format
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FER122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FH3160.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FH2160.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FS1122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FH1122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763FH1160.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763F122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB763F160.PDF PDF
Amendment: HB763AG HTML
Amendment: HB763AC HTML

Sources

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