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WNIJ's summary of news items around our state.

Video Gaming Reaches New Heights In Illinois

Video gaming machines have been popping up in Illinois bars and restaurants for nearly four years. For the most part, the increase in gaming machines and in revenue across the state has been steady.

Database: Check revenue reports in your community

There are nearly 24,000 video gaming machines in Illinois, and the amount played over the last few years is in the billions of dollars -- with a b. 

Some of the money goes back to the players who win. The rest is split among machine operators, business owners, the state, and the community where the machines are located.

Credit done in collaboration with summer 2016 data visualization course, Department of Computer Science, Northern Illinois University (Vineet Gupta)

Michael Gelatka, president of the Illinois Gaming Machine Operators Association, says he’s been satisfied with how the process has been regulated.

“I think that was the strength of the Illinois model,” he said. “It wasn’t everywhere you can sell lottery. It’s in bars and restaurants.”

That has helped businesses facing closure, he says, by offering a seemingly reliable revenue stream.

“It’s helped to improve local community. Instead of all the money going to a handful of boats in larger communities, this is driving money into local economy,” Gelatka says.

Beyond The Numbers

But there are two sides to every coin, and there are several ways to look at the impact of video gaming — both on paper and in socio-economic terms.

Gelatka says there has been no noticeable change in crime as a result of video gaming.

Not everyone agrees. Anita Bedell is with the Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction Problems.

“There has been embezzlement. There’s been bankruptcy, divorce, and crime – all of the results of video gambling,” Bedell says, “and that will just continue to grow.”

Notice that she calls it video gambling instead of video gaming.

The distinction is important because her group also monitors the state gaming numbers, but she focuses her attention on how much money players have lost.

Credit ILCAAAP
Spreadsheet generated by the Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction Problems using Illinois Gaming Board figures

Bedell’s group tallies the top ten communities by dollars lost by players. Since 2012, they include Springfield, Rockford, Decatur, Bloomington, Champaign, and Peoria.  

Bedell says her group will continue to educate communities which want to add or expand video gaming.

Credit done in collaboration with summer 2016 data visualization course, Department of Computer Science, Northern Illinois University (Kruthi Mangalampalli and Sreekanth Adhikarapu)
Illinois top ten in amount played and number of machines (2012-2016)

Reliable Revenue For Rockford

Consider another perspective: 25% of gaming revenue goes to the state of Illinois while 5% of the revenue from video gaming machines stays in the communities which allow them.

Rockford City Administrator Jim Ryan says the city uses the money from video gaming for its fleet of vehicles.

“We were having to, you know, talk to other municipalities and buy used equipment for ambulances and fire trucks – and it’s very capital-intensive,” he says.

Not any more.

He says video gaming has been a steady revenue stream, bringing in $1.2 million in 2014 and $1.3 million last year. At a time when the state is struggling to put together a budget, reliable revenue can be hard to find.

Ryan says he expects video gaming revenue will continue to increase, but adds that the city has tried to be mindful of how many new licenses are approved.

“We look at areas in terms of poverty and things like that,” Ryan explains, “but, if they’re not going to play in Rockford, they’re going to find a place to play.”

That’s where Robert Olsen, with the Outreach Foundation for Problem and Compulsive Gamblers, sees room for action.

“The Outreach Foundation doesn’t take a stand for or against gambling. It is here to stay,” he acknowledges. “Now, let’s help the people who have a problem with it. That’s all we really want to do.”

Self-Exclusion Program

Olsen says the state’s casinos have self-exclusion programsin which players who struggle with gambling can register to be banned from casinos. He says there is not a similar program in place for the video gaming terminals.

“It has to be addressed by our legislators to allow people who admit that they have a gambling problem, that they are not allowed in these parlors to continue their addiction and destroying their lives over it,” Olsen says.

Credit done in collaboration with summer 2016 data visualization course, Department of Computer Science, Northern Illinois University (Rohit Saraf)

Gelatka says the Illinois Gaming Machine Operators Association has been working with the Illinois Gaming Board "to come up with realistic options for irresponsible gamblers to acknowledge such and for location employees to be better educated about problem gambling and all of the options available to the small percentage of players who find themselves using video gaming for reasons other than as entertainment."

He says his group will continue to support business owners and operators. And he encourages those who like video gaming to make their feelings known.

 “We are always open to a call or a call to your local legislator,” he says, “so that they realize that you are enjoying the new option that you never had before.”

DeKalb City Council Mulls Gaming Limits

A spokesperson for the state gaming board says there have been indications that the growth in video gaming could eventually level off, but says the numbers could reach unseen heights if Chicago ever chooses to opt in.

·         WNIJ reporter Jessie Schlacks contributed to this report

 

Jenna Dooley has spent her professional career in public radio. She is a graduate of Northern Illinois University and the Public Affairs Reporting Program at the University of Illinois - Springfield. She returned to Northern Public Radio in DeKalb after several years hosting Morning Edition at WUIS-FM in Springfield. She is a former "Newsfinder of the Year" from the Illinois Associated Press and recipient of NIU's Donald R. Grubb Journalism Alumni Award. She is an active member of the Illinois News Broadcasters Association and an adjunct instructor at NIU.
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