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Public
Employee Press Union testifies OTB
revenue distribution is a losing bet
In a push to save the citys Off-Track Betting
Corp., Local 2021 President Leonard Allen testified Dec. 4 before the City Council
Finance Committee, calling for a change in OTBs distributionformula.
The
council scheduled the hearing in response to Mayor Michael Bloombergs recent
comments about shutting down OTB by June 30 if nothing is done to allow the Big
Apple to retain a greater share of the OTB purse.
OTB takes in $1 billion
in bets and produces $130 million in profits annually. It is the backbone of the
racing industry in New York. Local 2021 represents 1,400 clerks, who are responsible
for the success of the betting parlors. The citys 68 OTB parlors take in
40 percent of the wagers made statewide. But Albany siphons off 70 percent of
OTBs gross take, which, the union argues, leaves very little money for OTB
to pay the city as required by law. OTB has not paid the city since 2004. The
current payment formula is based on OTBs gross revenues. The formula
by which OTBs revenues are distributed must be changed to net revenues,
Allen said.
Shuttering OTB is like cutting off our noses to spite
our faces. Betting on horses will not disappear; it will just find other, less
attractive venues. Instead, what needs to be done is to fix the distribution formula
so that OTB keeps more of what it earns, said Allen, who chairs DC 37s
Political Action Committee.
Besides the 1,400 unionized clerks at OTB,
the racing industry employs nearly 40,000 people at racetracks, in food services,
and on more than a thousand horse farms across New York State; all depend on the
revenue stream OTB generates.
If OTB were eliminated, most of these
bets would disappear and so would the revenue we provide to support all those
jobs, Allen said.
Allen explained that harness race tracks statewide
have rebounded by using revenues generated by video lottery terminals. The New
York Racing Association, which was granted permission to operate 4,500 of these
terminals at Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens, has failed to do so. This inaction
has cost the racing industry tens of millions of dollars in lost revenues,
Allen said.
A fair and equitable solution must be found to make both
OTB and the city whole, said DC 37 Political Director Wanda Williams, who
also spoke at the hearing.
We need the state Legislature to take
action and provide the city with its fair share of the revenues OTB generates
by changing the current revenue distribution formula, she said. It
is a losing gamble to continue operations under the current formula, which denies
the city its fair share, threatens the operations of OTB and potentially means
the loss of jobs. DSW | |