By Steve Haner

A Virginia economist has turned up hard data showing which neighborhoods contained the highest concentration of the gaming devices called โskill gamesโ by some and โneighborhood slot machinesโ by others, when last they were legal. The result will not surprise you.
Fletcher Mangum of Mangum Economics in Henrico County was hired by a lobbying group called Virginians Against Neighborhood Slot Machines, which released his report Thursday as part of their effort to stop bills to authorize the gaming devices.ย This news release accompanied the report.
Being an economist, he also reported that the money lost on those machines would have produced major economic benefits if spent on useful things.
Probably true. But that assumes the money is not simply plowed into some other form of legalized gambling in this state, which includes the Virginia Lottery, sports betting, casinos, charity bingo and betting on horses at tracks and in parimutuel betting parlors.
Mangum also cites national statistics that show the convenience store sector is booming around the U.S. and the industry might not be on life support without this extra revenue. They are the most likely venue for these machines, along with truck stops and watering holes.
A bill to allow the machines again passed the 2024 General Assembly but was vetoed by Governor Glenn Youngkin (R). The advocacy coalition formed then and includes the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, Family Foundation, a liberal group Freedom Virginia, and a bunch of competing gambling interests. In other words, the classic strange bedfellows of legislative life.
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