On
Thursday, the Senate’s Committee on Taxes heard several bills related to
charitable gambling. One piece of legislation, SF 414, was authored by Senator
Justin Eichorn (R-Grand Rapids). That bill would exempt donations from the
“combined receipts” gambling tax allowing for more charitable gambling proceeds
to be invested into their communities and
organizations.
“Charitable gambling is often thought of
a fun activity that is meant to serve a good cause, but when people play and
donate, they don’t typically think to track where exactly all their dollars go,”
said Senator Justin Eichorn. “My legislation will make sure that more donors
dollars go where intended, lowering the amount of taxes that these
organizations have to pay, and allowing proceeds to best serve their intent of helping local communities and causes.”
It has been reported that charitable
gaming will remit over $95 million in gambling taxes and fees to the state in
2019 fiscal year. That is more than double the $40 million of just six years
ago. Per the 2018 Gambling Control Board Organization Annual Report, 340
charities, or 30% of the charitable gambling organizations in Minnesota, pay
more to the state than they do to support their communities and missions.
Further compounding the issue is that gambling organizations that don’t give
back to their communities, like Jackpot, FanDuel and Draft Kings, pay the
9.8% business rate while their charitable
counterparts can see their effective tax rate rise to as high as 72%.