Maryland wants to get out of owning slot machines
After a nearly a decade of losing money, Maryland wants out of the business of owning slot machines once and for all.
The state has reaped billions from legalized gambling, but the slot machines cost as much as $30,000 apiece, plus $2,000 a year in maintenance.
The expense far exceeded what policymakers envisioned when they launched the gambling program, and they have slowly made deals with casinos to transfer ownership of the slot machines in exchange for tax breaks.
The four biggest of the state’s six casinos own their slot machines now; two do not. The state pays $14 million a year to provide machines for Rocky Gap Casino Resort and the Casino at Ocean Downs.
Legislation pending before the General Assembly would give those two casinos a 10 percent break on their tax bills if they agree to buy the machines by the start of 2018 — a deal that would cost the state’s Education Trust Fund about $10 million a year. The state would also pay a $1.6 million penalty for breaking its contract with slot machine companies two years early.
The Hogan administration, which suggested the deal, told legislative analysts that the state would save money over the long run by avoiding that expense. The casinos do not pay the state for use of the machines.
If the casinos don’t buy the machines by 2020, they’d be forced to do so and receive just a 6 percent tax cut instead — the same deal received by MGM International at National Harbor, Horseshoe Casino in Baltimore and Hollywood Casino in Perryville. Maryland Live Casino in Anne Arundel County gets an 8 percent tax break for owning its machines.
The legislation has not faced vocal opposition.
Del. Frank Turner, a Howard County Democrat who helped oversee the legislation that set up Maryland’s casino industry, said the state offered to buy the machines in the first place to make the state’s gambling tax rate palatable to the companies.