Processing Your Payment

Please do not leave this page until complete. This can take a few moments.

December 19, 2014

Gaming panel considers relaxing CORI standard

Massachusetts gaming industry regulators are interested in re-opening the 2011 law that authorized up to three casinos, saying the statute is inconsistent with reforms to criminal records standards.

Gaming Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby said the statute the panel operates under has a "very strict" background check requirement and some believe it is too "rigid" for potential low-level gaming facility employees with criminal records.

"It's made it very difficult to target a lot of the underemployed or unemployed potential employees that the law says we should be targeting," Crosby said this week.

With a new Legislature and a new governor slated to take office in January, the commission will likely propose a "limited, strategic fix" to the gaming law, which allows for up to three casinos and a slots parlor, Crosby said at a Tuesday meeting of an advisory panel to the state gaming commission.

Crosby acknowledged the governor and legislators have been reluctant to re-open debate on the 2011 law, though the casino licensees agree that criminal offender standards, which lawmakers revised in 2010, are strict.

House Speaker Robert DeLeo, one of the architects of the gaming law, said he would be willing to look at making corrections or technical changes requested by the gaming commission. "But as I've said repeatedly, any major changes in terms of what we had provided for, I would not be in favor of that," DeLeo said. "If it's straightening out an inconsistency in the law, then of course we'll address it."

Asked about the criminal offender record issue raised by Crosby, DeLeo added, "I do believe that obviously, that those folks who work in a facility such as a casino, should be held to a higher standard especially, in terms of any record or anything else that they may have. So I am concerned about that, right off the bat. But again, I would take a look to see if there is something we can improve upon."

The gaming commission sent a memo earlier this year to six top lawmakers and the governor, outlining proposed changes to the 2011 gambling law. Of the seven elected officials, four will no longer be in office, including Gov. Deval Patrick, Senate President Therese Murray, Senate Ways and Means chairman Stephen Brewer and Sen. Gale Candaras, the co-chair of the Joint Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies.

The memo included a letter to Crosby from the commission's gaming consultant, New Jersey law firm Michael & Carroll, comparing how other states treat potential employees with criminal offender record information (CORI).

"Based on our experience, and on the above analysis of other jurisdictions, we believe the present statutory standard for the issuance of casino service employee registration is too harsh," the attorneys wrote. "We say this with a full appreciation for the need to strictly control casino operations and the people who staff them."

The gambling law requires the commission to deny permission to people who want to assume "the least sensitive jobs" in a casino if they have a felony or theft or fraud convictions within ten years of their application, the attorneys' letter said.

Sign up for Enews

WBJ Web Partners

0 Comments

Order a PDF