For the last month or so, the topic of intrastate online poker regulation has become a real hot subject in the poker industry, with numerous states expressing interest in taking matters into their own hands and trying to legalize poker for their residents, instead of waiting for a country-wide federal decision to be made. Now, it has been confirmed that Florida introduced its own intrastate online poker bill, having filed it on Tuesday.
The bill, titled HB 1441, The Internet Poker Consumer Protection and Revenue Generation Act of 2010, is designed to “create a framework for the state to regulate Internet poker sites that can ensure consumer protections and additional revenue to the state by authorizing, implementing, and creating a licensing and regulatory structure and system of Internet poker.”
The bill was filed by Florida Rep. Joseph Abruzzo, with reports claming that approx. 900,000 Florida residents gamble online and that intrastate regulation could bring $200 million a year to Florida. Currently the state is facing a $3.2 billion deficit and plans on charging each online poker site a $500,000 fee plus 20% of its monthly gross receipts if the bill is passed. The bill states that all online players under this bill would have to be 21-years-old and physically inside Florida’s borders in order to play.
The bill states that “Internet poker hub operator must register players and establish player accounts prior to play” and that accounts “may be established in person, by mail or telephone, or by any electronic means.”
If approved, the bill would go into effect on July 1st, 2010. The poker community is still waiting for one state to be successful with its intrastate bill, as it would make it much easier for other states to feed off that success and get their own regulations pushed through. The question still remains, however, if poker players are going to be happened with the greatly diminished number of players that will be available for them to play against, since intrastate laws require that online players be forced to play against only others from within the same state.





