Charity bingo operators in Sacramento lost a major round in court last week when a three-judge panel overturned a lower court injunction that would have allowed them to stay in business.
While the case concerns operations in the Sacramento
area, it has statewide implications. Several large
gaming tribes have claimed that these operations violate
the law and that by allowing them, the state was not
living up to the gaming compacts signed with tribes.
A year ago, the United Auburn Indian Tribe, which operates
the large Thunder Valley Casino near Sacramento, sent
a complaint letter to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
and attorney general Jerry Brown threatening to withhold
payments to the state called for in their gaming compact
if the bingo operations continued.
Under California law and the provisions of the gaming
compacts, California charities are allowed a type of
gaming known as “remote caller bingo.” Numerous charities in the greater Sacramento area
have been operating machines they say fit that description
because they pitted multiple players in a bingo game
against each other, without a “single player” option. The tribes argued that the machines were essentially
slot machines or video poker machines in terms of their
user experience.
Last year, Senator Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, successfully carried a bill, SB 1369, to shut down these type of machines. United Cerebral
Palsy of Greater Sacramento and Video Gaming Technologies,
Inc.—the company which makes most of the bingo machines
in question—filed suit, claiming SB 1369 violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). In June, a U.S. District Court judge in Sacramento,
John Mendes, granted a preliminary injunction that
allowed the bingo operators to stay in business.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco
heard the case on March 10 and issued their ruling March 27. The court found that SB 1369 “unambiguously” banned these machines types. The ruling also said
that the machines went beyond “reasonable modifications” that would allow them protection under the ADA.
“The Appeals Court judges are sending a clear message
to the District judge,” said Allison Harvey, executive director of the California
Tribal Business Alliance, of which United Auburn is
a member. “It’s just a shame that we had to take this much effort
to stop what are so obviously illegal slot machines.”
The ADA claim for the machines may have been somewhat
novel. According to Doug Bergman, president of United
Cerebral Palsy of Greater Sacramento, the legal issue
was around disabled people being able to play bingo
on a level playing field with everyone else. Bingo,
as it is now played in retirement communities and elsewhere,
often involves players tracking half a dozen cards
at once, with a new number called every 10 seconds—something disabled people have a problem doing without
the assistance of a bingo machine.
“I’ve got clients in my hall that cannot play paper bingo,” Bergman said. But he added, “It really gets down to the support these bingo machines
were providing for these community services.”
That support comes out to $300,000 a year for his group, Bergman said. The new ruling
means they will likely have to stop providing access
to the Saddle Pals program in Orangevale, which offers
horseback riding therapy to about 60 people with cerebral palsy, spina bifida, mental retardation
and other conditions.
This is far less than the $7 million a year his group gets from the state. But
the state money mostly only covers their basic operations,
he said. They haven’t gotten an adjustment since 2003, suffered a three percent cut in March 1, and will likely be subject to a further seven percent
cut on June 1. Meanwhile, revenues from other charity operations,
like their thrift store and car donation program, are
also falling.
“Now we’re going to find something else to replace that, and
we’re running out of options of what ‘something else’ is,” Bergman said. “It’s not the state of California.”
The case now heads back to Judge Mendes, who will have
the option of issuing another preliminary injunction.
Bergman said that his group will be meeting with the
attorney, John Goodman, this week and next to determine
what their next legal action will be, if any. Without
a further injunction, the remaining machines must be
out April 11.
The Business Alliance’s Harvey said the Appeals Court ruling was so clear
that she would be extremely surprised if Bergman tried
to stop the removal of the machines again. She went
on to claim to characterize charity bingo as big-time gambling operations that directly competed with
tribal casinos.
“Last year alone they took in $54 million [in Sacramento County],” Harvey said. “This is not small time.”
Of that money, she said only eight percent made it
to the charities, according to figures from the Sacramento
County Sheriff's Dept.
Harvey went on to note that SB 1369 allowed for charity bingo parlors to get mitigation
payments if they took the machines out by Jan. 1 of this year. Only one of the 15 bingo parlors in the area that got cease and desist
letters from the Attorney General’s office last year did so, she said.
“Now they’re going to lose the machine and they’re not eligible for any assistance under the terms
of the bill,” Harvey said.
