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IAGA Summit Berlin: June 10-12, 2025


casino games in Illinois whereby licence holders can partner with up to three iGaming providers and operators. The third consecutive year that legislation has been proposed, what's different about these iterations? What are your thoughts on these two bills? In what ways do they address fears of casino cannibalisation from land-based operators in Illinois?


While the IGB does not have a position on the public policy question of whether iGaming should be legal in Illinois, we oppose SB 1963 and HB 3080 for three primary reasons.


First, these bills do nothing to directly address the problems of illegal gambling. Tere are no provisions in the pending legislation regarding unregulated sweepstakes casinos, retail sweepstakes slot machines, or other unlicensed devices or online platforms that deceptively mimic legal forms of gambling. Simply legalising internet gaming in Illinois through HB 3080/SB 1963 without passage of HB 2879 (discussed above) will not eliminate predatory and fraudulent operators from the Illinois gambling landscape and will not protect consumers.


Second, IGB implementation of iGaming or any significant new gaming expansion in the near future is not possible without the IGB cancelling, pausing, or delaying execution of many impactful agency initiatives that will advance statutory mandates and address unmet regulatory and industry needs.


Some key existing priorities include: u


Procurement and deployment of a comprehensive licensing and case management system for casino, video gaming and sports wagering to replace legacy applications and systems;


u


Continued modernisation of agency infrastructure, operations, staffing, administrative rules, and casino internal control standards


u


Te implementation of TITO (Ticket In - Ticket Out) technology in our video gaming market


u


Deployment of cashless wagering for casinos and video gaming


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