ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Wednesday, August 28, 1996             TAG: 9608280053
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-1  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: RICHMOND
SOURCE: DAVID M. POOLE STAFF WRITER


SENATOR TAKES ON BETTING SHOPS

"That's not what Virginians bargained for when they approved the pari-mutuel referendum eight years ago," said Earley, who is jockeying for the Republican nomination for attorney general next year.

Horse racing advocates called Earley's proposal a political stunt that would go nowhere when the 1997 General Assembly convenes in January, seven months before Colonial Downs is scheduled to open in New Kent County.

"I just think it's kind of strange that someone running for attorney general would invite a massive lawsuit against the state," said Robin Traywick Williams, a member of the Virginia Racing Commission.

The Ohio-based owners of Colonial Downs could not be reached for comment Tuesday afternoon.

Earley said his concerns about creeping casino gambling at Colonial Downs have been fueled by statements by the track's new principal owner, Jeffrey Jacobs of Cleveland.

Earlier this month, Jacobs told The Roanoke Times and its sister paper in Norfolk, The Virginian-Pilot, that he would like to double the number of approved off-site betting parlors from six to 12. He also said he would seek the General Assembly's permission to introduce "video poker" slot machines at Colonial Downs, if tracks in neighboring Maryland get casino-style games.

Earley said none of these additional forms of gaming were mentioned when Virginia voters approved a pari-mutuel referendum in 1988.

Earley and Virginia Beach Sen. Kenneth Stolle have made pari-mutuel betting a contentious issue in their posturing for the 1997 GOP nomination for attorney general.

Stolle, an unsparing critic of the Colonial Downs management, wrote a law passed earlier this year that requires the track to open by next July or face the closure of its off-track betting parlor in Chesapeake and a second site planned for Richmond.

Stolle said that Earley's bill was an effort to placate evangelical conservatives who will hold a sizable block of votes in next year's GOP primary.

"Mark is afraid I have moved to the right of him on gambling issues," Stolle said. "But it's pretty irresponsible to change the rules after someone has invested millions of dollars in this."

Earley replied, "If anyone might have a [legal] claim, it's the people of Virginia for having to put up with this charade at Colonial Downs long enough."


LENGTH: Medium:   52 lines
KEYWORDS: HORSE RACING 












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