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Ohio's professional sports teams are calling on legislators to break the log jam in the debate over legalizing sports betting before they go on summer break.
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A coalition of bowling alleys, bars and other businesses that sell lottery games and mayors is pushing back and rejecting any plan to allow Ohio鈥檚 four casinos to control sports gambling in the state. This comes as a proposal on sports gambling is set to come out of the Ohio Senate soon.
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March Madness is right around the corner and Ohioans will be constructing brackets to bet on their favorite teams. But Ohio, unlike some other states,鈥
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Ohio lawmakers have been considering legalizing sports betting ever since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that states are allowed to do that. But鈥
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SnollygosterIn this week's episode of Snollygoster, Ohio's politics podcast from 星空无限传媒, Mike Thompson and Steve Brown gauge the growing 2020 Democratic presidential鈥
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Two state representatives have introduced a bill to legalize and regulate sports gambling, now that the U.S. Supreme Court has said states can do that. If鈥
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The state agency that oversees gambling addiction services in Ohio is expecting a spike in calls to the state's problem gambling helpline this month. 鈥淲e have more gambling at certain times of the year,鈥 head of the Bureau of Problem Gambling Services, Stacey Frohnapfel-Hasson. 鈥淢arch is one of them.鈥
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Gov. Mike DeWine says he鈥檒l pay for the spending in his $69 billion budget with economic growth 鈥 not new taxes or fees. He鈥檚 also not counting on a鈥
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Some lawmakers are looking for a way to bring legal sports betting to Ohio. The move is in reaction to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, allowing states鈥
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The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down a federal ban on sports betting means Pennsylvania can go forward with sports wagering through a law鈥