COLUMBIA - Allowing people to play the
ponies in South Carolina could boost tourism and bring the state
millions of dollars in revenues, Rep. Bubber Snow said Tuesday.
Snow, D-Hemingway, has introduced a bill to bring pari-mutuel
racing to South Carolina. The proposal must be approved as a
constitutional amendment, receiving at least a two-thirds vote in
the House and the Senate before going before voters.
The bill faces several hurdles before it ever goes to a vote.
First is the Lost Trust scandal more than a decade ago. The FBI
used a bill to legalize pari-mutuel racing as part of a sting that
paid about $30,000 in bribes to more than a dozen legislators.
Prosecutors got 27 convictions in the operation.
Second is the state's overall chill toward gambling. South
Carolina outlawed video gambling nearly three years ago, and little
effort has been made to revive it.
Bringing any new form of gambling to South Carolina is a long
shot, said House Speaker David Wilkins, R-Greenville. Or as Rep.
John Graham Altman put it: "Don't bet on that horse."
"I don't think people want any more state-sponsored gambling in
this state," said Altman, R-Charleston. "But I might be wrong."
Horse and other types of racing could bring much more money and a
higher class of people than video gambling and involves skill that
is absent from lottery games, Snow said.
"Pari-mutuel racing and horse racing in South Carolina would
create jobs. The lottery, I don't know how many jobs it created,"
said Bobby Anderson, president of the S.C. Horsemen's Council.
Also, Snow said, pari-mutuel racing itself had nothing to do with
Lost Trust, and it would be unfair to link the two.
As Snow discussed his plan on the south side of the Statehouse on
Tuesday, a handler led a race horse and jockey in circles on a small
patch of grass not far from the statue of Confederate general and
former Gov. Wade Hampton on horseback.
"We raise some of the finest horses in the world," said Sen. Jake
Knotts, R-West Columbia, who is considering introducing a similar
bill in the Senate.
Plus, the lottery has opened the door. "Gambling's gambling,"
Knotts said.
Horse racing would bring in more money than other forms of
gambling, said Othniel Wienges Jr., who has raised and raced horses
for decades. Tourism would increase, and trainers who currently ship
their animals out of state to race could stay here, he said.
"One horse means two jobs - not just trainers, but parking
attendants, too," he said.
Raising horses is a booming industry in South Carolina, but much
of the money is shipped out of state because the horses can't race
here, said Judy Ballew, who raises quarter horses at White Eagle
Farms near Clinton.
Ballew owns about 15 horses and figures she spend $12,000 a year
to send each of her horses to Oklahoma to race.
Tracks in Aiken, Camden, Charleston, Elloree and Cedar Swamp in
Williamsburg County would be ready to use immediately if pari-mutuel
racing became legal, Snow said.
Snow also has a personal reason for wanting to legalize
pari-mutuel racing.
He remembers the days his family raced seven thoroughbreds at
Washington Park Race Track, located on land that is now Myrtle
Square Mall. Harness races took place on Wednesdays and Sundays
before about 2,500 people for a few years after World War II, he
said.
Snow said the House passed a bill allowing pari-mutuel racing in
1947, but the Senate never took action on the proposal before a
state Supreme Court ruling shut the door.