
Senate Bill No. 656
(By Senators Dittmar, Fanning, Hunter, Kessler, McCabe, Oliverio,
Ross, Deem and McKenzie)
__________
[Originating in the
Committee on the Judiciary;
reported February 29, 2000.]
__________
A BILL to repeal articles twenty and twenty-one, chapter forty-
seven of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred
thirty-one, as amended; and to further amend said code by
adding thereto a new chapter, designated chapter ten-a,
relating to revising the laws governing charitable bingo and
charitable raffles; providing for charitable gaming; setting
forth legislative intent; defining terms; establishing who may
engage in charitable gaming; requiring application for
licensure; prohibiting transfer of license; providing for an
annual license; providing for a super bingo license; providing
for a limited occasion bingo license; setting forth
requirements for bingo occasions; establishing prohibited conduct and making certain exceptions thereto; establishing
venue of bingo occasions; providing for limited occasion
raffles licenses; authorizing conduct of certain raffles
without a license; establishing license fees; exempting gross
proceeds other than state fair bingo proceeds from taxation;
providing for the use of state revenue derived from proceeds;
setting forth requirements for licensure applications;
authorizing amendment of license; permitting licensees to
adopt rules and regulations; establishing general limitations
on prizes; limiting the amount of and the number of persons
who may be paid compensation for conducting charitable gaming;
authorizing concessions; setting forth permitted uses of
proceeds; limiting expense expenditures; requiring percentage
of proceeds be donated to certain charitable and public
service entities; authorizing commissioner to disapprove
contracts for sale of goods or services; establishing
limitations on premises rented for super bingo occasions;
setting forth recordkeeping and accounting requirements of
licensees; authorizing advertising; declaring charitable or
public service purposes of state fair proceeds; providing for
state fair charitable gaming license; authorizing state fair
board to adopt rules and regulations; requiring licensees to file reports with commissioner; providing that copies of
licenses be filed with county clerks; requiring commissioner
to make license applications available to public; authorizing
county option election and specifying procedures therefor;
prohibiting certain convicted felons from participating in
charitable gaming; providing for administration by
commissioner; authorizing commissioner to take action
regarding licensure and to impose fees and civil penalties;
establishing administrative review procedures; creating crimes
and establishing criminal penalties; authorizing transitional
amnesty and establishing procedures therefor; providing for
the use of bingo and raffles equipment; requiring smoking and
nonsmoking sections; exempting certain solicitation and sales
from law governing solicitation of charitable contributions;
establishing effective date; and providing for severability.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That articles twenty and twenty-one, chapter forty-seven of
the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be repealed; and that said code be further amended by
adding thereto a new chapter, designated chapter ten-a, to read as
follows:
CHAPTER 10A. CHARITABLE GAMING.
ARTICLE 1. CHARITABLE GAMING.
§10A-1-1. Legislative intent.

The Legislature finds and declares that many fraternal and
community organizations, volunteer fire departments, churches and
other charitable or public service organizations perform an
important role and benefit a number of the citizens of this state
with respect to: (1) Assisting them to establish themselves in
life as contributing members of society through education or
religion; (2) relieving them from disease, distress, suffering,
constraint, or the effects of poverty; (3) increasing their
comprehension of and devotion to the principles upon which this
nation was founded and to the principles of good citizenship; (4)
educating or making the public aware of issues of public concern;
(5) lessening the burdens borne by government by voluntarily
supporting, augmenting or supplementing services which government
would normally render to the people; (6) providing or supporting
nonprofit community activities for youth, senior citizens or the
disabled; and (7) providing or supporting nonprofit cultural
artistic activities.

The Legislature, in recognition of the foregoing and in
recognition of the need charitable and public service organizations
have for a practicable way of raising funds, declares its intent to grant the privilege of holding bingo games and raffles to those
organizations which qualify for a license as provided in this
article.
§10A-1-2. Definitions.

For purposes of this article, unless specified otherwise:

(a) "Bingo" means the game wherein participants pay
consideration for the use of one or more faces or cards bearing
several rows of numbers in which no two faces played in any one
game contain the same sequence or pattern. When the game
commences, numbers are selected by chance, one by one, and
announced. The players cover or mark those numbers announced as
they appear on the face or faces which they are using. The player
who first announces that he or she has marked or covered a
predetermined sequence or pattern which had been pre-announced for
that game is, upon verification that he or she has marked or
covered the predetermined sequence or pattern, declared the winner
of that game.

(b) "Bingo occasion" or "occasion" means a single gathering or
session at which a series of one or more successive bingo games is
conducted by a single licensee.

(c) "Charitable or public service activity or endeavor" means
any bona fide activity or endeavor which directly benefits a number
of people by:

(1) Assisting them to establish themselves in life as
contributing members of society through education or religion;

(2) Relieving them from disease, distress, suffering,
constraint or the effects of poverty;

(3) Increasing their comprehension of and devotion to the
principles upon which this nation was founded and to the principles
of good citizenship;

(4) Making them aware of or educating them about issues of
public concern so long as the activity or endeavor is not aimed at
influencing legislation or supporting or participating in the
campaign of any candidate for public office;

(5) By lessening the burdens borne by government or
voluntarily supporting, augmenting or supplementing services which
government would normally render to the people;

(6) Providing or supporting nonprofit community activities for
youth, senior citizens or the disabled;

(7) Providing or supporting nonprofit cultural or artistic
activities; or

(8) Providing scholarships for a person or persons deemed
worthy by the organization.

(d) "Charitable or public service organization" means a bona
fide, not for profit, tax-exempt, benevolent, educational,
philanthropic, humane, patriotic, civic, religious, fraternal or
eleemosynary incorporated or unincorporated association or
organization; or a volunteer fire department, rescue unit or other
similar volunteer community service organization or association
which engages in charitable or public service activities or
endeavors; but does not include any nonprofit association or
organization, whether incorporated or not, which is organized
primarily for the purposes of influencing legislation or supporting
or promoting the campaign of any candidate for public office.

For purposes of this article, an organization or association
is tax-exempt if it is, and has received from the Internal Revenue
Service a determination letter that is currently in effect stating
that the organization is, exempt from federal income taxation under
subsection 501(a) and described in subsection 501 (c)(3),
501(c)(4), 501 (c)(8), 501(c)(10), 501(c)(19) or 501(d) of the
internal revenue code. Any other organization shall be considered
tax exempt for purposes of this article if the commissioner issues
a written finding that the organization would, upon application to the internal revenue service, be entitled to receive such a
determination letter.

(e) "Charitable gaming" means the licensed conduct of
charitable bingo or charitable raffles or both charitable bingo and
charitable raffles.

(f) "Commissioner" means the state tax commissioner.

(g) "Conduct" means to direct the actual playing of a bingo
game by activities including, but not limited to, handing out bingo
supplies, collecting fees, drawing the numbers, announcing the
numbers, posting the numbers, verifying winners and awarding prizes
or to direct the actual holding of raffles by activities including,
but not limited to, selling chances, drawing the winning numbers or
names, announcing the winning numbers or names, posting the winning
numbers or names, verifying winners and awarding prizes.

(h) "Donate", "donated", "donation" or "donations" means the
act or acts of gratuitously remitting money, transferring other
property or providing the use of property or services to another,
the amount or amounts of which shall be based on the fair market
value thereof determined pursuant to a legislative rule proposed by
the commissioner in accordance with the provisions of chapter
twenty-nine-a of this code;

(i) "Joint bingo occasion" means a single gathering or session
at which a series of one or more successive bingo games is
conducted by two or more licensees.

(j) "Joint raffles occasion" means a single gathering or
session at a fixed location during which a series of one or more
raffles is conducted by two or more licensees.

(k) "Licensee" means an organization or association granted an
annual, limited occasion, super bingo or state fair charitable
gaming license pursuant to the provisions of this article.

(l) "Manager-operator" means an individual who is charged with
the overall responsibility for the licensee's charitable gaming
operation, including but not limited to: (1) Maintaining the
fiscal integrity of the charitable gaming operation and the proper
maintenance, accounting for and handling of all funds and revenues
derived therefrom and of all accounts related thereto; (2) the
timely filing of all required financial and operational reports;
(3) obtaining required financial compilations, reviews or audits;
(4) maintaining the integrity of the gaming process and fair gaming
operations; (5) assuring the prompt payment of gaming prizes which
have been legitimately won; (6) assuring that all gaming operations
are free of fraud or misrepresentation; (7) scheduling charitable
gaming operations; (8) supervising charitable gaming operations; (9) supervising volunteer and paid workers at the charitable gaming
occasion; (10) supervising the preparation of any required daily
report forms; and (11) performing any other managerial duties in
connection with the conduct of charitable gaming.

(m) "Operator" means an individual, either volunteer or paid,
who is responsible only for specific duties in connection with the
actual conduct of charitable gaming occasions.

(n) "Patron" means an individual who attends a charitable
bingo occasion other than an individual who is participating in the
conduct of the occasion, regardless whether the individual is
charged an entrance fee or plays any charitable games.

(o) "Person" means an individual, association, society,
incorporated or unincorporated organization, firm, partnership or
other non-governmental entity or institution.

(p) "Qualified expenditure for charitable or public service
purposes" means any expenditure of moneys by a licensee for: (1)
Payment of prizes awarded to winners of charitable bingo games or
raffles; (2) the reasonable, necessary and actual expenses incurred
in connection with the conduct of charitable gaming, including but
not limited to, custodial services, rent, advertising, equipment
and supplies to conduct charitable gaming, security personnel,
promotional supplies, workers or operators required to conduct the charitable gaming and child care services for the children of
patrons; and expenses directly related to the existence and
operation of the licensee charitable or public service organization
where these expenses are directly related to the charitable or
public service purpose directly underlying the tax exempt status of
the licensee organization, including but not limited to: (i) The
annual cost of housing the licensee organization, including but not
limited to, rent, mortgage payments, maintenance and repairs; (ii)
property, casualty or liability insurance for the licensee
organization; (iii) on-going utility expenses; (iv) printing,
postage and mail expense; (v) workers; and (vi) any other expense
incurred by the licensee organization directly in furtherance of
its charitable or public service purpose; and (3) donations, as
provided in section eighteen of this article.

(q) "Raffle" or "raffles" means a game or games involving the
selling of chances to participate in such game entitling the
players purchasing the chances the opportunity to win a prize or
prizes.

(r) "Venue" means the premises on which bingo occasions are
held.
§10A-1-3. Who may engage in charitable gaming; application for
license; licenses not transferable.

(a) Any charitable or public service organization which has
been in existence in this state one year prior to filing an
application for a charitable gaming license issued pursuant to
section four, five, six or nine of this article may conduct
charitable gaming in accordance with the provisions of this article
during the time it holds a valid license: Provided, That a separate
license is required for charitable bingo and for charitable
raffles.

(b) Application for a charitable bingo or charitable raffles
license shall be made to the commissioner on a form supplied by the
commissioner. The application shall contain the information
required by section twelve of this article and any other
information which the commissioner considers necessary. The
application shall state whether it is for a charitable bingo
license or a charitable raffles license or for a charitable bingo
license and a charitable raffles license. An application shall be
filed not less than sixty days before the date when the applicant
intends to first conduct charitable gaming. No charitable gaming
may be conducted until an application filed in accordance with this
article has been approved by the commissioner, and the license has
been received. The commissioner may approve an application in less than sixty days and shall send the applicant its license within
five days after approval of the application.

(c) If the commissioner has not acted on an application within
sixty days from the date the application is received by the
commissioner, as evidenced by a canceled check or other acceptable
evidence that the application fee has been remitted and a return
receipt for certified mail showing the application and application
fee were mailed to the commissioner, an applicant may proceed to
conduct the charitable gaming it had applied for a license to
conduct.

(d) No license issued pursuant to this article may be
transferred.
§10A-1-4. Annual license; frequency and duration of occasions;
license displayed.

A charitable or public service organization or any of its
auxiliaries or other organizations otherwise affiliated with it may
apply for an annual charitable gaming license. Only one annual
charitable bingo and one annual charitable raffles license per year
in the aggregate may be granted to a charitable or public service
organization and all of its auxiliaries or other associations or
organizations otherwise affiliated with it: Provided, That for
purposes of this section the various branches, chapters or lodges of any national association or organization or local churches of a
national association or organization or local churches of a
nationally organized church are not considered affiliates or
auxiliaries of each other. The commissioner shall propose a
legislative rule which provides the manner for determining to which
organization, whether the parent organization, an affiliate or an
auxiliary, the one license allowed under this section is granted.
An annual charitable bingo license is valid for one year from the
date of issuance and entitles only the licensee to hold no more
than one hundred four bingo occasions per year: Provided, however,
That the licensee may hold no more than fifteen bingo occasions
during any calendar month. No two or more organizations may hold
a joint bingo occasion under any annual licenses. No bingo
occasion held pursuant to an annual license may exceed twelve hours
duration. An annual charitable raffles license is valid for one
year from the date of issuance. The commissioner shall prorate the
license fee of any annual license issued on a calendar year basis.

A licensee shall display its annual charitable bingo license
or charitable raffles license, or a copy thereof, conspicuously at
the location where the charitable gaming is conducted.

No organization may hold a joint charitable gaming occasion
under any annual licenses.
§10A-1-5. Super bingo license, frequency and duration of
occasions, license displayed.

Any charitable or public service organization may apply to the
commissioner for issuance of one annual super bingo license per
year.

A holder of a super bingo license may conduct twelve super
bingo occasions each year during the period of the license and at
each occasion may award up to fifty thousand dollars in prizes,
notwithstanding the limitation on prizes set forth in section
fifteen of this article. No super bingo occasion shall exceed
twelve hours in duration.

A charitable or public service organization that has a regular
or limited occasion bingo license may apply for and be issued a
super bingo license.

A licensee holding a super bingo license shall display its
license, or a copy thereof, conspicuously at the location where the
occasion is conducted.
§10A-1-6. Limited occasion bingo license; conditions on holding
games.

A limited occasion bingo license is valid only for the time
period specified in the application and entitles only the licensee
to hold a bingo occasion once every twenty-four hours for a time period not to exceed two weeks. Two or more organizations may hold
a joint bingo occasion provided each participating organization has
been granted a limited occasion bingo license for such jointly held
occasion. No bingo occasion held pursuant to a limited occasion
license may exceed twelve hours in duration. Each charitable or
public service organization which desires to hold bingo occasions
pursuant to this section, or any of its auxiliaries or other
organizations otherwise affiliated with it, shall obtain a limited
occasion license notwithstanding the fact that it holds a valid
annual license: Provided, That no licensee which holds an annual
license may obtain more than one limited occasion license during
the period of its annual license.

Only three limited occasion bingo licenses per year in the
aggregate may be granted to a charitable or public service
organization and all of its auxiliaries or other associations or
organizations otherwise affiliated with it, none of which hold an
annual license. For purposes of this section, the various
branches, chapters or lodges of any national association or
organization or local churches of a nationally organized church are
not considered affiliates or auxiliaries of each other. The
commissioner shall propose a legislative rule which provides the
manner for determining to which organization, whether the parent organization, an affiliate or an auxiliary, the three licenses
allowed under this section are granted.

A licensee shall display its limited occasion bingo license
conspicuously at the location where the bingo occasion is held.
§10A-1-7. Bingo occasions open to public; no participation by
those under age of eighteen; exception; prohibition of
alcoholic beverages at bingo occasions; limitation on cashing
patron's checks.

(a)
All charitable bingo occasions shall be open to the
general public: Provided, That no licensee shall permit or allow
any individual under the age of eighteen to participate in the
playing of any bingo game with knowledge or reason to believe that
the individual is under the age of eighteen: Provided, however,
That an individual under the age of eighteen may attend the playing
of a bingo game when accompanied by and under the supervision of an
adult relative or a legal guardian of said individual: Provided
further, That a junior volunteer firefighter sixteen years of age
or older may assist the volunteer fire company of which he or she
is a member in the conduct of a bingo game or raffle if the junior
firefighter is supervised by a senior member of the same volunteer
fire company who is more than twenty-one years of age.

(b) The sale or the consumption of alcoholic beverages or
nonintoxicating beer is prohibited in any area where and during the
time charitable bingo is conducted.

(c) A licensee may receive and cash personal checks of any
patron in an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars during the
normal operation of a bingo game.
§10A-1-8.
Venue of bingo occasions.

Any charitable or public service organization or any of its
auxiliaries or other organizations otherwise affiliated with it
possessing an annual or limited occasion bingo license or a super
bingo license shall conduct a bingo occasion only in the county
within which the organization is principally located.

Any licensee which, in good faith, finds itself unable to
comply with this requirement shall apply to the commissioner for
permission to conduct a bingo occasion in a location other than the
county in which the organization is principally located: Provided,
That the location shall be in a contiguous county, or if not in a
contiguous county and not in the county where the licensee
organization has its principal location, the location of the
proposed bingo occasion may be no more than thirty air miles from
the county within which the organization is principally located.
The application shall be made on a form provided by the commissioner and shall include the particulars of the requested
change and the reasons for the change. The application shall be
filed no later than thirty days before any scheduled bingo
occasion.

For purposes of this section, the principal location of a
licensee is the address of the licensee shown on the licensee's
West Virginia business registration certificate.
§10A-1-9. Limited occasion raffles license; conditions on holding
of raffles.

A limited occasion raffles license is valid only for the time
period specified in the application and entitles only the licensee
to hold two raffles occasions during the time period specified,
which may not exceed six months from the date of issuance of the
limited occasion license.

Two or more organizations may hold a joint raffles occasion
provided each participating organization has been granted a limited
occasion raffles license for such jointly held occasions: Provided,
That no licensee which holds an annual charitable raffles license
may obtain more than one limited occasion raffles license during
the period of its annual license.

Subject to the limitations set forth in this section for
charitable or public service organizations having an annual license, a charitable or public service organization and all of its
auxiliaries or other associations or organizations otherwise
affiliated with it, may be granted only three limited occasion
charitable raffles licenses per year in the aggregate. For
purposes of this section the various branches, chapters or lodges
of any national association or organization or local churches of a
nationally organized church are not considered affiliates or
auxiliaries of each other. The commissioner shall propose a
legislative rule which provides the manner for determining to which
organization, whether the parent organization, an affiliate or an
auxiliary, the three licenses allowed under this section are
granted.

A licensee shall display its limited occasion raffles license
conspicuously at the location where the raffles occasion is held.
§10A-1-10. Authorizing the conduct of certain raffles without a
license.

Notwithstanding the provisions of section three of this
article, any charitable or public service organization which has
been in existence in this state for at least one year is authorized
to conduct charitable raffles without obtaining a license pursuant
to the provisions of this article: Provided, That any prize
awarded in any single raffles may not exceed in value the sum of five thousand dollars: Provided, however, That the cumulative
gross proceeds derived from the conduct of raffles pursuant to the
provisions of this section may not exceed fifteen thousand dollars
during any calendar year. An organization conducting charitable
raffles pursuant to the provisions of this section is not subject
to the record-keeping provisions of section nineteen of this
article but shall maintain a separate accounting for the operation
of raffles. All records required by this section shall be
maintained for at least three calendar years and made available for
reasonable inspection by the commissioner.
§10A-1-11. License fees and exemption from taxes.

(a)
A license fee shall be paid to the commissioner for
annual licenses in the amount of five hundred dollars, except that
for volunteer or nonprofit groups who expect to gross less than
twenty thousand dollars throughout the license period the fee is
two hundred dollars and for bona fide senior citizen organizations
the fee is fifty dollars. A license fee shall be paid to the
commissioner for a super bingo license in the amount of five
thousand dollars. A license fee shall be paid to the commissioner
for a limited occasion bingo license in the amount of one hundred
dollars. A license fee shall be paid to the commissioner for a
limited occasion raffles license in the amount of fifty dollars. A license fee of five hundred dollars shall be paid to the
commissioner for a state fair charitable gaming license as provided
in section twenty-two of this article.

(b) The gross proceeds derived from the conduct of charitable
bingo are exempt from state and local business and occupation
taxes, income taxes, excise taxes and all special taxes. The
licensee is exempt from payment of consumers sales and service
taxes and use taxes on all purchases for use or consumption in the
conduct of charitable bingo and is exempt from collecting consumers
sales taxes on any admission fees and sales of bingo faces:
Provided, That the exemption provided in this subsection does not
apply to state fair bingo proceeds.

(c) The gross proceeds derived from the conduct of charitable
raffles are exempt from state and local business and occupation
taxes, income taxes, excise taxes and all special taxes. Any
charitable or public service organization conducting charitable
raffles pursuant to the provisions of this article is exempt from
payment of consumer sales and service taxes, use taxes and all
other taxes on all purchases for use or consumption in the conduct
of raffles and is exempt from collecting consumers sales taxes on
any admission fees and sales of raffles chances.

(d) All revenue from license fees shall be deposited in the
special revenue account hereby established and appropriated by the
Legislature to support the regulation of charitable gaming by the
commissioner. The license fees imposed by this section are in lieu
of all other license or franchise taxes or fees of this state and
no county or municipality or other political subdivision of this
state is empowered to impose a license or franchise tax or fee on
the conduct of any charitable bingo or raffles.
§10A-1-12. Information required in application.

An application for a charitable gaming license shall include
the following information:

(a) Name of the applicant and name and headquarters address of
any state or national organization of which it is a local branch or
lodge;

(b) The address and telephone number of the applicant
organization, if any. If the applicant organization has no
telephone, then the address and telephone number of the person
applying on behalf of such organization shall be supplied;

(c) For a limited occasion license, the names and addresses of
two or more bona fide active members, supporters, volunteers or
employees of the applicant organization who have been active
members in good standing of the licensee organization or its authorized auxiliary organization or who have been meaningfully
affiliated with the licensee organization at least one year prior
to the date of filing of the application for a charitable gaming
license or the most recent filing of an application for renewal of
the license and who are charged with overall responsibility for the
applicant's bingo or raffles operations, at least one of whom shall
be present and function as a manager-operator for the applicant's
charitable gaming operations at all times such gaming operations
are conducted; and the names and addresses of the highest elected
officer of the licensee and his or her officially appointed
designee;

(d) For an annual license, the names, addresses and telephone
numbers of three or more bona fide active members supporters,
volunteers or employees of the applicant organization who have been
active members in good standing of the licensee organization or its
authorized auxiliary organization or who have been meaningfully
affiliated with the licensee organization at least one year prior
to the date of filing of the application for a charitable gaming
license or the most recent filing of an application for renewal of
the license and who are charged with overall responsibility for the
applicant's charitable gaming operations, at least one of whom
shall be present and function as a manager-operator for the applicant's charitable gaming operations at all times charitable
gaming is conducted; and the names and addresses and telephone
numbers of the highest elected officer of the licensee and his or
her officially appointed designees;

(e) The address or location of the premises where licensed
charitable games are to be held or the geographical area where
charitable raffles are to be conducted, as the case may be;

(f) Information as may be required by the commissioner to
satisfy him or her that the applicant meets the requirements of:

(1) Being a charitable or public service organization as
required by this article; and

(2) Being in existence in this state one year prior to filing
an application for a charitable gaming license.

(g) The day or days of the week, and the time or times when
bingo occasions will be held;

(h) The name of the owner of the premises where bingo
occasions are to be held and a copy of all rental agreements
involved if leased or subleased by the applicant from the owner or
lessee;

(i) A statement as to whether the applicant has ever had a
previous application for any charitable gaming license refused or
whether any previous license has been revoked or suspended;

(j) A sworn statement that the proceeds from charitable gaming
will be used solely for qualified expenditures for charitable or
public service purposes;

(k) A statement or statements to the effect that the
individuals specified in subdivision (c) of this section and the
officers of the applicant understand:

(1) That it is a violation of this article to allow any
persons other than those authorized by this article to conduct any
part of the charitable games;

(2) That it is required to file the reports and keep the
records as provided by this article; and

(3) That it is a crime to violate the provisions of this
article and, in addition, that a violation may result in suspension
or revocation of its license and denial of applications for
subsequent licenses;

(l) A sworn statement by an authorized representative of the
applicant that the information contained in the application is true
to the best of his or her knowledge;

(m) A list of the names and addresses of all officers and
members of the board of directors, governors or trustees, if any,
of the applicant organizations; and

(n) Any other necessary and reasonable information which the
commissioner reasonably may require.
§10A-1-13. Amendment of license.

If circumstances beyond the control of the licensee
organization prohibit it from holding any charitable bingo occasion
in accordance with the information provided by it in its license
application form, the licensee organization may request in writing
approval by the commissioner to:

(a) Modify the holding of one or more bingo occasions held
pursuant to an annual license or super bingo license if the changes
are temporary;

(b) Modify the holding of one or more bingo occasions held
pursuant to a limited occasion license if the changes affect fewer
than one-third the occasions to be held under the license; or

(c) Amend its original license if the changes to the holding
of occasions pursuant to an annual license or super bingo license
are permanent or if the changes affect one-third or more of the
occasions to be held under a limited occasion license.
§10A-1-14. Licensee rules and regulations.

Each licensee may adopt rules and regulations, not
inconsistent with or in violation of the provisions of this
article, or rules promulgated hereunder, to govern the conduct of charitable gaming occasions, except that no licensee may allow an
individual not present to play any charitable bingo.

Any rules and regulations adopted by the licensee shall be
made available for inspection at all charitable gaming occasions
held. Any such rules and regulations adopted are a part of the
records required to be kept by section nineteen of this article.
§10A-1-15. Limits on prizes awarded - general provisions.

Except as otherwise provided in this article, during the
period of a license the average total prizes awarded by a licensee,
or in the aggregate by two or more limited occasion licensees
holding a joint bingo occasion, for any bingo occasion held
pursuant to an annual or limited occasion license, may not exceed
fifteen thousand dollars in value.

Prizes may be money or merchandise other than beer,
nonintoxicating beer, wine, spirits or alcoholic liquor as defined
in section five, article one, chapter sixty of this code. If the
prizes are merchandise, the value assigned to them is their fair
market value at the time they are awarded.
§10A-1-16. Compensation.

No individual who participates in the conduct of charitable
gaming may receive or accept any commission, wage, salary, reward,
tip, gratuity or other form of compensation or remuneration whether directly or indirectly, regardless of the source, for his or her
work, labor or services in conducting charitable gaming except:

(a) A licensee may pay a salary, the minimum of which shall be
established at the federal minimum wage and the maximum which shall
be ten dollars and fifty cents per hour, to operators of charitable
raffles or charitable bingo games.

(b) If the licensee's gross receipts from charitable gaming
equal or exceed one hundred thousand dollars for the period covered
by the licensee's most recently filed annual financial report, a
salary may be paid to not more than twelve operators.

(c) If the licensee's gross receipts from charitable gaming
are less than one hundred thousand dollars, but equal or exceed
fifty thousand dollars for the period covered by the licensee's
most recently filed annual financial report, a salary may be paid
to not more than eight operators.

(d) If the licensee's gross receipts from charitable gaming
are less than fifty thousand dollars for the period covered by the
licensee's most recently filed annual financial report, a salary
may be paid to not more than five operators.

(e) In the case of a licensee lawfully holding a charitable
bingo occasion simultaneously with the conduct of charitable
raffles, the number of paid charitable gaming operator employees allowed under this limitation for charitable gaming licensees is
twice the number allowed for the conduct of charitable bingo or
charitable raffles alone.

(f) For a super bingo occasion, the maximum number of paid
employees is thirty for the super bingo occasion and thirty for the
conduct of charitable raffles held in conjunction with the super
bingo occasion: Provided, That a licensee may have the amount of
employees reasonably necessary to conduct a super bingo occasion
where the number of patrons at that super bingo occasion exceeds
nine hundred.
§10A-1-17. Concessions.

A licensee may allow any individual, firm, partnership or
corporation to operate concessions in conjunction with charitable
gaming occasions and to be compensated for the concession
operation.
§10A-1-18. Permitted uses of proceeds; disapproval of certain
contracts or leases.

(a) During the period of a charitable gaming license, the
gross proceeds from charitable gaming may only be used by a
licensee for: (i) Payment of prizes awarded to winners of
charitable bingo games or raffles; (ii) payment of reasonable,
necessary and actual expenses incurred in connection with the conduct of charitable gaming, including, but not limited to,
custodial services, rent, advertising, equipment and supplies to
conduct charitable gaming, security personnel, promotional
supplies, workers or operators required to conduct charitable
gaming and child care services for the children of patrons; and
expenses directly related to the existence and operation of the
licensee charitable or public service organization where these
expenses are directly related to the charitable or public service
purpose underlying the tax exempt status of the licensee
organization, including, but not limited to, rent, mortgage
payments, compensation to employees, payment for maintenance and
repairs, premiums for property, casualty or liability insurance for
the licensee organization; on-going utility expenses; printing,
postage and mail expenses; and any other expense incurred by the
licensee organization directly in furtherance of its charitable or
public service purpose; and (iii) donations for the purposes, and
to the entities, organizations or associations, described under
subsection 170(c)(1), subsection 170(c)(2) or subsection 170(c)(3)
of the internal revenue code: Provided, That during a license
period no more than twenty percent of the gross proceeds received
from charitable gaming by a licensee which is not an entity,
organization or association described in subsection 170(c)(1), 170(c)(2) or 170(c)(3) of the internal revenue code, regardless of
the amount of expenses it actually incurs, as described in
subdivision (i) and (ii) of this subsection, may be used for the
expenses described in subdivision (ii) of this subsection:
Provided, however, That notwithstanding any other provision of this
article, each licensee which is not an entity, organization, or
association described in subsection 170(c)(1), 170(c)(2) or
170(c)(3) of the internal revenue code, regardless of the amount of
expenses it incurs as described in subdivision (i) and (ii) of this
subsection, shall make the donations set forth in subdivision (iii)
in an amount equal to not less than four percent of its gross
proceeds received from the conduct of charitable gaming: Provided
further, That in a license period, at least one-half of the amount
of such donations shall be made by the remittance of money: And
provided further, That in a license period, not less than twenty-
five percent of the amount of such donations shall be made to
entities described in subsection 170(c)(1) of the internal revenue
code which have their principal office in the county in which the
licensee conducts charitable gaming.

(b) The commissioner may disapprove any contract for sale of
goods or services to any charitable bingo licensee for use in or with relation to any charitable bingo operation or occasion, or any
lease of real or tangible personal property to any charitable bingo
licensee for use in or with relation to any charitable bingo
operation or occasion, if the contract or lease is unreasonable or
not representative of fair market value. Contracts or leases which
are disapproved shall be considered to be in contravention of this
article, and are void. Any attempt by any charitable bingo
licensee to engage in transactions under the terms of any lease or
contract that has been disapproved is grounds for revocation or
suspension of the charitable bingo license and for refusal by the
commissioner to renew the charitable bingo license.

(c) If a property owner or lessee, including his or her agent,
has entered into a rental contract to hold super bingo occasions on
his or her premises, the premises shall be rented, for super bingo
occasions, to not more than four super bingo licensees during any
period of four consecutive calendar weeks: Provided, That each of
the charitable or public service organizations desiring to hold a
super bingo occasion must possess its own super bingo license.
Subject to this limitation, the premises may be used for super
bingo occasions during two consecutive days during a conventional
weekend. For purposes of this subsection, the term "conventional
weekend" means Saturday and Sunday. When used two consecutive days during a conventional weekend the super bingo occasions may occur
at the same facility no more often than on alternating weekends
during a calendar month.
§10A-1-19. Records, commissioner audit.

Any licensee which conducts charitable gaming as provided by
this article shall maintain separate checking accounts and a
separate bookkeeping procedure for receipts and expenditures under
each of its charitable gaming licenses. A licensee may not
commingle moneys from its operations under separate charitable
gaming licenses, but it may, by check, transfer funds between the
separate checking accounts to offset any losses from its conduct of
charitable gaming under one license with gains from its conduct of
charitable gaming under another license. Money for expenses may be
withdrawn only by checks having preprinted consecutive numbers and
made payable to a specific person, firm, association or corporation
and at no time may a check be made payable to cash. A licensee
with gross proceeds from charitable gaming in excess of five
hundred thousand dollars per year shall utilize an electronic cash
register approved by the commissioner which is specifically
designed for bingo or raffles operations and which maintains an
accurate record keeping system with sufficient detail so as to
permit a paper trail which is easily verifiable and which may be easily audited. A licensee shall maintain all records required by
this article for at least five years and the records shall be open
to the commissioner for reasonable inspection. Whenever the
commissioner has reasonable cause to believe a licensee has
violated any of the provisions of this article, the commissioner
may perform or cause to be performed an audit of the licensee's
books and records: Provided, That the commissioner shall perform
or cause to be performed an audit of the books and records of any
licensee that has awarded total prizes in excess of five hundred
thousand dollars. The commissioner shall file a copy of the
completed audit with the clerk of the county commission of the
county in which the licensee holds charitable gaming occasions.
§10A-1-20. Advertising.

A licensee may advertise its charitable gaming occasions in a
manner reasonably necessary to promote the occasion.
§10A-1-21. Proceeds of state fair.

The Legislature declares that the proceeds of any charitable
bingo games or charitable raffles which accrue to the West Virginia
state fair are considered used for charitable or public service
purposes as that term is defined by this article. Any proceeds
allowed by the state fair board to be paid to or retained by persons who conduct charitable gaming occasions at the state fair
are deemed to be expenses incurred by the state fair board.
§10A-1-22. State fair charitable gaming license; rules and
regulations.

The West Virginia state fair board may apply annually to the
commissioner for a state fair charitable gaming license to provide
for the conduct of bingo or raffles occasions at the state fair.
The license shall permit the state fair board to have one or more
persons conduct bingo or raffles occasions at the state fair who
have conducted bingo or raffles occasions on a regular basis for at
least one year prior to the date of the state fair board's
application. A license fee of five hundred dollars shall be paid
to the commissioner for the state fair charitable gaming license.
The provisions of sections eight, fifteen, sixteen and eighteen of
this article do not apply to the licensee holding a state fair
charitable gaming license. No state fair charitable gaming license
may be issued unless the application includes a copy of any lease
or agreement entered into between the state fair board and the
persons who are to conduct bingo or raffles occasions at the state
fair. The state fair board may adopt reasonable rules, not
inconsistent with or in violation of the provisions of this article, to govern the holding of bingo occasions or raffles at the
state fair.
§10A-1-23. Filing of reports.

Each licensee holding an annual license shall file with the
commissioner a quarterly and an annual financial report summarizing
its charitable gaming operations for the time period covered by the
report. Each quarterly report shall be filed within twenty days
after the end of the quarter which it covers. The annual report
shall be filed within thirty days after the expiration of the
license under which the operations covered by the report were held.
The time period covered by the annual report is the full license
year or, at the election of a licensee receiving state or federal
funding, the most recently ended state or federal fiscal year.

Each licensee holding a limited occasion license or state fair
license shall file with the commissioner a financial report
summarizing its charitable gaming operations for the license period
within thirty days after the expiration of the license under which
the operations covered by the report are held.

Each report shall contain the name, address and social
security number of any individual who receives, during the course
of a bingo occasion or raffles, prizes, the aggregate value of
which exceeds six hundred dollars, and other information required by the commissioner: Provided, That any licensee failing to file
the report when due is liable for a penalty of seventy-five dollars
for each month or fraction of a month during which the failure
continues, the penalty not to exceed six hundred dollars.
§10A-1-24. Filing of copy of license; application open to public
inspection.

Whenever a license is granted pursuant to this article, the
commissioner shall cause a copy of the license to be filed and
recorded with the clerk of the county commission of the county in
which the charitable bingo or raffles are to be conducted. A copy
of the application shall be made available for public inspection in
the office of the commissioner.
§10A-1-25. County option election.

The county commission of any county is authorized to call a
local option election for the purpose of determining the will of
the voters as to whether the provisions of this article shall
continue in effect in said county: Provided, That no local option
election may be called to disapprove the playing of bingo or
raffles games at the state fair in accordance with the provisions
of this article.

A petition for local option election shall be in the form
specified in this section and shall be signed by qualified voters residing within said county equal to at least ten percent of the
persons qualified to vote within said county at the last general
election. The petition may be in any number of counterparts and is
sufficient if substantially in the following form:

PETITION ON LOCAL OPTION ELECTION RESPECTING THE CONDUCT OF
BINGO AND RAFFLES GAMES FOR CHARITABLE PURPOSES IN . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA

Each of the undersigned certifies that he or she is a person
residing in . . . . . . . . . . . . . County, West Virginia, and is
duly qualified to vote in that county under the laws of the State,
and that his or her name, address, and the date of signing this
petition are correctly set forth below.

The undersigned petition the County Commission to call and
hold a local option election at (1) a special or (2) the next
primary, general or special election (the petition shall specify
(1) or (2)) upon the following question: Shall the provisions of
Article One, Chapter Ten-A of the Code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, continue in effect in
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . County, West Virginia?



Name



Address



Date

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(Each person signing must specify either his post office
address or his street number.)

Upon the filing of a petition for a local option election in
accordance with the provisions of this section, the county
commission shall enter an order calling a local option election as
specified in the petition. The county commission shall give notice
of such local option election by publication thereof as a Class II-
0 legal advertisement in compliance with the provisions of article
three, chapter fifty-nine of this code and the publication area for
such publication is the county. The notice shall be so published
within fourteen consecutive days next preceding the election.

Each person qualified to vote in the county at any primary,
general or special election shall likewise be qualified to vote at
the local option election. The election officers appointed and
qualified to serve as such at any primary, general or special
election shall conduct the local option election. If the local
option election is to be held at the same time as a primary,
general or other special election, it shall be held in connection
with and as a part of that primary, general or special election.
The ballots in the local option election shall be counted and
returns made by the election officers and the results certified by
the commissioners of election to said county commission which shall canvass the ballots, all in accordance with the laws of the state
of West Virginia relating to primary and general elections insofar
as the same are applicable. The county commission shall, without
delay, canvass the ballots cast at said local option election and
certify the result thereof.

The ballot to be used in said local option election shall have
printed thereon substantially the following:

"Shall the playing of bingo and raffles to raise money for
charitable or public service organizations continue in effect in .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . County, West Virginia?





/ /
Yes
/ /
No

(Place a cross mark in the square corresponding with your
choice.)"

If a majority of the voters voting at any local option
election vote no on the foregoing question, the provisions of
article one, chapter ten-a of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, no longer continue in
effect in said county.

No local option election may be called in a county to resubmit
said question to the voters of that county, whether the question
was approved or disapproved at the previous local option election,
sooner than five years after the last such election in that county.
§10A-1-26. Prohibited acts by convicted individuals and
corporations.

Any individual, organization, association or corporation
convicted of any felony is prohibited from directly or indirectly
obtaining a charitable license, conducting a bingo or raffles game,
operating a concession, or leasing or providing to a licensee
organization any premises where bingo or raffles occasions may be
held within ten years from said conviction.
§10A-1-27. Administration; rules and regulations; civil penalties
and other remedies.

(a) The commissioner shall administer the provisions of this
article in accordance with the provisions of chapter twenty-nine-a
of this code.

(b) To effectuate the provisions of this article, the
commissioner shall propose rules for legislative approval in
accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-
nine-a of this code. In this regard, the commissioner may
promulgate emergency rules pursuant to section fifteen of said
article as the commissioner determines are necessary for the
implementation of any provision of this article upon its effective
date.

(c) The commissioner shall deny an application for a license
if he finds that the issuance thereof would be in violation of the
provisions of this article.

(d) The commissioner may suspend, revoke or refuse to renew a
license if a licensee or any member of a licensee organization has
been convicted pursuant to section twenty-eight of this article and
the commissioner finds that it would be in the public interest to
do so.

(e) The commissioner may suspend, revoke or refuse to renew
any license issued hereunder for a material failure to maintain the
records or file the reports required by this article if the
commissioner finds that said failure will substantially impair the
commissioner's ability to administer the provisions of this article
with regard to said licensee.

(f) Notwithstanding any provision of this article to the
contrary, the commissioner may:

(1) Revoke or refuse to renew any license issued under this
article for any material violation of the provisions of this
article or the legislative rules promulgated pursuant to this
article;

(2) Suspend the license of any licensee for the period of time
the commissioner deems appropriate, not to be less than one week nor more than twelve months, for any material violation of the
provisions of this article or a legislative rule promulgated
pursuant to this article;

(3) Place a licensee on probation for not less than six months
nor more than three years: Provided, That in the event a licensee
is placed on probation, as a condition of the probation, the
licensee shall pay to the commissioner a probation supervision fee
not greater than two percent of the gross receipts derived by the
licensee from the conduct of bingo occasions during the period of
the suspension, but in no event may the probation supervision fee
be less than two thousand dollars. All probation supervision fee
revenue shall be placed in a special account and used by the
commissioner, after appropriation by the Legislature, to offset the
expenses and costs incurred by the tax division to supervise the
licensee;

(4) Require a licensee to replace any officer who knew or
should have known of a material violation of the provisions of this
article or any legislative rule promulgated pursuant to this
article;

(5) Require a licensee to prohibit one or more members,
supporters, volunteers or employees of the licensee involved in
acts of material violation of the provisions of this article or any legislative rule promulgated pursuant to this article from all
future bingo occasions held under the license, or for the period of
time specified by the commissioner;

(6) Impose a civil money penalty in an amount not less than
one hundred dollars nor more than four percent of the gross
receipts derived by the licensee from the conduct of charitable
gaming during a license period, for each material violation of the
provisions of this article or any legislative rule during such
license period: Provided, That in setting any monetary penalty for
a first offense, the commissioner shall take into consideration the
ability of the licensee to continue to exist and operate. For each
material violation which is a second or subsequent offense, the
amount of the civil penalty that may be imposed may not be less
than five hundred dollars and may not exceed ten percent of the
gross receipts derived by the licensee from the conduct of
charitable gaming during the license period in which the offense
occurred for each subsequent offense. The commissioner may impose
civil penalties based on second or subsequent offenses
notwithstanding the provisions of section twenty-nine of this
article. Application of this subdivision and the amount of civil
money penalty levied shall be determined in accordance with a
legislative rule promulgated by the commissioner. Any licensee aggrieved by the amount of the civil penalty may surrender its
license or, after exhausting all administrative remedies, have the
matter reviewed in the circuit court of the county where the
offense giving rise to the civil penalty occurred; or

(7) Order any one or more, or any combination, of the
penalties provided for in subdivisions (1) through (6), inclusive,
of this subsection: Provided, That no sanction or other remedy
shall be imposed under this article on a licensee which is exempt
or qualified to be exempt from federal income taxation under
subsection 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4) of the internal revenue code of
1986, as amended, but does not have bona fide members, due to
failure to operate bingo occasions with members if the occasions
are or were operated by residents of this state who have been
employed by the licensee or been meaningfully associated with the
licensee for one or more years before the date of the licensee's
application for a license under this article, or its last
application for renewal of a license under this article.

(g) The following administrative procedures govern the
proceedings under this section:

(1) An order issued under this section shall be served by
certified mail or in the manner provided in rule 4(d) of the West
Virginia rules of civil procedure.

(2) A licensee may appeal an order of the commissioner issued
under this section by filing a written protest with the
commissioner, either in person or by certified mail, within twenty
days after the licensee is served with a copy of the order.

(3) When a written protest is filed timely, the provisions of
article five, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code shall apply. The
commissioner may, by procedural rule, specify the form and content
of a written protest.

(4) Within five days after issuance of an emergency order, the
commissioner shall set a time and place for a hearing wherein the
licensee may appear and show cause why its license should not be
revoked.

(h) All fines, money penalties and fees imposed pursuant to
this section, except the probation supervision fee imposed by
subdivision (3), subsection (f) of this section, shall be deposited
into the general revenue fund of this state.
§10A-1-28.
Fraudulently conducted games; obtaining license
fraudulently; other violations; criminal penalties.

(a) In addition to any other offense set forth in this code,
any person who or licensee which knowingly conducts or participates
in a fraudulently or deceptively conducted charitable bingo or
charitable raffles game with intent to defraud is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less than
one thousand nor more than ten thousand dollars, or confined in a
state correctional facility not less than one nor more than five
years, or both.

(b) In addition to any other offense set forth in this code,
any individual, association, organization or corporation which
knowingly obtains or assists another in obtaining a charitable
gaming license under false, deceptive or fraudulent pretenses is
guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not
less than one thousand nor more than ten thousand dollars or
confined in a state correctional facility not less than one nor
more than five years, or both.

(c) Any person who violates the provisions of this article, or
who violates any of the provisions contained in a legislative rule
of the commissioner relating to charitable gaming is guilty of a
misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less
than two hundred nor more than two thousand dollars for a first
offense, and upon a second or subsequent conviction thereof, shall
be fined not less than one thousand nor more than five thousand
dollars or confined in a county or regional jail for not more than
one year, or both.
§10A-1-29. Transitional amnesty.

(a) Notwithstanding anything in this code to the contrary, a
licensee may elect to comply with the transitional amnesty
provisions of this section in lieu of other enforcement action to
which it may otherwise be subject under this article. For purposes
of this section, the term "other enforcement action" means an
action that, on or after the effective date of this article, is
being taken, or may be taken, pursuant to an administrative
decision or order or by agreement, including, but not limited to,
any suspension, probation, criminal or civil penalty, fine or other
punitive action, or alternative disposition and that is based on
one or more violations of article twenty or twenty-one, chapter
forty-seven of this code, which occurred before the repeal of such
provisions, and which are alleged or admitted to having been
committed by a person to whom a license was issued pursuant to the
authority of either such article.

(b) A licensee that elects the transitional amnesty provided
in this section shall retroactively satisfy, for the license
periods with respect to which the other enforcement action against
it relates, the provision of section eighteen of this article
mandating that no less than an amount equal to four percent of the
entire gross proceeds such licensee received from its conduct of
charitable gaming during such license periods shall be donated by such licensee for the purposes, and to those entities,
organizations or associations, described in subsection 170(c)(1),
170(c)(2) or 170 (c)(3) of the internal revenue code: Provided,
That the amount of any past donations which an electing licensee
shall have made to any such entities, organizations or associations
with respect to the license periods to which the other enforcement
action relates shall be counted toward satisfaction by such
electing licensee of section eighteen of this article for purpose
of the transitional amnesty provided in this section: Provided,
however, That any such donations made by a licensee pursuant to
this section shall only be made by the remittance of money and
shall not count toward satisfaction of such licensee's obligations
under section eighteen of this article for license periods
commencing on or after the effective date of this article, if any.

(c) Any licensee that may be subject to other enforcement
action and desiring to make the election permitted in this section,
shall give written notice to the commissioner of its election of
the transitional amnesty provided in this section no more than
ninety days after the enactment of this article, or ninety days
after the first notice it has of the initiation of such other
enforcement action against it, whichever is later: Provided, That, upon receipt of such notice, the commissioner shall suspend and
hold in abeyance, as to such licensee, the other enforcement action
against it during the period described in the following sentence.
A licensee which has given timely notice of its election, as
provided in the preceding sentence, shall complete making the
donations necessary to satisfy the requirements of such
transitional amnesty not later than thirty-six months from the date
such notice was received by the commissioner.
(d) Upon its full satisfaction of the requirements of this
section, a licensee shall have the other enforcement action against
it vacated, withdrawn and forever held for naught: Provided, That
a licensee which fails to timely elect and satisfy the requirements
of this section shall thereafter and forthwith be subjected to
other enforcement action according to the original terms thereof.
§10A-1-30. Bingo and raffles equipment.

A licensee may use bingo or raffles equipment which it owns or
which it borrows without compensation or leases for a reasonable
and customary amount.
§10A-1-31. Certain operators of bingo games to provide for smoking
and nonsmoking sections.

Any bingo operator who has more than one hundred bingo patrons
at any bingo occasion shall provide a smoking and nonsmoking section, if smoking is permitted. The provisions of this section
may not be varied or altered in any way by any local ordinance or
regulation.
§10A-1-32. Solicitation and sales of bingo cards and faces, and
raffles chances not to constitute solicitation of charitable
funds.

Notwithstanding any other provision of this code to the
contrary, the advertising, promotion and other solicitation of the
sale of bingo cards and faces, and of raffles chances, and the
sales thereof shall not constitute the solicitation of charitable
contributions for purposes of article nineteen, chapter twenty-nine
of this code, or otherwise.
§10A-1-33. Effective date.

The effective date of this article is the first day of July,
two thousand.
§10A-1-34. Severability.

If, for any reason, any section, sentence, clause, phrase or
provision of this article or the application thereof to any person
or circumstance is held unconstitutional or invalid, such
unconstitutionality or invalidity shall not affect other sections,
sentences, clauses, phrases or provisions or their application to
any other person or circumstance, and to this end each and every article, section, sentence, clause, phrase or provision of this
article is hereby declared to be severable.
______

(NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to reform the regulation
of charitable gaming. The bill repeals the articles on charitable
bingo and charitable raffles, and combines them into one article.

The bill mandates that a portion of gross proceeds from
charitable gaming be received by local government entities,
charitable and veteran organizations and used for charitable,
educational and public service purposes. In addition, employee
number and compensation are increased and uses of proceeds from
charitable gaming is further clarified.

This chapter is new; therefore strike-throughs and
underscoring have been omitted.)