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Schwarzenegger wants California lottery privatized

SAN FRANCISCO
Thu May 10, 2007 8:17pm EDT
A cashier hands a customer a Mega Millions lottery ticket in New York in this March 6, 2007 file photo. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to privatize the state lottery in what would be the first such move in the United States, aides said on Thursday. REUTERS/Eric Thayer

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to privatize the state lottery in what would be the first such move in the United States, aides said on Thursday.

Nearly all U.S. states have lotteries, a popular source of revenue, but many state officials are reconsidering their value because of the costs of managing them. If California opts to let the private sector take on its lottery system, smaller states could follow.

Schwarzenegger has concluded that California's lottery system, approved by voters in 1984 to help raise money for public schools, is not living up to its financial potential and that the private sector could do better.

California gets just over $1 billion a year from lottery ticket sales, or less than 1 percent of total revenues.

"This is about maximizing the return for California taxpayers," Schwarzenegger spokesman Adam Mendelsohn said on a conference call. "It's underperforming."

The lottery posted sales of $3.58 billion last year. Just over a third of its revenues go to schools, half pays for prizes and some 16 percent covers operating costs.

The state's lottery games are already managed by two private companies: Scientific Games Corp. and GTech, which last year merged with Italy's Lottomatica SpA.

But full privatization would free the state of cumbersome retail and marketing operations that private companies may regard as attractive opportunities, said former California Treasurer Kathleen Brown, now managing director and head of West Coast Municipal Finance for Goldman Sachs.

Administration aides declined to discuss the possible terms of such a deal, noting that Schwarzenegger is just starting to reach out to lawmakers about the idea.

Because of steady economic growth, California has in recent years managed to narrow a persistent gap between its revenues and spending, but the deficit still worries credit rating agencies.

State leaders have looked into new sources of cash, including California's fast-growing appetite for gambling.

Republican Schwarzenegger has aggressively pursued deals with Indian tribes to allow them to expand gambling operations on their lands in exchange for sharing casino revenues.



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