North Carolina Sports Betting Bill Survives Its First Committee Hearing
A committee just gave North Carolina’s new online sports betting bill its first hearing today. The bill passed, but with some challenges.
How North Carolina Proposes To Spend Its Online Sports Betting Taxes
If NC legalizes online sports betting, it will create millions of new tax dollars each year. A dozen entities would be spending that money.
North Carolina Sports Betting Bill Includes In-State College Betting
College sports betting is major part of North Carolina’s new bill. That includes betting on teams that reside in the Tar Heel State.
North Carolina Sports Betting Bill Mirrors Best Parts Of Other States
North Carolina’s new sports betting bill is taking the best parts of other industries. Lawmakers have learned from their previous mistakes.
Will This Be The Last March Madness Without North Carolina Online Sports Betting?
Lawmakers plan to launch North Carolina online sports betting on Jan. 1, 2024. That would let residents bet on next year’s March Madness.
North Carolina Fan’s Guide To Betting On March Madness
The Big Dance is finally here, and basketball fans in North Carolina have a few different options for betting on March Madness this year.
New North Carolina Online Sports Betting Bill Filed In House
Lawmakers are taking another swing at bringing online sports betting to North Carolina. The road to legalization began today for a new bill.
North Carolina Sports Betting Bill Could Double Proposed Problem Gambling Funding
If North Carolina legalizes sports betting, then the state will have a fresh $2 million to spend every year on fighting gambling addiction.
Could North Carolina Sports Betting Spawn Legalization Efforts In Other Southern States?
There’s always resistance to gambling expansion in the South, but North Carolina could be the first of many sports betting dominoes to fall.
New North Carolina Sports Betting Bill Looks A Lot Like Last Year’s
A new North Carolina sports betting bill is on the way, and the proposed legislation echoes a lot of the same ideas from last year’s bill.