The new chairman of the Nevada Gaming Control Board (NGCB) is advocating sweeping changes that would streamline approvals for gambling technology innovations.
Kirk Hendrick, a 58-year-old Las Vegas attorney, was appointed to a four-year term as NGCB chairman in January by new Republican Governor Joe Lombardo.
鈥淥ne of the reasons I took this job was to make radical change, make revolutionary change, and if we can get it done collaboratively, this is going to be a big step in the right direction,鈥 Hendrick said on Wednesday (September 27) during an NGCB workshop on technology approval processes in Las Vegas.
Lombardo recently lifted a regulatory freeze he imposed shortly after taking office, but Hendrick seems determined to make Nevada gaming regulations more 鈥渞isk tolerant.鈥
Hendrick grew impatient when Dan Reaser, an attorney representing the Association of Gaming Equipment Manufacturers (AGEM), disagreed with the NGCB鈥檚 recommendation that Nevada鈥檚 regulatory procedures should be compared to those in other states.
鈥淎ll I鈥檝e heard since before I took this job was Nevada is slower than other jurisdictions,鈥 Hendrick told Reaser.
鈥淐an you tell me, in a concrete example, why 鈥 Nevada would be slower?鈥
Reaser, who has testified on policy submitted to the NGCB on behalf of the AGEM, responded that Nevada should not be driven by what other states do.
鈥淭he objective of evaluating modernization of technology processes is not just to do enough or just as good as another jurisdiction,鈥 Reaser said.聽
鈥淭he goal has to be that Nevada is put at the forefront as best in class.鈥
鈥淒uration鈥, or the setting of deadlines for the NGCB to act on new gaming devices or technological innovations, is key to modernizing gaming regulations, Reaser said.聽
A series of deadlines for regulatory approval would apply only to gaming devices that have been certified by an independent testing laboratory.
鈥淲hat needs to be discussed is what is the appropriate number of days to complete whatever regulatory process the board decides to implement for a particular type of technology,鈥 Reaser said.
For example, if the modification of a gambling device has been reviewed by the NGCB but a final decision is pending, the device should be deemed automatically approved after three days.
After Reaser spelled out several other recommended deadlines for gaming device applications, Hendrick appeared mollified.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I鈥檝e been looking for; I鈥檝e been looking for something concrete that we can dig into and that鈥檚 the framework you鈥檝e given us,鈥 Hendrick said.
However, NGCB member Brittnie Watkins and Jim Barbee 鈥 the chief of the NGCB鈥檚 technology division 鈥 expressed concern about whether their agency has the financial wherewithal to operate under deadlines.聽
Barbee described the deadlines recommended by AGEM as 鈥渃urt.鈥
鈥淚t definitely will require some additional overhead 鈥 just to track all the timelines,鈥 he said.聽
Still, Hendrick ended the meeting by enthusiastically touting the potentially historic regulatory changes he hopes the NGCB will adopt.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to use the word 鈥榬evolutionary鈥. That might come back and bite me, but I hope it鈥檚 bigger than revolutionary,鈥 Hendrick said.
鈥淚 hope people are talking at G2E [Global Gaming Expo, beginning October 9 in Las Vegas] about how Nevada just changed the game.鈥
Wednesday鈥檚 workshop was the second such meeting of regulators and industry stakeholders this year to discuss changes to Nevada鈥檚 approval processes for new gaming technologies.
The NGCB has scheduled similar workshops on October 5 and October 18 to review the state鈥檚 regulatory approaches to licensing investigations and enforcement.


