I thought I'd better add a note clarifying something I wrote awhile back. While the logical person would THINK the basic starting point for needing a license is if you are charging for bingo, it may not actually be that simple.
Believe it or not, in Texas, ANY bingo game outside very few exceptions require a license- and schools/PTOs are not one of the exceptions. And a licensed game cannot allow anyone to play for free. (If you read the statute, it sounds like they want to prevent a bingo operator from letting a friend or someone into a commercial game for free. However, since everyone needs a license, and if you have a license you can't let anyone play free, it's illegal to have a free game.)
So, technically, a PTO couldn't legally run a FREE game in Texas. I had remembered this - sort of - from when I initially did my research, but I didn't pay much attention since we charge. However, I double checked it today (twice) with the agency that oversees this in our state.
I know this is absurd. The point of bingo laws are to control gambling. If there's no money involved, no gambling - right? However, sad but true, our state laws are written this way.
As much as I try to follow the rules and do things the right way, it's highly unlikely I'd push for getting a license if we were running a free game.
And as a citizen, I'm outraged at the unneccessary costs the state would incur to license such a game. Yes, there's $25 fee, but that can't begin to cover the staff time, let alone the background checks. When we apply for a license, we usually list 20+ people. The state has to conduct a background check on each of them. Maybe there's a reason for this that I don't understand, but it really sounds like a good intent run amuck.
[ 01-27-2004, 12:11 AM: Message edited by: JHB ]