For Immediate
Release: October 6, 2005
Senator Daisy Lawler
Senator Lawler Questions Decision to Sell Lottery Tickets at
Pawn Shops and Payday Loan Companies
State Senator Daisy
Lawler Thursday encouraged members of the Oklahoma Education
Lottery Commission to move quickly to ban the sale of lottery
tickets at pawn shops and payday loan companies and vowed to push
for legislation next year to prevent such sales.
“Allowing the sale of lottery tickets in pawn
shops and over the counters at payday loan companies is nothing
more than preying on the poorest among us,” said Lawler,
D-Comanche. “There’s right and wrong and that’s
just wrong.”
Wednesday, the Lottery Commission voted to approve
emergency rules that would allow ticket sales at pawnshops and
payday loan companies. Commission Chairman James Orbison said
it is possible for the commission to revisit the issue and disallow
the sale of lottery tickets at those businesses.
Lawler spent 28 years as a classroom teacher in
Oklahoma.
“Obviously, the more tickets that are sold
the more money we’ll have for our schools, but I can’t
support encouraging people to borrow money to buy lottery tickets
and that’s what the state will be doing if we allow the
sale of lottery tickets at pawn shops and payday loan companies,”
Lawler said. “This is greed, plain and simple. It’s
not healthy and it won’t lead to a healthier Oklahoma economy.”
The Lottery Commission should reconvene as soon
as possible, she said, to take up the issue again and ban the
sale of lottery tickets at pawnshops and payday loan companies.
“I will introduce legislation next session
that will clearly make the sale of lottery tickets at pawnshops
and payday loan companies illegal. I will be contacting the Governor’s
office today to suggest that he also encourage the commission
to move quickly to ban those sales in their rules immediately,”
Lawler said.
Sales of scratch-off lottery tickets are set to
begin next month and the state is expected to join a multi-state
lottery next year.
Lawler said the thought of a sign promoting the
sale of lottery tickets for a multi-million dollar drawing appearing
in the same window as a sign promoting high-interest payday loans
is “immoral.”
“It’s contrary to our values and Oklahomans
should be outraged,” Lawler said.