relative to the liability for death of a companion animal.
Allows certain political entities (nonfederal candidates, PACs, state and legislative district parties) to use net raffle income for political purposes if locally recognized and pe
Allows certain political entities (nonfederal candidates, PACs, state and legislative district parties) to use net raffle income for political purposes if locally recognized and pe
Status: Introduced Nov. 13, 2024. Second reading — failed to pass (yeas 21, nays 72).
Purpose
- To amend subsection 1 of ND Century Code §53‑06.1‑03 to clarify and expand when proceeds from permitted gaming (specifically raffles) may be used for a political purpose by certain categories of organizations recognized as “public‑spirited.”
Key provisions and changes
- Recognition and permitting (unchanged framework retained)
- Organizations must be recognized as a “public‑spirited organization” by the city or county governing body to obtain local permits for certain games (raffles, bingo, sports pools, etc.).
- Local permits are issued on forms prescribed by the attorney general; governing bodies may charge up to $25 per permit and set times/places for games.
- Prize caps for local/restricted permits remain: primary prize ≤ $8,000 and total prizes per year ≤ $40,000 (does not apply to raffles under chapter 20.1‑08).
New/clarified allowance to use raffle net income for political purposes (main change)
Continued limitations for restricted event permits
Who is affected
- Directly affected:
- Nonfederal candidate campaign committees, nonfederal PACs, state political parties, and legislative district party committees in municipalities/counties that recognize them as “public‑spirited” — these entities could lawfully direct net raffle proceeds to political purposes if permitted locally.
- Local governments (city/county governing bodies) that decide recognition and issue permits.
- The attorney general’s office (form and regulatory oversight) and permit applicants (must disclose intended use of net income on application).
- Indirectly affected:
- Voters and the public (changes fundraising pathways for political organizations).
- Other nonprofit or civic organizations (distinction preserved — only specified political entities are called out).
Procedural/timing notes
- The bill was introduced Nov. 13, 2024.
- According to the provided status, it reached second reading but failed to pass (yeas 21, nays 72).
- If enacted, the amendment would become part of NDCC §53‑06.1‑03 and operate within the existing local permitting/registration framework administered by city/county governing bodies and subject to attorney general rules and reporting requirements.
Potential implications (objective)
- Enables certain political organizations to raise and deploy raffle proceeds directly for political purposes where local recognition and permits are granted.
- Maintains existing structural safeguards: local recognition, disclosure of intended uses on permit application, prize caps for local permits, and AG‑prescribed reporting.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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