Pimlico Plus bill gets General Assembly OK

HB 1524, the legislation to set the wheels in motion the Pimlico Plus plan, passed the House of Delegates Monday evening by a vote of 105-32.

The House action, coupled with an earlier 41-6 vote in the Senate, represents final legislative action on the bill and moves it to the desk of Gov. Wes Moore (D). Since he has been an advocate of the bill, he is expected to sign it.

The overall bill, coupled with a series of agreements its passage is expected to trigger, will remake Maryland racing. It will lead to the closure of Laurel Park, the revitalization of Pimlico Race Course, and the acquisition of land for and building of a training center. It will also end Maryland’s tradition of private, for-profit ownership of racetracks, replacing that with a state-owned, nonprofit-managed model.

The legislation authorizes the Maryland Stadium Authority to issue up to $400 million in bonds to support the project.

The bill will operationalize a plan developed by Maryland Thoroughbred Racetrack Operating Authority (MTROA), which the General Assembly created last year to determine the best course for Maryland racing’s future. And it will trigger several agreements the Authority says it has hammered out with the Stronach Group, which owns Laurel Park and Pimlico.

Those will include the transfer of Pimlico to the state for a nominal price of one dollar and an agreement that will see the MTROA paying the Stronach Group millions of dollars annually in perpetuity for the right to run the Preakness Stakes.

The passage of the legislation followed – as is, to some extent, tradition – a frantic sprint to the finish line. The legislation had easily passed the House April 1, but a hearing in the Senate’s Budget and Taxation committee April 5 made clear that many Senators were troubled by aspects of the bill.

Senators, the Governor’s representatives, and MTROA members worked through the weekend to craft a series of amendments that didn’t exactly make Senators happy – “a leap of faith,” one Senator termed voting for it – but made them willing to vote in favor.

Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) called the bill a “hot potato” as the Senate approved it, and hours later, the House followed suit.

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