Lottery Spends Almost 70% of Revenue on Prizes in Fiscal Year 2021

In June the Arkansas Lottery wrapped up Fiscal Year 2021.

Reports released Monday indicate that, all told, nearly 70% of the Arkansas Lottery’s revenue went to prizes for lottery players in the past fiscal year. Seventeen percent went to college scholarships.

For perspective, the typical state lottery budgets approximately 25% – 30% of its revenue for education and about 60% for prizes.

The Arkansas Lottery grossed nearly $632.6 million in fiscal year 2021. Of that money, $106.6 million went to scholarships. $440.1 million went to prizes.

The Arkansas Lottery managed to allocate more than $100 million for scholarships for the first time in its 12 year history. However, it was only able to do that by tapping into more than $8 million in unclaimed prize money.

The Arkansas Lottery could pay millions of dollars more to scholarships every year if it simply would reduce its prize budget and raise its scholarship budget. Unfortunately, the Lottery has shown little interest in doing that.

Below is a breakdown of lottery revenue, scholarships, and prizes for Fiscal Year 2021 (July 1, 2020 – June 30, 2021).

Scholarship Spending

MonthGross Lottery RevenuePaid to Scholarships% Gross Revenue
July, 2020$49,780,369.99$8,592,573.9317.3%
August49,672,105.047,862,917.4415.8%
September47,501,224.727,691,576.9916.2%
October42,615,839.968,447,337.0019.8%
November43,115,514.848,207,598.8819.0%
December50,329,644.305,970,922.5311.9%
January, 202162,994,737.2710,913,192.3217.3%
February42,099,444.225,592,370.9513.3%
March67,975,057.808,341,917.3812.3%
April65,520,420.7212,299,938.6418.8%
May57,605,418.677,588,364.3713.2%
June53,370,041.1615,100,729.4728.3%
Total$632,579,818.69$106,609,439.9016.9%

Prize Spending

MonthGross Lottery RevenueTotal Prizes% Going to Prizes
July, 202049,780,369.9935,641,717.4871.6%
August49,672,105.0435,023,856.8370.5%
September47,501,224.7233,422,556.1470.4%
October42,615,839.9629,995,072.5070.4%
November43,115,514.8430,548,473.7270.9%
December50,329,644.3033,661,170.7566.9%
January, 202162,994,737.2741,745,065.1766.3%
February42,099,444.2227,955,512.1966.4%
March67,975,057.8047,945,090.7870.5%
April65,520,420.7246,040,694.0270.3%
May57,605,418.6740,336,944.4870.0%
June53,370,041.1637,830,320.4870.9%
Total632,579,818.69440,146,474.5469.6%

Photo Credit: Powerball and Mega Millions Lottery Billboard in Missouri by Tony Webster, on Flickr.

Is The Transgender Miss Nevada Making or Mocking History?

John Stonestreet, Radio Host and Director of the Colson Center

Last month the New York Post congratulated the first transgender contestant for winning the Miss Nevada USA Pageant, saying that the biological male was “making history.”

Kataluna Enriquez bested 21 other contestants, in the usual beauty pageant stuff including wearing skimpy swimsuits. For years, these contests have been justly criticized as sexist and objectifying to women. But now that a man is competing, they’re “historic”?

Certainly not like the first man on the moon, or Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, or the signing of the Magna Carta? I doubt that “men in beauty pageants” will earn an entry in our history books next to “George Washington.”

If these steps in the trans revolution are remembered as historic, it will be as signs of a culture that lost its way and indulged in unhealthy delusions. 

Those who declare that trans men are “making history” should take care. After all, History is littered with “historic” moments, once praised, that are now derided.

Copyright 2021 by the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Reprinted from BreakPoint.org with permission.