State Lottery Spends One-Fourth as Much on Students as Prizes

The Arkansas Lottery wrapped up its fiscal year on June 31, 2020.

According to reports the state released on Friday, the Lottery budgeted four times as much money for prizes as it did for college scholarships.

The Arkansas Lottery spent a little less than $89.5 million on scholarships — about 16.8% of its total revenue for the fiscal year

However, the Arkansas Lottery budgeted nearly $370 million for prizes — about 69.5% of its revenue.

For perspective, the typical state lottery spends about 30% of its revenue on education and about 60% on prizes paid out to lottery players.

Because the Arkansas Lottery budgets so much money for prizes and so little for education, the Lottery has failed to live up to its promise to provide $100 million per year in funding for college scholarships.

Had the Arkansas Lottery structured its budget more like most states, it probably would have provided millions more in scholarship funding.

Below is a breakdown of lottery revenue, scholarship funding, and prize payouts for Fiscal Year 2020.

Scholarship Spending

MonthGross Lottery RevenuePaid to Scholarships% Gross Revenue
July$41,239,173.79$4,523,930.7511.0%
August40,899,086.754,942,736.9712.1%
September36,202,677.796,565,973.3218.1%
October38,932,640.236,318,099.2116.2%
November36,118,641.125,947,177.4516.5%
December46,134,469.216,371,983.4913.8%
January, 202040,802,067.758,239,083.7720.2%
February40,670,746.717,233,556.7717.8%
March47,876,969.857,386,497.3015.4%
April49,549,754.168,318,312.6416.8%
May61,129,306.968,619,106.3914.1%
June52,445,625.4614,984,463.1828.6%
Total$532,001,159.78$89,450,921.2416.8%

Prize Allocation

MonthGross Lottery RevenueTotal Prizes% Going to Prizes
July$41,239,173.79$27,395,174.4466.4%
August40,899,086.7527,981,278.9068.4%
September36,202,677.7925,380,100.6970.1%
October38,932,640.2326,836,578.1468.9%
November36,118,641.1224,593,530.9568.1%
December46,134,469.2132,772,295.0971.0%
January, 202040,802,067.7527,636,240.2467.7%
February40,670,746.7128,772,455.2370.7%
March47,876,969.8533,400,886.9269.8%
April49,549,754.1635,431,849.0371.5%
May61,129,306.9642,848,771.8270.1%
June52,445,625.4636,553,760.7069.7%
Total$532,001,159.78$369,602,922.1569.5%

Trial Over Arkansas’ Ten Commandments Monument Delayed

A trial over Arkansas’ monument of the Ten Commandments has been postponed due to COVID-19.

In 2015 Sen. Jason Rapert (R – Conway) sponsored a law authorizing a monument of the Ten Commandments on the Arkansas State Capitol Grounds.

The monument was paid for with private funds, and it was placed on the Capitol lawn on June 27, 2017.

Less than 24 hours later, a man plowed a vehicle into the monument, completely destroying it.

The monument was rebuilt and replaced on the Capitol grounds in April of 2018.

Shortly afterward, the American Humanist Association, the Freedom From Religion Foundation, and the Satanic Temple all filed legal challenges to have the monument removed.

The lawsuit was set to go to trial this month, but due to disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic, the trial is being delayed 60 – 90 days.

As we have written before, Arkansas’ monument of the Ten Commandments is identical to one the U.S. Supreme Court ruled constitutional in Texas in 2005.

Frankly, there just shouldn’t be anything controversial about a monument honoring the significance of the Ten Commandments.

Historians have long recognized the Ten Commandments as one of the earliest examples of the rule of law in human history, and they have helped shape the laws in countries around the world.

Arkansas’ monument simply honors that legacy.