Lottery Ticket Sales Jump As Stimulus Checks Arrive

Ticket sales for the Arkansas Lottery rose in the later part of April, after Arkansans began receiving economic stimulus checks, according to documents Family Council obtained via the Freedom of Information Act.

Family Council recently sent the Arkansas Lottery Office a Freedom of Information Act request asking for weekly ticket sales information from March 29 to April 25.

The reports show that from March 29 to April 4, Arkansas Lottery instant ticket net sales were about $9 million.

During the week of April 5 to April 11, instant ticket net sales dropped to $8.9 million.

From April 12 to April 18, net sales for instant lottery tickets rose to more than $9.8 million.

And during the week of April 19 to April 25, net sales for instant lottery tickets surpassed $11 million.

Across the board, Arkansas lottery ticket sales jumped during the week of April 19 – April 25, compared to previous weeks.

It’s impossible to know how many lottery tickets were bought using COVID-19 stimulus money the federal government sent to Arkansans, but it seems like more than just a coincidence that lottery ticket sales would jump after these checks began arriving.

News outlets have similarly reported that in Texas state lottery ticket sales saw a boost after stimulus checks were deposited.

It’s no secret that gambling preys on the poor and desperate, and state-run lotteries like Arkansas’ are no exception.

That’s why groups like Stop Predatory Gambling have called on state officials to suspend their state-run lotteries temporarily as taxpayers receive relief checks.

Otherwise money that is meant to help taxpayers make ends meet during these challenging times could end up being wasted on losing lottery tickets.

State Lottery Still Spending Thousands on Travel

Since last July, the Arkansas Lottery has spent more than $151,000 reimbursing employees for their travel mileage, according to the Arkansas Transparency website.

That’s up about $8,000 since April 1 of this year.

We’ve written repeatedly about how the Arkansas Lottery reimburses its employees for travel across the state instead of using Department of Finance vehicles, which are cheaper.

When state employees use their personal vehicles for work-related travel, they can be reimbursed 42 cents for every mile they drive.

In light of that, it appears Arkansas Lottery employees have driven their personal vehicles nearly 360,000 miles on official, Lottery business since July 1, 2019.

It may seem odd to some people that Arkansas Lottery employees have continued to to receive reimbursements for travel mileage amid a statewide pandemic.

Spending six figures on mileage reimbursement is just another example of wasteful spending at the Arkansas Lottery.

Lottery Scholarship Funding Low Despite High Sales: March Report

Last week the Arkansas Lottery released its report for the month of March.

The report shows the Arkansas Lottery took in nearly $47.9 million — the highest revenue of any month since March of last year.

Despite selling so many lottery tickets, Arkansas’ college students received less than $7.4 million last month — about 15 cents out of every dollar the Arkansas Lottery made.

More than $33 million went to prizes for lottery players.

As we have said time and time again, the Arkansas Lottery does not make scholarship funding a priority. If it did, Arkansas’ college students would get more than 15% – 16% of the Lottery’s revenue.

Below is a breakdown of Lottery revenue and scholarship funding so far this fiscal year.

Month Gross Lottery Revenue Paid to Scholarships % Gross Revenue
July $41,239,173.79 $4,523,930.75 11.0%
August 40,899,086.75 4,942,736.97 12.1%
September 36,202,677.79 6,565,973.32 18.1%
October 38,932,640.23 6,318,099.21 16.2%
November 36,118,641.12 5,947,177.45 16.5%
December 46,134,469.21 6,371,983.49 13.8%
January, 2020 40,802,067.75 8,239,083.77 20.2%
February 40,670,746.71 7,233,556.77 17.8%
March 47,876,969.85 7,386,497.30 15.4%
Total $368,876,473.20 $57,529,039.03 15.6%