Taxpayers footing Magpies' pokie bill Mark Russell
October 10, 2010 THE Collingwood Football Club has used a legal loophole to get taxpayers to help cover $2.7 million it spent on running the club and its pokies venues in the past year, describing the operating costs as a ''community benefit''.
But the club's five poker machines venues - which brought in almost $23 million in revenue - made no community benefit payments to the elderly or the poor in 2009-10, documents filed with the Victorian Commission for Gambling Regulation show.
Over the past year, Collingwood rose to the top of the pokies ladder, raising $10 million more than the next most lucrative club, Essendon.
Collingwood is one of nine Melbourne-based AFL clubs allowed to claim a tax break of 8.3 per cent on pokies revenue if they can prove they are spending at least that much on community initiatives.
But under a loophole, clubs can claim payments to players and officials, as well as some venue running costs, as a benefit to the community.
Full article here:
http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/taxpayers-footing-magpies-pokie-bill-20101009-16d37.html