Five Firms File Financial Data for Lotto Award
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SACRAMENTO — Five firms have filed financial disclosure information as a preliminary move toward bidding on a massive state contract to operate a computerized lotto game next year.
“It looks like we have five bidders,” lottery spokesman Bob Taylor said, just after the noon Friday deadline.
Most of the 10 interested electronics manufacturers originally balked at making detailed financial disclosures, including the personal finances of corporate officers and stockholders in their company, parent firm and subsidiaries. The disclosures are required by the initiative adopted by voters last year that set up the state lottery.
But the five bidding corporations apparently complied with the regulations to have a chance at a contract potentially worth $200 million over four years. It will be one of the biggest state government computer contracts ever and the largest contract that will be awarded by the lottery.
San Diego Firm
Taylor said International Totalizator Systems Inc. of San Diego was the first firm to bring in its disclosures, which came in 11 cardboard boxes. It was closely followed by Control Data Corp. of New York; GTECH Corp. of Rhode Island; General Instrument Corp., which is bidding from its new Sacramento office, and Scientific Games Inc. of Georgia.
The disclosure requirements are supposedly aimed at maintaining the games’ integrity, but have been criticized as limiting competition.
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