Multi-State Lottery Association

Multi-State Lottery Association

The Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL) is a non-profit, government-benefit association owned and operated by agreement of its 33 member lotteries (see below.) MUSL was created to facilitate the operation of multi-jurisdictional lottery games, including Powerball, Mega Millions), video lottery, and instant (scratch) tickets. (MUSL will be supervising MegaHits, its second video lottery terminal (VLT) game; it will begin on July 15, 2011.)

It was formed in December 1987 by seven US lotteries. Its first game was launched in February 1988, called Lotto*America. That game was changed to Powerball; its first drawing was on April 22, 1992. Powerball was a unique game using two drums, suggested to MUSL by Steve Caputo of the Oregon Lottery. Powerball is played in 44 jurisdictions, including the District of Columbia and the US Virgin Islands. (Mega Millions, which became part of MUSL on January 31, 2010 but is operated by its 12 original members, is offered in 43 jurisdictions.)

Contents

MUSL members

MUSL's membership consists of 33 US lotteries, including the District of Columbia, and the US Virgin Islands),[1] which sold Powerball tickets prior to the January 31, 2010 beginning of cross-selling with the 12 lotteries that operated Mega Millions. The year in parentheses below is when each of the 33 lotteries joined MUSL:

Other games

Besides Powerball, MUSL operates 2by2, Hot Lotto, and Wild Card 2. It coordinates with the 12 Mega Millions consortium lotteries concerning their participation in Powerball[2] as well as MUSL member lotteries in Mega Millions[3].

MUSL has retired several games, including Ca$hola (video lottery), Daily Millions, Rolldown, and the Powerball scratchcard game; the latter was tied to a weekly television game show produced for two years in Hollywood, California called Powerball: The Game Show; then for two years from the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas, called Powerball Instant Millionaire.

In September 2007, MUSL launched Midwest Millions, a scratch ticket game, in Iowa and Kansas; it was the country's first multi-jurisdictional scratch game since the Powerball television game shows. Midwest Millions returned in 2008 and 2009.

Ca$hola was retired on May 15, 2011 when its 37th jackpot was won. A replacement multi-jurisdictional video lottery game, MegaHits, began on July 15, 2011 in Delaware, Rhode Island, and West Virginia, the three lotteries which offered Ca$hola. MegaHits will feature five progressives; Ca$hola's top prize was its only jackpot.

Services

MUSL provides a variety of services for lotteries, including: game design, management of game finances, production and uplinking of drawings, the development of common minimum information technology and security standards and inspections of lottery vendor sites; the building of a quantum-based Random number generator (RNG), coordination of common promotions and advertisements, coordination of public relations, and emergency back-drawing sites for lottery games. MUSL also hosts the Powerball web site and the websites for more than a dozen U.S. lotteries. The Powerball web site average over 350,000 pageviews per day (over 10.5 million monthly). MUSL provides these services to the lotteries at no cost. MUSL earns its income from non-game sources such as earnings on its accounts, bond swaps, and licensing of its trademarks. MUSL owns the patents and trademarks involved in its operations, holding them for the benefit of its members.

MUSL's director is Chuck Strutt, who was the association's first employee in 1987. Strutt directly responds to players and writes MUSL's unusual FAQ, which elicits strong responses from readers who may find it humorous or insulting. MUSL currently has 12 full-time employees located in Urbandale, Iowa. The Powerball drawings moved to Florida when it joined; however, MUSL's other draw games continue to be conducted in Iowa.

MUSL games operate under the same core game rules in each jurisdiction; however, each lottery is free to vary rules pertaining to such things as purchase age, the claim period, and some validation processes.

Powerball/Mega Millions cross-selling begins

On October 13, 2009 the Mega Millions consortium and MUSL signed an agreement that allowed MUSL members to sell Mega Millions tickets, and consortium members to sell Powerball tickets. On January 31, 2010, all but 2 of the 12 Mega Millions consortium lotteries began selling Powerball tickets. The consortium members did not join MUSL;[1] they were licensed by MUSL to sell Powerball; the consortium coordinates their Powerball participation with MUSL.[2] Likewise, MUSL members may offer Mega Millions through a special MUSL product group that coordinates with the Mega Millions consortium.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b MUSL - Members
  2. ^ a b MUSL Powerball Group Rules (Arkansas Scholarship Lottery)
  3. ^ a b MUSL Mega Millions Product Group Rules (Arkansas Scholarship Lottery)

External links


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