After a decadelong slide, pulltabs, bingo and other forms of charitable gambling are bouncing back in Minnesota, with gross receipts up 8.6 percent statewide this fiscal year and expected to top $1.1 billion, according to the Minnesota Gambling Control Board.
That's the biggest percentage increase in more than 20 years and the third straight year-to-year rise.
"It's just clear to us the economy has rebounded," said Al Lund, executive director of Allied Charities of Minnesota, which represents the nearly 1,200 nonprofit groups running charitable gambling operations in the state. "People are back out enjoying themselves and are willing to donate to their local charities."
That appears to be especially so in Anoka County. The 29 nonprofits based there eclipsed $101 million in gambling receipts in 2013, a 14 percent jump from 2012, according to Gambling Control Board data. That works out to roughly $300 in charitable gambling by every man, woman and child in the county, compared with about $200 per person for the state as a whole.
"Anecdotally [Anoka County] is a very strong area for charities," Lund said. "The charities that are up there are very active. People know what they do in their community and they are willing to donate."
Data for other counties aren't yet available; the Gambling Control Board will issue statewide numbers later this month.
When gross revenue from charitable gambling dipped below $1 billion in 2010 — the lowest it had been in two decades — some theorized that a generation gap might be a factor. But Lund of Allied Charities said the younger generations are buying in, fueling a resurgence in bar bingo in particular.
"Paper bingo is enjoying a resurgence with young people. It's an interesting development we didn't see coming," he said.