Nj legalized games of chance raffle report
More information about RSS feeds. You may be trying to access this site from a secured browser on the server. Please enable scripts and reload this page. Turn on more accessible mode. Turn off more accessible mode. Skip Ribbon Commands. Every organization interested in conducting bingo or raffles or allow its members to assist a licensed affiliated organization, must first apply to the Commission for eligibility.
If the Commission determines that the applicant qualifies as a bona fide charitable, educational, religious, patriotic, public-spirited organization or senior citizen association or club it issues to it a registration certificate reflecting its identification number. The Charitable Registration and Investigation Act of requires certain groups organized as a c 3 entity or which raise money for charitable purposes to register with the Division of Consumer Affairs - Office of Consumer Protection's Charities Registration Section.
To check whether your organization is required to register with the Section, you can call or click the above link. Once registered with the Legalized Games of Chance Control Commission, the organization must file a license application s for each separate type of game of chance it intends to conduct from the appropriate municipality where the games are to be held. Upon doing so the organization must exhibit their identification card to the municipal clerk when submitting their license application.
Raffle licensing laws limit the prizes that can be awarded in any one game. Specific rules will also apply, depending on the exact format of the raffle. The organization conducting the raffle must file a report with the Legalized Games of Chance Control Commission during the calendar month following the raffle. The report should detail the gross receipts, the expenses and the net profit. The organization should also provide details of the uses to which the profits have been applied and a list of the prizes awarded.
The Commission has the power to impose fines on any organization that has not complied with the statutory rules. Based in the United Kingdom, Holly Cameron has been writing law-related articles since
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