Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1.
Internal accounting and
administrative controls required.
A. An
organization must establish and implement a written system of internal
accounting and administrative controls for its lawful gambling operations, on a
form prescribed by the board, in addition to any other documented procedures
the organization has approved and implemented to meet the following objectives:
(1) transactions are made with management's
authorization;
(2) gambling revenue
transactions are recorded properly and completely to maintain accountability
for assets;
(3) assets are secured
and access to assets is only permitted with management's
authorization;
(4) recorded
gambling funds and equipment are monitored on an ongoing basis and
discrepancies are resolved;
(5)
separation of duties, functions, and responsibilities to protect the
organization from theft and fraudulent reporting and ensure compliance with all
lawful gambling reporting requirements; and
(6) fair play of the games to the public is
not restricted.
B. The
organization's members, gambling employees, or gambling volunteers must
perform, at a minimum, the following duties:
(1) prepare source documents that include:
(a) inventory records for daily tracking of
game inventory, site inventory, monthly physical inventory, and merchandise
inventory. The person who maintains the perpetual inventory must not be the
same person who performs the physical inventory;
(b) gambling deposit slips;
(c) gambling occasion and daily activity
records; and
(d) authorization for
disbursements of gambling funds;
(2) provide oversight of lawful gambling
including but not limited to:
(a) conduct of
lawful gambling;
(b) monitoring the
organization's permitted premises to detect illegal gambling;
(c) investigating cash variances;
(d) determining product to be
purchased;
(e) ordering
product;
(f) presenting the
gambling report to members at the regular monthly meeting of the organization;
and
(g) ensuring compliance with
the lawful purpose rating under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.15,
subdivision 1;
(3) hire,
discipline, or fire employees;
(4)
train employees;
(5) deposit
gambling receipts into the bank accounts;
(6) verify cash banks; and
(7) verify that all gambling expenditures,
equipment, assets, and receipts are properly accounted for.
C. The organization is responsible
for verifying the accuracy of records and reports, including but not limited
to:
(1) check register;
(2) monthly bank statement
reconciliation;
(3) all tax returns
and schedules;
(4) final audit of
closed games;
(5) bank deposit
reconciliation to game and bank records;
(6) reconciliation of physical and perpetual
inventories; and
(7) all monthly
reports filed with the board.
D. The organization must use the
board-prescribed form to document the segregation of functional
responsibilities for the organization's gambling operations, including the
names or titles of persons who are responsible for:
(1) presenting the monthly gambling report to
the organization membership;
(2)
ensuring that prior authorization for all gambling expenditures is
obtained;
(3) recording the monthly
gambling report and authorization of expenditures in the organization meeting
minutes;
(4) preparing checks and
electronic transaction authorizations for signatures and maintaining the check
register that includes check and electronic transactions;
(5) signing checks from the gambling
account;
(6) maintaining perpetual
inventory records, and comparing the physical inventory to the perpetual
inventory;
(7) conducting and
verifying the physical inventory;
(8) maintaining merchandise
inventory;
(9) preparing bank
deposits;
(10) depositing receipts
into the gambling account;
(11)
reconciling bank statements to the checks, electronic transactions, and
deposits listed in the check register, and reconciling bank deposits to games
and bank records;
(12) auditing
closed games;
(13) verifying and
resolving profit carryover variances;
(14) preparing reports required to be
submitted to the board and the commissioner of revenue;
(15) monitoring the organization's compliance
with the lawful purpose rating under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.15,
subdivision 1;
(16) investigating
and resolving fund losses of missing inventory, tickets, or receipts;
and
(17) investigating and
resolving cash shortages.
E. If the organization does not meet the
requirements in this subpart, the board must require that the organization
revise its internal accounting and administrative control systems. Failure to
respond to the board's notice that the organization must revise its internal
accounting and administrative control systems must result in the board taking
disciplinary action.
Subp.
2.
Method of accounting.
An organization must use the cash basis method to report gross
receipts and allowable expenses on the tax return except that the accrual basis
method must be used to report the tax required by Minnesota Statutes, section
297E.02, and the
monthly regulatory fee required by Minnesota Statutes, section
349.16,
subdivision 6a.
Subp. 3.
Gambling bank accounts; expenditures of gambling funds; emergency
expenditures.
Each organization must maintain a separate gambling bank
account at banks, savings and loans institutions, or credit unions located
within Minnesota and comply with the following.
A. The organization must maintain a gambling
checking account that complies with the requirements of Minnesota Statutes,
section
297E.06,
subdivision 2, as prescribed by the commissioner of revenue.
B. For all expenditures from the gambling
checking account, two signatures of active organization members are required on
all checks and for the authorization for electronic transactions. The treasurer
of the organization may not sign the checks or the authorization for electronic
transactions from the gambling bank account.
C. The organization may make expenditures
from the gambling checking account by electronic transfer or by debit card.
Each month, two active organization members must review a listing of the
electronic transfers and debit card transactions for the previous month to
verify that the expenditures were made with the authorization of the
organization's membership. The active organization members conducting this
review must sign and date the list.
D. The organization must make all
expenditures or contributions of gambling funds from the gambling checking
accounts. This item does not pertain to emergency expenditures which may be
made from a source other than the organization's gambling account if the
organization's membership has approved the expenditure. "Emergency expenditure"
means a financial obligation due and payable which, if not met, would require
the organization to immediately stop gambling.
Subp. 4.
Deposits and transfers of
gambling receipts.
The following items pertain to the deposit and transfer of
gambling receipts.
A. Each
organization must deposit into the organization's gambling bank account all
income derived from or related to lawful gambling, including:
(1) all gambling receipts;
(2) interest income;
(3) any rebate or credit refund for an
expenditure originally paid with gambling funds; and
(4) advertising income, including any income
from sponsors of the organization's gambling activities.
B. An organization may transfer gambling
funds to a nonchecking gambling bank account.
C. For deposits of gambling receipts, the
organization must record on the deposit slip the date of deposit, premises
permit number, and the following:
(1) for
each paper pull-tab and tipboard game, the game serial number and amount of
actual cash deposited for each game;
(2) for electronic pull-tabs and electronic
linked bingo, the date of the first electronic game occasion included in the
deposit and the date of the last electronic game occasion being deposited;
(3) for bingo occasions, the date
of each occasion and amount of actual cash deposited from each
occasion;
(4) for raffles, the date
of the raffle and actual amount of deposit from the sale of raffle tickets or
certificates of participation; and
(5) for paddlewheel activity, the actual
amount of cash deposited from each day's paddlewheel activity and series number
of all paddletickets sold during that day's paddlewheel activity.
D. Funds from a nongambling source
must not be deposited in the gambling bank account except as required by
subpart
5 and subpart
16, item B.
E. Gambling funds must not be transferred to
the organization's general bank accounts for any expenditures or contributions
without prior board approval. This item does not pertain to transfers allowed
under subpart
15, item B.
Subp. 5.
Reimbursements to
gambling bank account.
An organization may not deposit funds from a nongambling source
into the gambling bank account unless the organization is required by the board
or as otherwise required by statute or rule to reimburse its gambling account
for the following reasons, including but not limited to:
A. unlawful expenditure or expense;
B. cash shortage;
C. fund loss;
D. gambling receipts that the organization
failed to deposit into the account;
E. bring the organization into compliance
with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 297E, as required by the commissioner of
revenue; or
F. bring the
organization into compliance as required by the terms of a license termination
plan approved by the board.
Subp.
6.
Report to membership and approval of expenditures by
membership required.
A. Before gambling
funds are spent, the organization must obtain the approval of its members at a
regular organization meeting and record the approval in the meeting
minutes.
B. The gambling manager or
designee must present a monthly report to the organization's members. The
organization must include the report with the meeting minutes. The report must
contain the following information:
(1) gross
receipts from each form of lawful gambling conducted;
(2) for each form of lawful gambling
conducted, the dollar amount of all prizes paid out and total value of all
merchandise prizes awarded;
(3)
details on all allowable expenses;
(4) records that show how the net receipts
from gambling activity were spent for lawful purpose;
(5) records of gambling equipment purchases,
including:
(a) type, quantity, date purchased,
and unit cost of equipment purchased; and
(b) the licensed distributor from whom the
equipment was purchased;
(6) a month-end physical inventory of all
games in play and unplayed games, including:
(a) manufacturer's identification, part
number, and serial number;
(b) game
name;
(c) cost of each game;
and
(d) date and signature, in ink,
of the person completing the inventory;
(7) bank reconciliation that balances with
the organization's profit carryover for each month, and lists:
(a) outstanding checks, including check
number, payee, and amount;
(b)
outstanding electronic transactions;
(c) deposits in transit;
(d) beginning and ending bank balances for
each month;
(8) any
correspondence received or sent about the organization's lawful gambling
operations; and
(9) any fund loss
discovered during the month.
C. On an annual basis the organization must
report to its membership the financial summary report required by Minnesota
Statutes, section
349.19,
subdivision 5, in a format prescribed by the board.
Subp. 7.
Report of lawful purpose
expenditures to board required.
An organization must file with the board a report of lawful
purpose expenditures as required by Minnesota Statutes, section
349.19,
subdivision 3, in a format prescribed by the board by the 20th day of the next
month.
Subp. 8.
Monthly report to revenue required.
The organization must file information each month with the
Department of Revenue as prescribed by the commissioner of revenue in Minnesota
Statutes, section
297E.06.
Subp. 9.
Fund loss report or
request for a profit carryover adjustment due to fund loss.
When an organization has a fund loss by questionable means of
its inventory or cash, including prizes paid from a game not conducted in
compliance with statute and rule, the organization must use the following
procedures.
A. The organization must
file a report with local law enforcement authorities within:
(1) five days of discovering the loss;
or
(2) 24 hours of discovering a
loss from a pull-tab dispensing device.
B. The organization must submit one of the
following to the board within 60 days of discovering the loss:
(1) documentation that its gambling account
was reimbursed for the amount of the fund loss from a source of nongambling
funds and the date the loss was reported to the organization's membership;
or
(2) a request for a profit
carryover adjustment due to a fund loss. If the organization does not submit
the request within 60 days of discovering the loss, the board will not consider
the request.
C. An
organization that submits a request to the board for a profit carryover
adjustment due to a fund loss must use a form prescribed by the board. The
request must contain, at a minimum:
(1)
organization's name, address, license number, premises permit number, and
effective date of the premises permit where the loss occurred;
(2) monetary value of the loss or total
amount of prizes paid from a game not conducted in compliance with statute and
rule;
(3) how and when the loss
occurred;
(4) how the assets were
secured when the loss occurred;
(5)
whether the current status of the law enforcement investigation is active,
inactive, or closed;
(6) whether
any portion of the loss has been or will be paid by insurance or restitution
and, if so, the anticipated amount to be paid and dates of payment;
(7) internal controls in place when the loss
occurred and any changes made to the internal controls and personnel to prevent
future losses;
(8) date the loss
was reported to the membership;
(9)
signatures of the chief executive officer and gambling manager; and
(10) before the request will be considered by
the board, the organization must provide the board with copies of:
(a) the local law enforcement report or a
letter showing that the organization has requested a copy of the
report;
(b) a copy of the Schedule
B2, if any, and the lawful gambling find reconciliation showing how the loss
was reported; and
(c) minutes from
the meeting at which the find loss was reported to the membership.
D. The board must
consider the following items when approving or denying a request for a profit
carryover adjustment due to a fund loss:
(1)
security procedures and internal controls in effect when the loss
occurred;
(2) how assets were
secured when the loss occurred;
(3)
whether established internal controls were followed by the organization's
employees;
(4) timely filing of the
local law enforcement report;
(5)
whether the information in the request was complete;
(6) when the loss occurred, whether an
organization employee was in control of the cash, inventory, or prizes paid
from a game not conducted in compliance with statute and rule;
(7) whether the cash, inventory, or prizes
paid from a game not conducted in compliance with statute and rule were
accessible to nonorganization employees; and
(8) if the loss occurred after business
hours, how the organization protected and controlled the cash or
inventory.
E. If the
board denies a request for a profit carryover adjustment due to a fund loss,
the organization must reimburse its gambling account for the amount of the fund
loss. The organization must submit proof of reimbursement to the board within
90 days of the board's final determination.
F. The board must reconsider a request for a
profit carryover adjustment due to a fund loss when an organization presents
new information that the organization could not have discovered before the
board's initial consideration of the request.
Subp. 10. [Repealed, 35 SR 1276; 35 SR
1528]
Subp. 11. [Repealed, 35 SR
1276; 35 SR 1528]
Subp. 12.
[Repealed, 35 SR 1276; 35 SR 1528]
Subp.
13. [Repealed, 35 SR 1276; 35 SR 1528]
Subp. 14.
Standards for 501(c)(3)
organizations and 501(c)(4) festival organizations.
A. To be eligible to make lawful purpose
contributions to itself under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (1), a licensed 501(c)(3) organization or 501(c)(4)
festival organization must comply with the following:
(1) the organization's total general fund
expenditures for fund-raising, management, and general costs for its most
recent two fiscal years must be 30 percent or less. "Fund-raising costs" has
the meaning given in part
7861.0210, subpart 24. "Management
and general costs" has the meaning given in part
7861.0210, subpart 34;
and
(2) the organization must
submit to the board a copy of the organization's annual report on income and
expenses that was provided to the Internal Revenue Service, or in a format
prescribed by the board, upon request.
B. If the board determines that the
organization does not meet the standards under item A, then any expenditure
made by the organization under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (1), must be:
(1)
related to its program services which do not include fund-raising, management,
and general costs; and
(2) paid
directly from the gambling checking account.
C. Nothing in this subpart prohibits an
organization from making other lawful purpose expenditures as allowed under
Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25.
Subp. 15.
Lawful purpose expenditures allowed.
In addition to lawful purpose as defined in Minnesota Statutes,
section
349.12, subdivision
25, an organization may make a lawful purpose expenditure for the
following.
A. A contribution may be
made to a 501(c)(3) organization or 501(c)(4) festival organization if the
organization does not:
(1) exist primarily
for the purpose of receiving and distributing gambling profits;
(2) have more than 49 percent of its
membership in common with the contributing organization; and
(3) have an officer, director, or other
person in a managerial position who is also an officer, director, or management
person in the contributing organization.
B. A contribution may be made by a 501(c)(3)
organization or 501(c)(4) festival organization to itself for its primary
purpose if the board has determined that the organization has complied with
subpart
14, item A.
C. A contribution may be made to a person or
family suffering from poverty, homelessness, or disability if the contribution
is reasonably calculated to relieve the effects of that poverty, homelessness,
or disability. A contribution may be made to a nonprofit corporation that
exists exclusively for these relief purposes if the entire contribution is used
to relieve one or more of these effects. Disability includes, but is not
limited to, physical or mental difficulties in doing daily tasks and activities
such as personal care, meal preparation, cleaning, transportation, or athletic
activities.
D. A contribution or
expenditure may be made to or on behalf of a public or private nonprofit
educational institution registered with or accredited in Minnesota or any other
state. If a contribution or expenditure is made to or on behalf of a public
educational institution the organization must document the contribution or
expenditure on a form prescribed by the board showing the request from or
acknowledgment of the institution. The organization must keep the completed
form in its records.
E. A
contribution may be made for scholarships according to Minnesota Statutes,
section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (5), if:
(1) the
selection process does not discriminate based on race, gender, religion,
national origin, marital status, disability, or age;
(2) the scholarship is not limited to
organization members or their immediate families;
(3) the criteria for the selection process is
communicated to all participants and to all organization members; and
(4) the names of the persons awarded
scholarships are public and communicated to all organization members.
F. A contribution or an
expenditure may be made for the cost of activities recognizing military service
to the United States, the state of Minnesota, or a community if the following
criteria is met.
(1) Any member of the
organization making the contribution or expenditure may not receive any money,
money equivalent, goods, or services with a market value greater than $10. In
any 12-month period, the total amount of contributions and expenditures for a
person must not exceed $100. These limits do not apply to contributions or
expenditures made for members who are active military personnel and their
immediate family members in need of support services or to expenditures made
for membership events allowed under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (17). For purposes of this subitem, "immediate family
members" means persons living in the same residence as the active military
personnel.
(2) If a contribution is
made to or on behalf of a unit of government the organization must document the
contribution or expenditure on a form prescribed by the board showing the
request from or acknowledgment of the unit of government. The organization must
keep the completed form in its records.
G. A contribution may be made for
recreational, community, and athletic facilities and activities intended
primarily for persons under age 21 if the facilities and activities are
available to both boys and girls and the opportunity to participate shows their
interest in the activity. "Primarily" is demonstrated by written documentation
showing that programs for persons under age 21 are given priority scheduling
consideration. Equal opportunity must be given for:
(1) provision of equipment and
supplies;
(2) scheduling of
activities, including games and practice times;
(3) supply and assignment of coaches or other
adult supervisors; and
(4)
provision and availability of support facilities.
H. A contribution may be made to or on behalf
of any unit of government as authorized by Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (10). The organization must document the contribution
or expenditure on a form prescribed by the board showing the request from or
acknowledgment of the unit of government and keep the completed form in its
records.
I. A contribution for
activities recognizing humanitarian service includes expenditures for
transportation, food, and beverages given to persons making blood
donations.
J. Expenditures may be
made for grooming and maintaining snowmobile and all-terrain vehicle trails
that are open to public use or are designated as grant-in-aid trails by the
commissioner of natural resources under Minnesota Statutes, sections
84.83
and
84.927.
Expenditures may be made for supplies and materials for safety training and
educational programs coordinated by the Department of Natural Resources. This
item includes the repair of equipment used exclusively for the grooming and
maintenance of public use snowmobile or all-terrain vehicle trails that are not
in the Department of Natural Resources grant-in-aid program or other
reimbursement program. Lawful purpose expenditures made under Minnesota
Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clauses (13), (23), and (24), are not eligible for
reimbursement under the grant-in-aid program. Before an expenditure is made,
the organization must obtain approval of the project or activity from the
commissioner of natural resources or its agents. The organization must document
the approval on a form prescribed by the board and keep the completed form in
its records.
K. Expenditures may be
made for citizen monitoring of surface water quality as allowed under Minnesota
Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (12). Before an expenditure is made, the organization
must obtain approval of the project from the Minnesota Pollution Control
Agency. The organization must document the approval on a form prescribed by the
board and keep the completed form in its records.
Subp. 16.
Lawful purpose expenditures
requiring board approval.
This subpart governs lawful purpose expenditures that require
board approval before an expenditure may be made as allowed under Minnesota
Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a). The organization must submit a request for board
consideration in a format prescribed by the board.
A. For a replacement building as allowed
under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (a), clause (25), the replacement structure must be used for the
same or similar purposes as the building being replaced and must have
essentially the same square footage as the building being replaced. Additional
costs for landscaping, building code, or parking lot requirements required by
the local unit of government after the original building was built may be
included.
B. An organization that
received board approval to make an expenditure for a mortgage payment or other
debt service must obtain prior board approval for any increase in the
expenditure, including refinancing or other debt restructuring that increases
the debt balance. Closing costs are not included. Any equity withdrawn from
real property or a capital asset as part of the refinancing or other debt
restructuring is considered gambling gross profits and must be deposited in the
organization's gambling bank account.
C. With prior approval of the board, a
contribution may be made to a parent organization at the Minnesota state level
if the parent organization has submitted to the board a list of the charitable
contributions, as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
7a, for which the parent organization will use the contributions.
Subp. 17.
Lawful purpose
expenditures not allowed.
In addition to Minnesota Statutes, section
349.12, subdivision
25, paragraph (c), lawful purpose does not include any of the following:
A. interest on taxes, tax penalties, or
interest on tax penalties;
B. any
expenditure, contribution, or other distribution of gambling gross profits for
which the organization keeps any control over the funds, except as allowed in
subpart
15, item B;
C. any contribution or expenditure that
results in any monetary, economic, financial, or material benefit to the
organization making the contribution or expenditure;
D. any contribution or expenditure that is
not allowed under the conflict of interest provisions of the Minnesota
Nonprofit Corporation Act, Minnesota Statutes, section
317A.255;
E. the purchase of any intoxicating liquor,
wine, or malt beverages; and
F.
fund-raising costs, except as allowed by subpart
15, item B.
Subp. 18.
Organization
records and reports.
A. An organization
must maintain documentation showing that expenditures of gambling gross profits
are either an allowable expense or a lawful purpose.
B. Each organization must maintain complete,
accurate, and legible records with documentation to support all gambling
transactions.
C. The organization
must record all inventory records, including perpetual, physical, site, and
merchandise prize records, in a format prescribed or approved by the
board.
D. All records must show the
gross receipts, prizes, net receipts, expenses, and all other accounting
transactions.
E. The organization
must keep all records and reports for 3-1/2 years.
F. The organization may maintain or convert
and store records and reports in an electronic format. The organization must
make records and reports available in paper format to the board, the
commissioner of revenue, the commissioner of public safety, or their agents
upon request.
Statutory Authority: MS s
14.055;
349.12;
349.151;
349.154;
349.155;
349.16;
349.162;
349.163;
349.1635;
349.165;
349.166;
349.167;
349.169;
349.17;
349.1711;
349.1721;
349.173;
349.19;
349.191;
349.211