- Philadelphia Phillies' season ticket demands force team to cap sales
- Phish tour maintains zero tolerance stance on ticket resale for summer 2010 concerts
- With attendance down, Golden State Warriors drop ticket prices
- Arizona legislators consider ticket surcharge to help Chicago Cubs build spring training stadium
- Broadway ticket sales skyrocket with the help of four new productions
- New consumer-friendly Connecticut ticketing bill moves closer to adoption
- Eagles tour taps Dixie Chicks, Keith Urban as special guests for summer concerts
- Red Bulls of the MLS to open new stadium
- Jack Johnson tour goes 'To the Sea' with summer dates for North America
- Kings of Leon tour fills summer months with U.S. concert plans
Minnesota Repeals Scalping Law
By Alfred Branch, Jr.
On August 1, the likes of Tom Petty and other artists will no longer have to hide the fact that they’re scalping tickets to their own shows in the Land of 10,000 Lakes.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty Monday signed into law a bill that repealed the state’s 94-year-old anti-scalping law, after it had received overwhelming support from state legislators.
The move comes at a critical time in the secondary ticket industry. Minnesota is one in a wave of states that recently repealed – or are considering repealing – their outdated anti-scalping laws, because legislators are realizing the laws are largely unenforceable in the Internet age. . . .
While some have argued that repealing the law will drive ticket prices higher, most echo the sentiments of Minnesota State Rep. Phyllis Kahn who told Minnesota Star Tribune newspaper that the old anti-scalping law represented “the worst kind of socialist interference with the free market.”
Last year, Petty and Ticketmaster cancelled 500 pre-sale tickets to the performer’s Xcel Energy Center concerts in St. Paul after the fan club-issued tickets popped up on secondary ticket websites. But, Petty was among the artists who sanctioned the resale of tickets to the shows through the website Fanfire.com. Tickets on www.Fanfire.com were reselling for upwards of $200.



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