- St. Louis Rams resume ticket sales for London game
- Broadway's sales continue to fall in the first week of February
- Super Bowl tickets rule this week's Top Events rankings
- AEG to turn ticket buying into lottery system
- Ticket resale laws and anti-fraud legislation in the U.S. and United Kingdom
- Ticket Summit named one of EXPO Magazine's Top 25 Fast-Growth Shows of 2011
- Off-season purchases turn Miami Marlins into a new team
- Broadway boosts ticket sales by borrowing stars from other genres
- Red Sox implement digital ticketing to keep ticket prices low
- Bruce Springsteen, The Fray tickets on sale throughout the weekend
Minnesota moves one step closer to transparent ticket sales
The Minnesota House of Representatives Wednesday, May 6, voted overwhelmingly to approve a new measure that would not only require all of an event's tickets be made available when tickets go on sale, it would also prohibit companies from rerouting customers from a primary ticket source to a secondary one.
The proposed bill, SF0759, must next gain approval from the state Senate before moving to Gov. Tim Pawlenty's desk for his signature. Senate approval is all but assured because they have already worked on the proposal's language. See the video below.
The proposed bill states, "The initial seller of tickets shall make available for sale all tickets under control of the initial seller in the manner and under terms directed by the provider of the event or venue. The initial seller shall not, unless authorized by the provider of the event or venue, divert tickets from the initial sale to the general public to be sold in any other manner or under any other terms. No person or entity, with intent to defraud, may sell a ticket that is invalid, counterfeit, altered, or otherwise not genuine."
Legislators created the bill in part to help protect Minnesota residents from the same type of situation that occurred with Ticketmaster and its TicketsNow subsidiary when fans were allegedly rerouted to TicketsNow to buy Bruce Springsteen tickets at higher prices.



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This bill is just show. With an exception for holding tickets if "authorized by the provider of the event or venue," there won't be any real change in ticket availability or transparency.
Waste of tax dollars. Find out how to better my childs education *****!