Open Letter to Colorado State Senate
April 26, 2023
Re: Please concur with the House amendments to SB 23-060
Dear Senator:
We, the undersigned national consumer protection and live event fan advocates, launched the Ticket Buyer Bill of Rights, a framework for ticketing legislation that can improve the live events ticketing market that serves millions of fans each year. We are writing with regards to SB23-060, Consumer Protection in Event Ticket Sales. We urge the Senate to concur with the House amendments.
We opposed the introduced version of the bill because of a number of provisions intended to concentrate power in the industry and put consumers at a disadvantage. However, we are pleased to share that we now support the amended version of SB23-060 because the House Business Affairs and Labor Committee added vital consumer protections to the bill through amendment L033.
This amendment requires ticket sellers to report illegal bot activity and requires ticket sellers to disclose how many tickets they are “holding back” for any event. These consumer protections align with our Ticket Buyer Bill of Rights. We support these provisions, and amendment L033, which requires sellers to reveal the number of tickets they would otherwise secretly hold back from the public on-sale of tickets. This added transparency will end a deceptive trade practice and will provide more information to consumers so they are better informed when shopping for tickets. To ease compliance on small, local venues in Colorado, the House exempted venues under 2,000 seats from having to disclose ticket holdbacks.
While you may be contacted by large and powerful players in the live events system with their rhetorical talking points opposing the holdback provision, please hold the line. Support for holdback disclosures is broad. In fact, just last month, legislation was introduced in the United States Senate that includes similar transparency disclosure around deceptive ticket holdbacks.
Ticket holdbacks are deceptive: Sellers withhold up to HALF of all tickets for shows.
This is a well-documented problem that has been investigated by the US GAO, New York Attorney General, and the City and County of Honolulu. It is not uncommon for up to half of the tickets for an event to be secretly held back from the public when tickets go on sale. This scheme was a huge problem for the Taylor Swift tour, as was documented by the Wall Street Journal. The Journal estimated that 94% of Swift tickets were held back for those with special or exclusive access. Yet while Ticketmaster initially claimed tickets had sold out, still today Ticketmaster continues to send out access codes for held back Taylor Swift tickets.
This deceptive industry scheme creates fake scarcity to induce a ticket-buying frenzy so that consumers panic, and in believing there are scarce tickets left, are compelled to buy now. Consumers without special or exclusive access to pre-sales are abused during the public on-sale of tickets, where they may miss work and spend hours in an online waiting room only to be left with intentionally opaque options. When the true inventory of tickets is not presented to fans, they are not capable of making the best possible purchase decision.
Transparency is needed in the ticket market; Beginning with revealing true inventory of tickets
It is critical that those selling tickets in the primary market (venue box offices, and contracted primary ticketing companies like Ticketmaster and AXS) reveal to consumers how many tickets they are secretly “holding back” from fans when tickets go on sale. This way, when informed about how more tickets will be released for sale in the coming days, weeks, and months, they can better choose whether to buy now, wait, or comparison shop elsewhere. An informed consumer is a more empowered consumer.
We, the undersigned organizations, support SB23-060 as amended with amendment L033 and we encourage its passage in its current form to maintain critical holdback transparency.
Sincerely,
John Breyault, Vice President Public Policy, Telecommunications, and Fraud, National Consumers League
Erin Witte, Director of Consumer Protection, Consumer Federation of America
Greg Guice, Director of Government Affairs, Public Knowledge
Brian Hess, Executive Director, Sports Fans Coalition
Chris VanDeHoef, President, Fan Freedom
Gary Adler, Executive Director, Protect Ticket Rights