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The Powerball jackpot is at $1.4 billion: What does that mean for California schools?

Mark Nelson, left, shows off $460 worth of Powerball lottery tickets he bought at Bluebird Liquor, a shop with a reputation for lottery luck, in Hawthorne. At right is the owner of the liquor store, James Kim.

Mark Nelson, left, shows off $460 worth of Powerball lottery tickets he bought at Bluebird Liquor, a shop with a reputation for lottery luck, in Hawthorne. At right is the owner of the liquor store, James Kim.

(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
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The frenzy over the Powerball lottery has continued to build after Saturday’s drawing failed to produce a winner, leading officials to increase the jackpot Monday to a jaw-dropping $1.4 billion.

With the biggest jackpot in U.S. lottery history when it was listed at almost $950 million on Saturday, game officials were stunned when, for the 19th consecutive drawing, the game failed to produce a winner.

“Someone should have a camera to see my reaction if we don’t have a winner on Wednesday,” joked Alex Traverso, a California State Lottery spokesman.

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Drawings are every Saturday and Wednesday at 7:59 p.m. PST.

Powerball produces some of the biggest lottery jackpots in the country while giving the worst odds for winning. The odds of matching all six Powerball numbers (five numbers between 1-69, a sixth between 1-26) are 1 in 292 million.

No one has matched all six numbers since Nov. 4. Powerball is played in 44 states and three U.S. territories.

As people continue to hand over $2 per ticket this week, state lottery officials say it’s turning into a windfall of sorts for education because a portion of the state’s overall lottery sales (including Scratchers) goes toward the education budget.

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About 40 cents of every dollar sold in Powerball tickets, specifically, goes toward education, Traverso said. In the 2014-15 fiscal year, Powerball sales in California were $372 million, meaning about $148.8 million went to the state’s education budget.

In just the last five days, from Tuesday to Sunday, there were $150 million in Powerball sales in California, Traverso said. That equates to roughly $60 million for schools.

“We’re making in an hour what we’re typically making in an entire week in two [Powerball] draws,” Traverso said. “Wednesday is probably going to be the best day of sales we’ve ever had.”

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To be clear, only a tiny fraction of the state’s education money comes through lottery sales – about 1%. But a drop in the bucket on that scale can mean tens of millions of dollars, officials say. Overall spending for California public schools is about $76.6 billion when federal funds and other funding sources are added, according to the California Department of Education.

“Anything that comes to education is a good thing. Nothing is too small for the schools and students here in California,” said Naj Alikhan, a spokesman for the Assn. of California School Administrators.

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Last year about 24.6%, or $1.39 billion, of the lottery revenues were funneled back into California’s K-12 schools, community colleges and public universities. (Some non-Powerball lottery tickets, such as Scratchers, contribute fewer than 40 cents per dollar.)

About 80% of last year’s lottery revenues for education went to K-12 education, 13% went to community colleges and the remainder was divided among higher education and other entities, according to the lottery’s website.

For breaking California news, follow @JosephSerna.

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