PA - “Casinos rack up big money in state”

continued at http://www.responsiblegambling.org/staffsearch/latest_news_articles_details.cfm?intID=10178

Author:
Source: TheDerrick.com
Published Date: May 14, 2007

Description:
Gambling is big business. And it’s getting bigger in Pennsylvania. In the six months since the start of slot-machine gambling in Pennsylvania, tens of thousands of gamblers have helped get the industry off to a strong start, with more than $300 million in revenues. During that period, four slots parlors (including one near Erie) plugged in about 8,000 slot machines, a number that could rise to more than 35,000 in two years as the state’s full complement of 11 slots casinos open. The business is being closely watched by competitors, regulators and Pennsylvania’s politicians, who legalized slots in 2004 on a promise to spin gambling revenue into tax cuts.

Posted: May 19, 2007 Comments (0)

CAN - “Gambling: governments’ dangerous addiction”

continued at http://www.responsiblegambling.org/staffsearch/latest_news_articles_details.cfm?intID=10179

Author: Jarjour, Samuel
Source: National Review of Medicine
Published Date: May 15, 2007

Description:
Many experts think suicides by VLT addicts are slipping under the radar right across the country. Some even say the provincial governments, hooked on gambling revenues, prefer it that way. It wasn’t meant to be like this. At a meeting of the Intergovernmental Conference of Chief Coroners and Chief Medical Examiners in June 2003, an agreement was made that all provinces would begin tracking suicides caused by gambling. Most provinces complied, but in BC and PEI tracking of gambling deaths by the coroners’ offices is still not standard protocol. Nova Scotia began tracking but stopped in 2004. Indeed, pathological gamblers often cultivate more than one vice. Data from the 2006 Canadian Community Health Survey show that 2% of Canadians are moderate/high-severity problem gamblers. Additionally, comorbidity with other problems is common, such as mood and anxiety disorders, or alcoholism. However, Jack Smith, of the Canada Safety Council, points out that suicides are more common in pathological gamblers than they are in other addictions.

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ON - “Gambling fuelled by government greed”

at http://www.responsiblegambling.org/staffsearch/latest_news_articles_details.cfm?intID=10184

Author: Harris, W.C.
Source: Sarnia Observer
Published Date: May 15, 2007

Description:
It’s estimated that 35 per cent of Ontario’s over $5 billion in gambling revenue came from “problem gamblers,” yet in 2005, Ontario announced it would spend only $4 million in two years on a problem gambler public awareness campaign. (Ontario spends over $250 million a year advertising gambling through the Ontario Lottery Corporation.) The government’s decision to legalize gambling, build too many gambling venues, over-advertise gambling, under-fund public awareness programs and underestimate the growing social problems of gambling were driven by greed. Governments must recognize that this is a growing problem and take proactive measures to warn all ages of the numerous problems created with gambling addiction.

Author: Harris, W.C.
Source: Sarnia Observer
Published Date: May 15, 2007

Description:
It’s estimated that 35 per cent of Ontario’s over $5 billion in gambling revenue came from “problem gamblers,” yet in 2005, Ontario announced it would spend only $4 million in two years on a problem gambler public awareness campaign. (Ontario spends over $250 million a year advertising gambling through the Ontario Lottery Corporation.) The government’s decision to legalize gambling, build too many gambling venues, over-advertise gambling, under-fund public awareness programs and underestimate the growing social problems of gambling were driven by greed. Governments must recognize that this is a growing problem and take proactive measures to warn all ages of the numerous problems created with gambling addiction.

continued …

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AUS - “Cashless pokies ‘may help’ ID problem gamblers”

Author:
Source: ABC News
Published Date: May 16, 2007

Full Document:
NEW SOUTH WALES – The New South Wales Government says new technology that allows cashless winning from poker machines could be used to identify problem gamblers.
The new ‘Ticket In, Ticket Out’ machines force poker machine players to move away from the machine to collect their winnings.

Gaming Minister Graham West says data collected from the tickets could be used to study gambling.

“[It can help] identify the habits of people who are problem gamblers, so that we can work with them to reduce that problem,” he said.

continued ….

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PA - “Harm reduction, not abstinence, used to treat gambling addicts”

at http://www.responsiblegambling.org/staffsearch/latest_news_articles_details.cfm?intID=10177

Author:
Source: Penn Live
Published: May 13, 07

Full Document:
PENNSYLVANIA – Attendees at the Pennsylvania Health Department’s first major gambling addiction conference were told that different approaches are needed to treat problem gamblers than are used with those addicted to drugs or alcohol.
Rather than requiring abstinence, a “harm reduction” theory tries to encourage problem gamblers to spend less time and money on gambling, the counselors, social workers and therapists attending the conference were told.

“Harm reduction recognizes abstinence is an ideal outcome but acknowledges alternatives,” said Michael Chevalier, a consultant to Erie County’s Office of Alcohol and Drug Abuse. “Are we being realistic here? Yeah. … We can’t have it be all or nothing.”

More than 150 people attended the five-day conference last week in hopes of becoming certified to treat the estimated 3 percent of the population with serious gambling issues. Now that casinos are opening, counselors expect an increase in gambling addictions.

Gene Boyle, director of the state’s Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Programs, said that with less than half of the state’s casinos open, increased gambling problems are not yet evident.

“It’ll take a couple years for all this to settle out,” he said. He said he expects treatment programs to be in place by the time they are needed.

A minimum of $1.5 million from slots revenues will be set aside annually for gambling treatment and education under the department’s Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Programs. By this summer, the first funds for outpatient treatment could be released to certified gambling counselors, he said.

At least $1 million of the annual funding from casino revenue will be used for treatment, with the rest spent on education, research and a referral phone line, Boyle said.

continued ….

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COL (US) - “State places no money on table for gambling addicts”

By Kevin Simpson, Denver Post Staff Writer

05/14/2007

“In the throes of a week-long gambling binge, Larry all but forgot about food and drink until he collapsed on the flight home from Las Vegas.

At a Denver hospital, intravenous fluids revived him as emergency-room workers hooked him to a heart monitor. Later, after he had demanded his release and slipped into bed at home, his wife sleepily laid her hand on his chest - and was startled to find an electronic lead still taped there.

He assured her he was fine, that he just “overdid it” on his trip - grossly understating the gambling addiction that was just dawning on him.”

continued …

“Larry, now a 41-year-old member of the recovery group Gamblers Anonymous, continued gambling hard for a decade more - from dog tracks to Powerball to Colorado’s mountain casinos to Vegas to the Internet. He nearly lost everything, including his marriage, before confronting his problem.

His ordeal offers a glimpse of the collateral damage from legalized gambling in a state that reaps hundreds of millions of dollars from the increasingly popular pastime.

But Colorado, which approved a lottery in 1982 and opened the doors to limited-stakes gambling eight years later, remains among a handful of states that don’t dedicate public money to address problem gambling.

“People can convincingly argue that gambling is a nice, fun thing for most people to do - that’s OK,” says J. Michael Fara gher of the Problem Gambling Treatment and Research Center at the University of Denver. “What isn’t OK is to ignore the destruction in its wake. Our state is not putting back anything toward the solution to the problems, and a certain percentage of lives are destroyed.” ”

continued …

“National estimates of problem gambling’s prevalence hover around 2 percent to 3 percent of the adult population. But Nancy Petry, psychiatry professor at the University of Connecticut Health Center and one of the leading researchers on the subject, says that while less than 1 percent meet the psychiatric definition of pathological gambling, upward of 5 percent have some degree of a problem. ”

continued …

“In Colorado, state taxes on casinos raked in more than $100 million in 2005 and 2006, and lottery proceeds have topped that figure in each of the past six years.”

continued …

“”We’re a newer addiction,” says Amber Bunch, executive director of the Problem Gambling Coalition of Colorado, a consortium of industry representatives and treatment advocates. “There are also some cultural implications that problem gambling is something people should just get over, a pull-themselves-up-by- their-bootstraps mentality.”

Forty-eight states have legalized gambling - bets are off in Utah and Hawaii - and all but 11 of those states have designated public funding to address what some experts call an “invisible addiction.” ”

continued ….

“Based on population figures at the time, it estimated that about 3 percent of 7,800 probable pathological gamblers would seek services and recommended that Colorado plan to treat about 250 people per year.

The state never acted on that recommendation.”

continued …

“Primarily from its $8.6 million marketing budget, the lottery contributes $854 a month toward a problem-gambling hotline - but none of that money is guaranteed by law. It also helps with the Problem Gambling Coalition of Colorado website, public-service announcements for National Problem Gambling Awareness Week and other in-kind contributions.

About 10 years ago, casinos began training employees to recognize problem gamblers and point them toward resources, although they didn’t want workers to become “intervention people,” Rice says. Brochures and stickers in the casinos also steer individuals toward help. ”

continued ….

“Free or low-cost counseling represents a major treatment component because problem gamblers often don’t admit their addiction until they’re tapped out and on the verge of drastic action.

Treatment advocates predict that with the growing presence of gambling on television and its increased accessibility on the Internet, the problem will only grow.”

continued ….

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NS - “NS government awards contract for study on impacts of gambling”

The Canadian Press, 18/05/07, The Daily News

HALIFAX (CP) - The Nova Scotia government has awarded the contract for a study into the social and economic impacts of gambling in the province.

An Edmonton-based research company, Anielski Management, is expected to complete the job by next April.

The study is part of the provincial gaming strategy.

Anielski was the lowest of three bidders considered for the project, coming in at about $212,000.

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AUS - “Man claims casino ’seduced’ him of $20m”

By Shelley Hodgson

May 19, 2007 01:00am, news.com.au

A CONFESSED pathological gambler lost more than $20 million in real estate as his addiction ran out of control, a court has heard.

Joseph William Wells, 56, was a member of Crown casino’s exclusive Mahogany Room.

Records showed he exchanged $3.5 million for gambling chips between 2003 and 2005 alone.

Wells, a father of three, pleaded guilty to two offences under the Corporations Act yesterday.

Representing himself in court, Mr Wells claimed he was seduced by the casino with free trips and accommodation and his gambling spiralled out of control as he splashed out on poker machines, gaming tables and horse races.

He sold 20 homes, blocks of land, units, an office complex and factories to feed his gambling addiction over 15 years.

Mr Wells also ended up losing an Italian restaurant in Port Douglas and the family’s Mt Eliza home was recently repossessed.

Mr Wells is bankrupt.

“I couldn’t start to put a monetary figure on costs to our family,” he said.

continued ….

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Warren Buffett on gambling

Is Buffett Right About Gambling?

By Jeff Hwang, May 18, 2007, The Motley Fool

“To quite an extent, gambling is a tax on ignorance. I find it socially revolting when the government preys on the ignorance of its citizenry. When the government makes it easy for people to take their Social Security checks and pull [slot machine] handles, it relieves taxes on those who don’t fall for it. It’s not government at its best.”

— Warren Buffett

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Casino Watch (url and quick facts)

at http://www.casinowatch.org/quick_overview/quick_overview.htmlMarch 1, 2007

Someone must meet five of 10 criteria
to be diagnosed as pathological:
American Psychiatric Association
- Gambled longer than planned
- Gambled until last dollar was gone
- Lost sleep because of thoughts of gambling
- Used income or savings to gamble, leaving bills unpaid
- Made repeated, unsuccessful attempts to stop gambling
- Broke law or considered breaking law to finance gambling
- Borrowed money to finance gambling
- Felt depressed or suicidal because of gambling losses
- Been remorseful after gambling
- Gambled to get money to meet financial obligations

“Pathological gambling is often
characterized as an addiction-like
disorder, with the affected person being
addicted to the excitement felt while
being ‘in action’ (gambling).”
American Psychiatric Association

Resolution No. 430
WARNING: GAMBLING CAN
BECOME COMPULSIVE BEHAVIOR
HOUSE ACTION; ADOPTED AS FOLLOWS:
RESOLVED, That the
American Medical Association
encourage physicians to advise their
patients of the compulsive behavior
potential of gambling;

“Pathological gambling is
one of the fastest growing
mental health problems
in the western world.”
New England Journal of Medicine

“Pathological gambling is really
a huge public health problem”
Dr. Susan McElroy, a psychiatry professor
at the University of Cincinnati who studies and
counsels compulsive gamblers.
Canada Safety Council

“It is a life-threatening disease”
William Gorman, commissioner of New York’s Office
of Alcoholism & Substance Abuse Services

The American Psychological Association estimates that 2% to 4% of Americans have an active gambling problem.
Benefitnews.com, NY
January 29, 07
Problem gambling prevalent in the workplace

The National Research Council has estimated the median number of problem gamblers at about 1.5 percent of the population. Welte’s estimate is nearly 5 percent.
University of Buffalo researcher John Welte
International Symposium on Problem Gambling and
Co-Occurring Disorders meeting
www.ctnow.com/news/local/hc-
Researchers See Growth In Gambling Problems
October 19, 2004

“The number of problem gamblers doubles
when there’s a casino within 50 miles”
National Gambling Impact Study Commission

“So when you’re dealing with one addict, you’re dealing with 8-10 other people that get affected because of the addiction.”
Ed Looney: the Council for Compulsive Gambling.
www.family.org/cforum
March 21, 2006 Gambling at an All Time High

Arnie Wexler, the former executive director of the New Jersey Council on Compulsive Gambling and now head of a consulting firm that specializes in compulsive gambling and other addictions, has said that the rate of attempted suicide among compulsive gamblers is 200 times the national average.
September 6,1999 The Advocate

More than 53 percent reported having been divorced in the National Opinion Research Center survey. Multiple failed marriages also are higher among gamblers than the population in general.
May 22, 2006
More spent on promoting gambling than curing the ills it causes
Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc.

The costs of problem gambling extend from domestic abuse to financial ruin, said Henry Lesieur, a leading researcher from Rhode Island and president of the Institute for Problem Gambling, based in Middletown. “Problem gamblers are 10 times more likely to be involved in a hospital
emergency room [for treatment] than non-gamblers.”
www.ctnow.com
Researchers See Growth In Gambling Problems
October 19, 2004

Ironically, it’s been found that stress-related illnesses associated with people with gambling problems, such as headaches, high blood pressure, anxiety and depression, also have been found in family members.
Buffalo News www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20030727/1046133.asp

“ACCESS TO GAMBLING IS A CRITICAL ISSUE FOR PROBLEM GAMBLERS WHO COMMIT CRIMES.” “I’M 100% CONVINCED …. THAT THEY WOULD NOT HAVE ENGAGED IN THOSE CRIMES IF GAMBLING WERE NOT LEGAL”
Henry Lesieur former chairman of the Criminal Justice Dept. at Illinois State University

Lesieur (1998b) surveyed nearly 400 members of Gamblers Anonymous, 57% of whom admitted stealing to finance their gambling. On average these 400 people stole $135,000 and their total theft was over $30 million.
Business Profitability Versus Social Profitability:
Evaluating Industries with Externalities,
The Case of the Casino Industry
By Earl L. Grinols and David B. Mustard
http://www.cba.uiuc.edu/grinols/Scribblings/Casinos-Crime-15SEP00.pdf

44% Of Illinois Gamblers Anonymous members stole from work to pay gambling debts.
Lesieur, Ph.D., Anderson, MS, NCGC, LMFt.

Bankruptcies, lost productivity and thefts from gambling addiction were
estimated at $5 billion in 1999.
The National Council on Problem Gambling

Grinols’ studies also show that between 37 and 50 percent of casino revenues come from pathological or problem gamblers.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Maine’s neighbors would copy casinos /11.10.02
Gambling in America, Costs and Benefits by Earl L. Grinols

A new study, funded by the province, measured the spending habits of problem gamblers in Ontario. It found that 35 per cent of money raised through gambling - $1.4 billion - comes from problem gamblers…
CBC/Ontario wins 35% of gambling cash from problem gamblers/11.2.04

Mr. McGuinty’s comments came in response to a new study that suggests about 36 per cent of Ontario gaming revenue is generated by people with gambling addictions. The study by researchers Rob Williams and Rob Wood at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta…
The Ottawa Citizen/Ontario addicted to gambling revenue/11.03.04

4% OF OUR CHILDREN
ADDICTED TO GAMBLING
American Psychiatric Association
Annenberg National Risk Survey of Youth
Dr. Carlos Blanco, Columbia University Medical Center
Jeffery Derevensky and Rina Gupta of McGill University
ED LOONEY, Council on Compulsive Gambling of N.J
Dalhousie University
Harvard Medical School
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center
Minnesota Institute of Public Health
National Council on Problem Gambling
Michael Stone, Kentucky Council on Problem Gambling
Emily E. Wilson licensed psychologist
Harold Wynne of Wynne Resources in British Columbia

20% of addicted gamblers
have filed for bankruptcy.
Professor John Warren Kindt
John K. Palchak
Bankruptcy Developments Journal
volume 19, No. 1

In 1996 the bankruptcy rate was 35% higher than the average in counties with five or more gambling establishments Shelby County, TN, where residents have easy access to 30 gaming halls and riverboat casinos in nearby Mississippi locations, has the highest personal bankruptcy rate in the nation —
four times the national average
SMR Research Corporation 1996

20% of the homeless are gambling addicts
Atlantic City Rescue Mission
Association of Gospel Rescue Missions in Kansas

60% of those addicted to gambling will commit crimes.
63% of gambling addicts are alcoholics.
California Council on Problem Gambling

“Research shows that if you have a gambling problem you will likely have
an alcohol problem as well, and a drug problem. The reverse, however,
is not true.” Alcoholics don’t turn to gambling, but gamblers turn to alcohol to relieve mental anguish.
H. Wesley Clark, MD, JD, MPH, CAS, FASAM
Keynote Speaker: MIDWEST CONFERENCE ON
PROBLEM GAMBLING & SUBSTANCE ABUSE

Up to 50% of spouses of addicted gamblers are abused. When casinos opened in SD child abuse rose by 42% and domestic assaults by 80%.
National Research Council
The Guardian 11.5.04

20% of gambling addicts commit or attempt suicide.
National Council on Problem Gambling

“ON AVERAGE, PEOPLE WHO GAMBLE LOSE MONEY, AND PEOPLE WHO GAMBLE A GREAT DEAL CAN LOSE A GREAT DEAL OF MONEY. WHILE THIS MAY NOT LEAD TO SUICIDE BY THE GAMBLER, IT COULD LEAD TO SUICIDE BY THE GAMBLER’S SPOUSE, SON, RELATIVE, OR BUSINESS PARTNER.”
Dr. David Phillips, University of California-San Diego, 12/15/97
SUICIDE & LIFE-THREATENING BEHAVIOR
Elevated Suicide Levels Associated with Legalized Gambling

Canada has up to 360 suicides a year by gambling addicts.
Canada Safety Council

“Studies show that two out of three pathological gamblers commit crimes to pay off debt or to continue gambling. While the majority of crimes are nonviolent and involve embezzlement, cheque forgery, stealing credit cards, tax evasion, fencing stolen goods, insurance fraud, bookmaking, and/or employee theft, in some cases they involve violence and armed robbery.” (National Council on Welfare, 1996, p.28)
Problem gambling, while providing additional revenues, also results in significant costs to the individual, his or her family, and society as a whole. Uncontrolled spending, the resulting debts and the strategies used to gain more money to gamble has a significant impact on many determinants of health and can cause marital conflict, child neglect, poor work performance, multiple addictions, stress-related physical ailments, crime and even suicide (Topp, Sawka, Room, Poulin, Single and Thompson, 1998)
The cost of problem and pathological gambling does not only affect individuals and their families. Society also bears the brunt of gambling, with the overall cost to taxpayers estimated at $56,000 for each problem gambler, including cost of treatment, health-related costs, absenteeism at work and time spent in courts
(National Council on Welfare, 1996)
Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit
www.healthunit.org/adults/php_gambling.htm
A Public Health Perspective on Gambling in Ontario

Crime statistics are equally revealing. State Police Troop E, responsible for the areas in which Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun (casinos) are located, must contend with the highest drunk driving rate in the state. North Stonington has closed two houses of prostitution.
www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?
Is a gambling casino a good idea for anyone?
06/18/2004

The average (gambling) debt is between $63,000 and $110,000.
CT Department of Mental Health

Each pathological gambler on average costs the insurance industry $64,468 for fraudulent claims. The annual loss due to fraud by pathological gamblers is estimated to be $1.32 billion.
The WAGER, Harvard Medical School, Division on Addictions April 9, 1996

Business and Employment Costs: These costs include lost productivity on the job, lost time and unemployment, sick days off for gambling, extended lunch hours, leaving early to gamble, and returning late after gambling. Problem and pathological gamblers often impose costs on their employers (in addition to theft or embezzlement) in the form of an unreliable presence on the job and reduced productivity when present.

Among the forms of sickness associated with gambling or affected by it are depression, stress-related illness, chronic or severe headaches, anxiety, moodiness, irritability, intestinal disorders, asthma, cognitive distortions, and cardio-vascular disorders. This category of costs includes therapy/treatment costs, unemployment and other social service costs (includes welfare and food stamps).

Society’s cost per pathological gambler per year is $13,586. Crime, Suicide, Illness, Business, Employment Costs, Bankruptcy, Social Services, Government Direct Regulatory Costs.
Business Profitability vs. Social Profitability: Evaluating The Social Contribution Of Industries
With Externalities, The Case Of The Casino
Earl L. Grinols, Dept. Economics, University of Illinois and David B. Mustard
Dept. of Economics, University of Georgia

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