ON - Responsible Gambling Council Newscan June 22/07
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1. First empirical study of online gaming behaviour
Author:
Source: Union Network International
Published Date: Jun 22, 2007
Description:
To date, only speculations have been available to guide our understanding of the scale of gaming and problematic gaming behaviour among online sports betting. Now the initial results of a unique, broad-based study investigating the gaming behaviour of online players are available, which begins to shed light on the potential for gaming related problems.
2. Lottery agency plans retailer training, testing. Program to launch by end of year
Author: Bailey, Ian
Source: Globe and Mail
Published Date: Jun 22, 2007
Description:
By the end of 2007, a passing grade in an online course will be necessary for selling a lottery ticket in B.C. The B.C. Lottery Corp., under fire since a provincial Ombudsman’s report last month said too little was being done to police retailer fraud, disclosed the plan yesterday. The training will focus on retailer policies, how lottery terminals work, responsibilities to consumers and a rundown of corporation products. The effort is a response to a call from Ombudsman Kim Carter for more retailer training, said spokesman Peter Smith, director of public affairs and corporate responsibility for the corporation.
3. Gateway adds gambling problem treatment
Author:
Source: Tecumseh Countywide News
Published Date: Jun 21, 2007
Description:
Gateway to Prevention and Recovery of Shawnee, Okla. has added treatment for compulsive and addicted gamblers to its programs. “Although legalized gambling has increased the number of addicted gamblers, we are not against the casinos. We have their (casinos) support in helping the addicted gambler,” Cindy Satterfield, Gateway’s compulsive gambling program coordinator said. The program is funded through money from casinos and the state lottery set aside by the Oklahoma Legislature and distributed through the state Department of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Services.
4. Gambler sues casino in Australia after losing his money
Author: Jones, Tom
Source: Casino Gambling Web
Published Date: Jun 21, 2007
Description:
Many people around the world would love to have the casinos in which they gamble give their money back at the end of the night if they lose. A man in Sydney is taking that thought to the next step by suing the Star City casino for allowing him to lose his money. The sticking point to the case, is, the man, Behrouz Foroughi, voluntarily went on an exclusion list of problem gamblers, which, in turn, barred him from the casino. He claims that not only did the casino let him back in, but they gave him access to the high rollers room.
5. Average casino punter loses $68 a visit. The Christchurch Casino wins on average nearly $68 from every punter, leaked documents show
Author: Steeman, Martha
Source: Timaru Herald
Published Date: Jun 21, 2007
Description:
The Press obtained a revenue report for the Christchurch Casino for the month ending May 13 during its investigation into loan sharks at the casino. The monthly report reveals punters gambled $25.8 million in the Christchurch Casino that month. Of that, the casino’s winnings were $2.27m, or 8.8c of every dollar bet. The $2.27m winnings is an average of $67.80 from the 33,586 casino customers in the month. The gaming machines appear to be where the casino won most money. But it won the greatest cut or percentage of what punters spent on the gaming tables.
6. Loan sharks cruise casino to lure gamblers: MP
Author: Dye, Stuart
Source: New Zealand Herald
Published Date: Jun 21, 2007
Description:
Loan sharks are luring gamblers by approaching them as they ponder their losses inside the casino, Parliament was told yesterday. Green MP Sue Bradford said gamblers at the SkyCity casino in Auckland were borrowing as much as $10,000 a time to continue playing. In some cases, she said, gamblers were introduced to the loan shark by a casino dealer. The Government has ordered an investigation into allegations of loan sharking and financial irregularities at Christchurch Casino. But the Green Party wants a wider public inquiry.
7. Government to ban aggressive gambling ads
Author:
Source: Local Sweden News
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
The Swedish government is to commission a new report regarding the rules that govern the Swedish betting market. But state-owned Svenska Spel is to retain the sole right to organize gambling activities regarded as particularly problematic from a social perspective. Finance Minister Anders Borg and Public Health Minister Maria Larsson explain that the government’s main priority is to institute a ban on aggressive marketing in the gaming industry.
8. Macau’s gaming and gambling over US$12.5 billion in 2010
Author:
Source: Macauhub
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
Revenue from gaming and gambling activities in Macau could be over 100 billion patacas (US$12.5 billion) at the end of 2010, the director of the Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau (GICB) told Macau magazine Revista Macau. Manuel Neves also said that at the end of 2007 gaming revenue in Macau was expected to rise by 40 percent to 77 billion patacas. The director of the GICB also said there was a “limit to the rise that is being seen,” as “it all depends on the economic growth of China, as the vast majority of gamblers are from the interior of the country.”
9. Online gambling ban may cost U.S. billions in sanctions
Author: Associated Press
Source: Delaware Online
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
The United States should face commercial sanctions worth more than $3.4 billion each year for its failure to comply with a World Trade Organization ruling that its Internet gambling restrictions are illegal, the Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda said today. Antigua, which won a WTO ruling last year against the U.S. restrictions, is asking the trade body for authorization to target American trademarks and copyrights if the U.S. refuses to alter its legislation. It said the sanctions would come into effect “shortly,” unless the United States requests a WTO arbitration panel on the level and scope of the sanctions.
10. Bluff Europe names London ‘number one poker city in Europe’
Author:
Source: iGamingbusiness
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
London has been named the hottest poker destination in Europe by poker magazine Bluff Europe. The top poker publication praised London for the diversity of games available, from home games to high profile tournaments, as well as for the enthusiasm with which the capital has embraced the game.
11. Gambling Commission publishes new approach to licensing, compliance and enforcement of gambling laws
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Source: ATE Online
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
The Gambling Commission has set out how it will monitor and regulate the activities of British gambling operators, and the action it will take against those who fail to comply with its rules or who run illegal gambling operations. From September next year the Commission will have substantial new powers under the Gambling Act 2005, and its new consultation document, Licensing, Compliance and Enforcement, gives the gambling industry its first indication as to how it intends to use them. The Commission will ensure that, once licensed, operators comply with a range of new rules it has introduced designed to keep crime out and make sure gambling is socially responsible.
12. Polls eventually will embrace gambling
Author:
Source: Decatur Daily
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
“No” means “No,” even to gambling magnate Milton McGregor who lost big-time in the U.S. Supreme Court this week. But “No” doesn’t mean “Never.” The court this week upheld an Alabama Supreme Court decision that shut down his virtual casino at his Birmingham dog track. Mr. McGregor invested heavily in taking advantage of high technology to bring electronic sweepstakes to the track, and draw far more patrons. So don’t count him out. He’ll not take this rebuff lightly. His fertile mind and campaign contributions will surely make another run at expanding gambling in Alabama.
13. House GOP seeks to ban gaming devices
Author:
Source: Akron Beacon Journal
Published Date: Jun 20, 2007
Description:
House Republicans are pursuing a statewide ban on electronic gaming devices regardless of the size of their jackpots. GOP House Speaker Jon Husted said simply outlawing all games of chance - which have been cropping up virtually unchecked around Ohio - is better than just restricting payouts, as Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland and Attorney General Marc Dann recently proposed. “I don’t want to begin that process,” Husted said. “This back-door approach to opening up gambling is unacceptable to me. It opens up the corrupt underbelly of gambling, and I’m not for that.”
14. More teens trying hand at gambling
Author:
Source: KOIN.com
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
Oregon Health officials say they are starting to see a rise in the number of teens who gamble. For most, it’s just a way to hang out with friends. But studies also show one in every 25 teens is a problem gambler. The Oregon Department of Human Services has developed a new video to make teens aware of gambling risks.
15. ADAPT hopes program stems gambling habit
Author: Gray, Chris
Source: Oregon News
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
ADAPT is taking a new approach to tackling the problem of gambling addiction. Starting in July, the treatment center will recruit for a program that works with the loved ones of gamblers rather than the gamblers themselves. Brian Serna, the program director for ADAPT “Teaching Effective Caring,” said gamblers are notoriously bad for dropping out of treatment as soon as they get on a lucky streak, only to return unchanged when they lose it all again.
16. Japan poised for law to allow casinos. A new programme, which would legalise gambling, aims to increase falling tax revenues
Author: Nakamoto, Von Michiyo
Source: Financial Times
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic party plans to legalise casino gambling next year. Seiko Noda, who heads an LDP study group that is drafting the legislation, said the target was to pass a bill by the end of the next ordinary Diet session in June 2008. The ruling party hopes casinos will spur tourism, help revitalise local economies and increase tax revenues. Opening up Japan to casinos is also likely to provide big opportunities for foreign operators, as few Japanese companies have the expertise necessary to develop the large-scale operations being envisioned.
17. The stakes are high for problem gamblers
Author:
Source: ABC TV
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
It can start so innocently…so you had a little bet on the Melbourne Cup and lost, or you overspent a little on the pokies. You tell yourself, “So what, I won’t do it next time”. But the fact is that for some people what starts out as a harmless dabble in gambling can grow into an obsession. Mick, Sarah and Ian know what it’s like to lose control. They’re all reached the point when gambling began to ruin their lives. They know what it’s like to lose everything, their family and friends, money and possessions, dignity and self-esteem. But in the hope they may be able to help others, they want to encourage others to take the road to recovery.
18. Casino let me in despite ban, gambler tells court
Author: Brown, Malcolm
Source: Sydney Morning Herald
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
A man claiming to be a compulsive gambler visited Star City casino 65 times between May 18, 2004, and January 28 last year and lost more than $600,000 despite being on a list of banned persons, the Federal Court heard yesterday. Behroub Foroughi had approached Star City management in 2004 after sustaining heavy losses at roulette and volunteered to be banned. Three weeks later, unable to resist his urge, he had returned, undetected, and kept gambling. In October 2005 he started proceedings against Star City Casino, alleging it had engaged in unconscionable conduct in allowing him to gamble and even inviting him to go to the high rollers’ room. An issue of the casino’s duty of care had arisen. The casino had either known who he was, had not known, or had been “oblivious of the exclusion order”.
19. Casino must monitor big spenders: judge
Author:
Source: Sydney Morning Herald
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
Crown Casino should either ensure money from big spenders is legitimate or be forced to compensate victims of crime for ill-gotten gains gambled by criminals, a Victorian judge says. County Court Judge Frank Dyett made the remarks as he sentenced Heather MacNeil-Brown, 63, to six years’ jail - with a minimum non-parole period of four years - for embezzling almost $1 million from the Australian branch of global consulting and accountancy firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers. Judge Dyett said MacNeil-Brown initially spent the proceeds of crime at small pokies venues in Melbourne but from 2002, most of the money was lost at Crown Casino.
20. EU to U.S.: pay up for online gambling ban
Author: Associated Press
Source: AZ Central
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
The European Union told the United States that it wanted compensation for a U.S. ban on foreign online gambling sites, which doesn’t comply with global trade rules. The decision closed off the most lucrative region in a market worth $15.5 billion (11.6 billion euros) last year. About half of the world’s online gamblers are based in the United States. But an EU official said the concessions Europe was looking for would likely be “commitments” to open up other trade sectors.
21. Province won’t budge on VLTs
Author: Fletcher, Robson
Source: Brandon Sun
Published Date: Jun 19, 2007
Description:
Manitoba’s newly elected NDP government will apply the same old rules when it comes to the number of VLTs allowed at the proposed Wheat City Horse Park, discouraging those who want to build the facility - but not killing the deal altogether. Former Brandon West MLA Scott Smith, who had been responsible for lotteries in Manitoba before being defeated in last month’s election, repeatedly said the province would not allow a major VLT expansion at the horse park. The province re-iterated that position yesterday, saying that the park, if built, would be restricted to a maximum of 30 machines.
22. Morality vs. money: Online gambling. Nations say they attack Internet betting for sake of the children. But they also run gambling operations
Author: Spring, Sylvia
Source: Newsweek International
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
When the French police arrested two Austrian on-line-gambling executives on September 15, they did it in the name of protecting France from “the explosion of money games in a heedless manner.” Indeed every recent state move to crack down on online gambling, from the United States to Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden, has followed the same moral argument: it’s all about saving our people from the sins of gambling. The problem is that all of these countries allow licensed gambling at home, and in some cases are promoting its expansion very aggressively. So what’s it really about? In recent months the EU has launched proceedings against all these nations (except of course the United States) for protecting national monopolies in violation of EU laws guaranteeing free movement for goods and services. Opponents of online gambling are exploiting a loophole in the EU laws protecting free trade, which allows member states to take measures to protect the social and moral fabric of their societies.
23. Gambling takes a toll
Author: Hughes, Kristina
Source: Petoskey News-Review
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
As gambling becomes an accepted pastime, Paula Musilek — the counselor at Harbor Hall in Petoskey — helps combat the glamorized gaming by bringing awareness to the addiction. Musilek currently has 42 patients and has met with more than 100 clients since the programs were established in 2000. Musilek coordinates a gambling therapy group and individualized therapy. The programs use national assessments and screenings. A Gamblers Anonymous group meets in Petoskey, but help is limited. “There are no inpatient programs for gambling in the state,” Musilek said. Michigan began providing the statewide gambling program and helpline in 1999, paid by casino revenues. Virginia Pieroni, the program manager, said the helpline counselors make between 1,700 to 2,100 referrals a year.
24. Gambling problems can lead to legal issues
Author: Zucker, Steve; Hughes, Kristina
Source: Petoskey News-Review
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
Emmet County (Mich.) Sheriff’s Office Det./Sgt. JL Sumpter said the vast majority of the financial crimes that come across his desk have an element of gambling addiction, drug abuse or a combination of the two at their roots. In fact, Sumpter said, in most embezzlement or fraud-type cases, the suspect’s gambling habits are the first thing he often investigates. After investigating numerous cases tied to gambling over the past several years, Sumpter said one defendant’s comment about his addiction has always stuck with him. “He told me, ‘When I go to bed at night, I just lie there and can hear the ringing of the slot machines in my head.’”
25. Casinos cooperating in efforts to help gaming addicts. Compulsive gamblers hard to spot
Author: Rotstein, Gary
Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
Of at least 50,000 slots players who entered the doors of The Meadows Racetrack & Casino in its first week, a few thousand could have been compulsive gamblers. If so, they breezed by brochures at the front desk for the Council on Compulsive Gambling of Pennsylvania. They bypassed the literature at security podiums suggesting they could seek voluntary exclusion from the casino. They ignored the signs around ATM machines posting the council’s toll-free phone number for counseling. All 450 employees of The Meadows have received training on identifying and assisting people who can’t control their gambling, but such intervention will be infrequent.
26. Increase in gambling addiction likely. With four new casinos set to open, gambling counselors are preparing
Author: Eckenrode, Vicky
Source: Morris News Service
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
State officials and treatment counselors are gearing up for a potential increase of Kansans addicted to the roll of the dice or turn of the cards should four new casinos open in the state. Lawmakers who supported legislation this year opening the door to four, new state-owned casinos approved boosting the amount of money set aside for preventing and treating gambling problems. The Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, which oversees the money, has been getting $100,000 a year for the addiction program, largely to fund a 24-hour telephone help line for problem gamblers and their families. That fund could jump to $17 million or $18 million annually.
27. States do gambling programs differently
Author: Breen, Tom
Source: Huntington Herald Dispatch
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
When West Virginia’s state Lottery decided it wanted more say in how its money is spent, it probably didn’t anticipate setting off tremors throughout the country. But on July 1, when the widely emulated Problem Gamblers Help Network goes from being administered by the state Department of Health and Human Resources to being overseen by the state Lottery, the eyes of problem gambling programs in dozens of states will be fixed on West Virginia. The change has prompted concerns about the integrity of the help network, and at the Lottery’s request, state auditors have launched a review of the Lottery’s past involvement with the program.
28. Stakes are high in underage gambling. Getting caught can lead to a lifetime ban
Author: Schneider, Grace
Source: Gannett News Service
Published Date: Jun 18, 2007
Description:
“In many ways, it’s more appealing to sneak into a casino now than getting served in a bar,” said David Giancopassi, a University of Memphis researcher who has studied underage casino gambling. In the last decade, Indiana’s 10 riverboats have paid about $296,000 in fines for avoidable lapses in allowing 90 underage patrons inside in the last decade. Mike Smith, executive director of the Indiana Casino Association, said the riverboats put a lot of effort into stopping underage people before they can get onto the boat. But no system of checks is completely fail-safe, security experts say, and some older teens and 20-year-olds get their hands on expertly counterfeited ID cards. “If a person is really determined to get in they can find a way. Some fake IDs are pretty convincing,” said Larry Buck, regional general manager with Las Vegas-based Pinnacle Entertainment, which owns Belterra Casino Resort & Spa in Switzerland County, Ind.
29. School scheme aims to warn young gamblers
Author: Blythman, Joanna
Source: Sunday Herald
Published Date: Jun 17, 2007
Description:
Betting among Scottish schoolchildren has reached such desperate levels that Gamblers Anonymous is stepping up a major new project aimed at curbing the problem. Reformed adult addicts are being dispatched to schools across the central belt to tell children how gambling ruined their lives. The massive increase in broadband internet access and the proliferation of scratchcards has taken gambling to a new, vulnerable generation. Already 50 schools have been visited, but Crawford Moodie, a psychologist at Glasgow Caledonian University, who has conducted numerous studies on gambling, believes more government funding is needed if new legislation is to be effective.
30. Time to stop gambling with young lives
Author:
Source: AdelaideNow
Published Date: Jun 17, 2007
Description:
The insidious culture of gambling enveloping our society is now reaching into schoolyards, setting some children on the path to becoming adult problem gamblers. The culture has developed so gradually that few people have understood the true extent of its impact. The Education Department’s Dicey Dealings program, showing children the risks and harm of gambling, is a start, but remains a piecemeal approach to a statewide issue. The biggest winner from South Australia’s addiction to gambling is the State Government, with a lucrative revenue stream coming straight from the pockets of losers. Some of this river of gold could well be directed to an upgraded and statewide program to show our schoolchildren the cold facts of gambling.
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