COMPULSORY R.I.G.T. CONSULTATION DOCUMENT PUBLISHED
(Update)
9 January 2009
But there is still time for the gambling industry
to make good on voluntary contributions
UK Sports Minister Gerry Sutcliffe has published a
consultation document that could be the first step in
turning a voluntary contribution to problem gambling
charity R.I.G.T. (Responsibility in Gambling Trust) into
a mandatory donation.
After months of delays by some large gambling groups in
making the 2008 -2009 donations, the Minister says that
Britain's gambling industry now faces a compulsory GBP 5
million pound ($7.3 million) a year levy for research
into problem gamblers unless it funds the present
voluntary scheme, Reuters reports.
Sutcliffe's document discusses how to collect the levy
in a consultation process that closes on March 31 and
proposes the levy begins from June 1, 2009 set at GBP
5.3 million for the 2009/10 financial year and rising to
GBP 7 million for 2011/12.
"If the industry can agree the improved voluntary
arrangements in the meantime the door is not closed, but
time has almost run out," Sutcliffe said.
Since 2002 operators have been contributing voluntarily
to fund research, education and treatment of problem
gambling in a scheme administered by the R.I.G.T.
In the past two years the funding target has only been
met very late in the financial year, while this year the
shortfall is estimated at GBP 1.2 million, the
government said earlier (see previous InfoPowa report).
A spokesman for Britain's largest bookie group,
Ladbrokes, said the company would be active in the
consultation process and hoped that an agreement could
be reached for the money to continue to be raised
through a voluntary system.
"We already make a contribution to RIGT voluntarily and
have done since its inception so, financially, it won't
have much bearing on us either way," the spokesman
explained. "We would like to see it continue as a
voluntary system and will continue to work to achieve
that, but we accept that a statutory system may well
come into place."
Ladbrokes, which has about 2 100 shops in the UK, said
one difficulty in achieving a voluntary resolution is
that the issue has fallen down the list of priorities
for some smaller operators, because of challenging
economic conditions.
"We're more than happy to pay our fair share and maybe
even a bit more, but not to the extent that we're
massively subsidising competitors," the Ladbrokes
spokesman said.
Last year the UK Gambling Commission recommended an
improved voluntary payment scheme to guarantee funding
over the next three years.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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