ECOGRA APPOINTED TO TEST COMPLIANCE OF KAHNAWAKE
GAMING COMMISSION LICENSEES
29 January 2010
Up to 55 operators commit to high standards
of fairness and player protection
Rumours that the Kahnawake Gaming Commission has been
making moves to up its game regarding player disputes
and policing licensees appear to be confirmed by a
release out today (Monday) indicating that the
independent London-based player protection and standards
non-profit, eCOGRA, has been commissioned to handle
compliance testing.
The KGC statement notes the
importance of its licensees meeting "...high
international standards of fairness, player protection,
operational conduct and responsible gambling", and
advises that the Commission has launched a new
compliance program that will involve the third party
inspection and ongoing monitoring of up to fifty-five
online gambling operators licensed by the Mohawk
jurisdiction, located near Montreal, Canada.
KGC
chairman Dean Montour said in the statement that he was
pleased that licensees, many of them major companies in
the online gambling industry, had shown a strong
commitment to a compliance system that met or exceeded
international best practice standards.
"Our first
step in implementing the new scheme, which we have
titled the Continuous Compliance Program, has been the
appointment of eCOGRA as an Approved Agent in terms of
section 140 of our Regulations to assist in the
application of the program, and submit reports of its
findings to the Commission," Montour revealed, adding
that the KGC is confident in eCOGRA’s ability to
effectively implement the compliance program while
ensuring that all information received from operators is
held in the strictest confidence.
Supporting his
confidence, Montour goes on to observe: "eCOGRA is a
non-profit standards and player protection company that
has a substantial staff of professionally qualified and
industry-experienced Chartered Accountants who have
completed hundreds of compliance inspections over the
past six years.
"The company, which is itself
reviewed annually by KPMG, has the resources to assess
compliance and conduct monitoring programs to ensure
game fairness and adherence to key KGC objectives, and
is eminently suited to the task.
"In 2007 eCOGRA
was appointed by the European Gaming and Betting
Association, a highly respected representative of the
leading European gaming and betting operators, to
implement a similar continuous compliance program for
all its members. This program, involving some of the
largest companies in the business, has proved very
successful and is now in its third compliance cycle."
According to the KGC statement, the Kahnawake
Continuous Compliance Program includes all authorised
games and has three elements:
1. Annual
assessment of licensees for full compliance with KGC
regulations concerning anti-money laundering, player
protection, complaints and dispute resolution, prizes,
responsible gambling, records and reports and
advertising.
2. Annual assessment for compliance
with key regulatory objectives.
3. Ongoing
analysis of the live gaming data to ensure authorised
games are random and fair, and return to player ratios
are correctly assessed and maintained through a
continuous monitoring program of operational data.
eCOGRA Chief Executive Andrew Beveridge explains in
a comment in the statement that the compliance
activities at eCOGRA fall directly under the authority
of the 4 Independent Directors on his Board, all of whom
are highly experienced in the industry.
"The KGC
and its licensees have demonstrated a great
determination to achieve best practice standards, and we
respect the commitment that has so far been shown,"
Beveridge said.
"Our extensive work with our own
eCOGRA-accredited operators and those of EGBA has
repeatedly illustrated that the right standards,
professionally and diligently applied and maintained by
an independent third party, produce outstanding results
that enhance the reputation and productivity of
participating companies.
"We look forward to the
considerable task ahead and have almost completed 4
initial test reviews that have generated enthusiastic
feedback from the operators concerned. The most
important aspect of this program is that players will be
safer, and that can only be to the credit of the
industry."
KGC regulations, in place since 1998,
were developed in consultation with Frank Catania, a
respected legal expert in the regulation of online and
terrestrial gaming who is also a director of eCOGRA. The
KGC is comprised of three members appointed by the
Mohawk Council of Kahnawake, who preside over a
permanent staff and a roster of consultants.
Over
140 tier one gaming websites and their associated
software suppliers and operators are currently reviewed
by the London-based eCOGRA, which is predominantly
staffed by Chartered Accountants from Big 4 audit firms
with appropriate online gambling industry and auditing
experience and training.
eCOGRA’s constitution
ensures that all compliance matters are strictly under
the control of the Independent Directors comprising the
Audit and Seals Compliance Committees.
eCOGRA is
recognised as an accredited testing agency by various
online gambling jurisdictions and has advised a number
of jurisdictions on compliance matters.
KPMG
London, as a recognised international accounting firm,
performs an annual quality assurance review of eCOGRA to
ensure that the governance structure, responsibilities,
processes and approach implemented within the
organisation are in line with best practice and industry
requirements, and comply with recognised audit practices
and principles.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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