NEW DAWN FOR KAHNAWAKE GAMING COMMISSION?
29 January 2010
Canadian regulator takes positive steps to
improve
There have been rumours for months about a new-look
Kahnawake Gaming Commission emerging as the regulator
discussed the future with its licensee operators in an
industry where there is a growing demand for real
regulatory compliance.
The first official
confirmation that a new approach was in progress was the
announcement during the ICEi week by the KGC that it had
appointed the independent player protection and
standards body eCOGRA to carry out compliance testing
and ongoing monitoring on its licensees (see previous
InfoPowa report).
There was further evidence as
the KGC manned an exhibition stand and fielded a
powerful delegation that included livewire chairman Dean
Montour and general legal counsel Murray Marshall.
The duo met and freely discussed their future plans
with industry leaders and opinion formers from all
sectors.
With them was Micki Oster, a highly
respected industry veteran who made a significant
reputation for herself as the general manager of what
was at that time two of the most popular and trusted
online casino groups on the Internet – the Sunny and
Trident groups.
Oster’s legendary sense of fair
play and player sensitivity made her many friends in the
player community, and her business professionalism was
reflected in the success of the companies she managed
back then.
Oster’s involvement became clear this
week; she has been retained as a consultant to advise
the KGC on improvements to player relationship
activities, including the timeous and fair handling of
player disputes with Kahnawake licensed operators, for
which she will responsible, liaising with operators and
the KGC board directly.
“In terms of the KGC
regulations, operators have 7 days to respond to an
enquiry, after which a further three days on final
warning are allowed. After that, the issue goes before
the KGC board and drastic penalties can be levied in
terms of licensing suspension and fines,” Oster told
InfoPowa.
Dean Montour, chairman of the KGC, said
he had full confidence in Oster’s impartiality,
experience and integrity, and she had the full support
of the board.
Questioned on the motive driving
the new KGC initiative, Montour said that the online
poker scandal involving prominent licensees of the KGC
in previous years had made a major impression on the
KGC.
“$22 million was returned to players, and
heavy fines imposed on the companies concerned, whilst
the KGC handed over the comprehensive results of its
investigation to provincial police authorities, where we
understand complicated enquiries are still being carried
out,” said Murray Marshall, counsel for the KGC.
The issue also acted as a catalyst for improvement,
Montour noted, leading to discussions with licensees and
a new and more compliance oriented approach. KGC
licensees had been generally positive about the changes,
recognising that these added value on several levels.
“There is a strong commitment to be a better
regulator and to be more publicly visible,” Montour
said, recapping some of the immediate actions which are
now unfolding:
* Streamlining the player disputes
function under Oster.
* Engaging the services of
eCOGRA to beef up monitoring and compliance, using that
body’s highly experienced professional teams.
* A
new logo certification program linked to a new logo and
a new and informative website at
www.gamingcommission.ca.
* The intention is to
link the website with the new logo. When users click on
the logo it will present a page of information that
includes software provider, copy of certificate, brand,
url, RNG certificate, RTP (return to player percentage)
and other relevant data. The website includes a feedback
forum for the use of interested parties.
“These
measures are accompanied by a general determination on
the part of ourselves and our licensees to do better,”
said Montour, adding that within the next six months
everything will be in place.
Montour recognises
that there will inevitably be some cynicism on the KGC’s
plans.
“We monitor certain player message boards
and that is to be expected,” he said. “We are quite
prepared to stand behind these changes and be judged by
our licensees’ performance and adherence to our
requirements going forward.”
Marshall said that
the KGC’S relationships with the Quebec provincial
government were multi-layered and covered a multitude of
subjects, and in the case of online gambling went back
11 years without provincial interference.
InfoPowa’s purely subjective opinion is that Montour and
Marshall impressed as serious and professional
regulators determined to make real and useful changes,
whilst Oster’s integrity and industry experience is
unquestionable in our experience and will be a valuable
element in achieving success.
Time will clearly
tell – and fairly quickly - if this drive is producing
the desired results for operators, regulators and most
importantly of all, the playing community.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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