CLOSER LOOK AT B.C.'s ONLINE GAMBLING AMBITIONS
18 September 2009
Canadian publication explores British
Columbia Lottery Corporation ambitions
One of the more interesting articles over the weekend
was a piece authored by Brian Hutchinson writing in the
Canadian publication The National Post on the online
gambling ambitions of the British Columbia Lottery
Corporation (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Hutchinson prefaces his story with the comment that the
BCLC is no stranger to massive profits, pointing out
that last year saw over a billion in profits, the 24th
consecutive year of profit for the organisation.
But management was disappointed - the results fell
some $19 million short of what they were expecting.
"They decided something new was required to keep the
win streak alive," writes Hutchinson. "More games. A
different venue. An appeal to younger players. The
bureaucrats set to work."
The article explains
that the new project involved boosting allowable
deposits into gambling accounts....and launching
Internet casino-style betting on games such as
blackjack, roulette and poker, designed for computers
and portable devices.
Hutchinson looks at the
conservative history of BC provincial authorities,
remarking that the latest goals would have unimaginable
even a decade ago, when Premier Gordon Campbell was
adamant that: "There will be no further expansion of
gambling. We'll try to reduce it."
But once in
power, Premier Campbell embarked on the biggest, most
aggressive land gambling expansion program ever seen in
Canada, claims Hutchinson. "Now there are signs that
traditional gambling markets in B.C. may have reached
the saturation point."
"New casinos still draw
crowds, but overall participation rates have started to
fall. Lottery games are considered old hat. Young
gamblers especially don't seem enthralled," he adds.
Hutchinson notes that with the more generous limits
on deposits, BCLC players can now build up to $520 000
in their gambling accounts in one year, and will soon be
able to wager the entire sum on one virtual poker hand,
one virtual spin of the wheel.
"No other
jurisdiction in Canada or the United States offers
online casino-style games," he writes before outlining
the often confusing situation in the United States and
the status quo in Canada, where only the Atlantic
provinces offer online sports betting and lottery draws,
along with B.C.
Officially, no other provinces
are contemplating the introduction of Internet gambling,
he informs.
Hutchinson spoke to John Kennedy
Fitzgerald, a Toronto lawyer and CEO of the Interactive
Gaming Council, an online gambling trade association
based in Vancouver.
Fitzgerald told him that
mention of Internet gambling generally sets off alarms
because it is perceived as gambling expansion. "But I
don't think it's an expansion at all. I think it's just
recognizing what already exists, and making a decision
to regulate it," he opined, adding that BC "....might as
well jump in and grab some of the business being
conducted illegally."
And apparently the IGC has
discussed online gambling legalisation with the BC
government. Fitzgerald told Hutchinson that such talks
were held with "a very open B.C. government" prior to
its decision to expand Internet gambling.
"B.C.'s
move is fantastic ... a wonderful step," he adds.
However, he'd like the province to go even further and
open the industry to everyone, opening the market up to
free competition and the benefits that such an approach
gives to players.
Hutchinson says that the head
of the BCLC has been quoted in newspapers as saying:
"Gaming online is growing at a rate of 20 percent a
year. Globally, the industry is worth a staggering
$12-billion a year. Simply put, if British Columbians
wish to gamble online, we'd like them to do it as
customers of BCLC."
Playing Devil's Advocate,
Hutchinson interviewed experts with opposing views,
including Robert Wood, an associate professor in the
University of Lethbridge's department of sociology, who
claims that stepping into the Web gambling game is "bad
news for Canadians. It's opening Pandora's box."
Wood is especially concerned about the potential
impact of Internet gambling on youth. "This could create
a whole new generation of gamblers," he says.
"There are young people who won't set foot inside a
stinky casino. Hand them an iPhone and they may find
their way to a government gambling site, online. They'll
be able to sign in and gamble anywhere.... Do we want
that? Do we want governments in Canada to be promoting
this? Is there not a moral question here?"
Wood
points to studies and surveys used in a report he
co-authored this year, called Internet Gambling:
Prevalence, Patterns, Problems, and Policy Options. And
he makes some very contentious claims regarding online
gambling:
"The prevalence of problem gambling is
three to four times higher in Internet gamblers compared
to non-Internet gamblers," reads his report. "Having
problems with gambling is one of the features that best
predicts someone is an Internet gambler."
The
report also notes "a significant proportion of online
gambling revenue comes from problem gamblers (41.3
percent in Canada, 27 percent internationally)."
Canadian Internet gamblers have "relatively high, past
month rates of substance abuse (23.3% for illicit
drugs)." Use of illicit drugs "is statistically
associated with Internet gambling," the report notes.
Hutchinson taxed the BCLC's Kevin Gass with Wood's
claims, but these were news to the lottery official, who
said he had not seen the Lethbridge study and wouldn't
comment on it, other than to say "...there is a
multitude of definitions [regarding the term] 'problem
gambling.' " He insisted that everything the BCLC does
is socially responsible.
Gass went on to expand
on problem gambling precautions, saying that counselling
is available. The government provides this help through
its gaming policy and enforcement branch. Funding for
the branch's "responsible gambling strategy" was
increased two years ago, to $7-million. Yet the branch
did not spend all of its $7-million allotment, in fact,
it ended the year with a $1.6-million surplus.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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