Problem Gambling Sports Betting
About one in 20 monthly sports betters are problem gamblers, almost half experience some level of harm. 'If nothing is done, then we will increasingly see sports betting among young children and adults normalised in this country and problem gambling on the rise,' Vasiliadis says. Sports Betting: Every Day’s a Super Bowl. Feb 18, 2013 Recent Northstar Posts, Sports Gambling. Sports betting has been around for a long time in the United States. The country’s founding fathers were risk takers by nature, and colonists from England brought with them a gambling history that went back generations.
Legal Sports Betting is About to Sweep the Nation. Services for Gambling Addicts Probably Won’t.
By Marsha MercerStateline, an initiative of The Pew Charitable Trusts
Problem Gambling Sports Betting Against
pewtrusts.org/Stateline Oklahoma’s 128 tribal casinos host 46 million visits and rake in $4.5 billion a year – but there isn’t a single billboard in the state that tells problem gamblers where they can find help. “We can’t afford it. It costs $1,200 to $1,400 a month for a billboard,” said Wiley D. Harwell, executive director of the Oklahoma Association for Problem and Compulsive Gambling. With $186,000 from the state and about $100,000 from Indian tribes and other donations annually, Harwell’s group operates a hotline, trains counselors and gives public education talks. Billboards won’t fit into the budget – which might explain why the hotline received just 1,020 calls in 2016, even though an estimated 65,000 Oklahoma adults have a gambling problem. Overall, the Sooner State dedicates $1 million a year – 25 cents per capita – to help problem gamblers. The national average, among the 40 states that spend anything at all, is 37 cents per capita. By clearing the path for all states to permit sports betting, the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this week set the stage for “the largest potential expansion of gambling in our nation’s history,” said Marlene Warner, executive director of the Massachusetts Council on Compulsive Gambling and current board president of the nonprofit National Council on Problem Gambling. She predicted that problem gambling will increase too, “unless steps are taken to minimize harm.” Warner would like to see any state that permits sports betting dedicate a percentage of revenues to prevention and treatment. In many states, that is unlikely to happen. The federal government mostly leaves gambling regulation, and gambling addiction programs, up to the states. Only 17 states pay for one or more full-time staff positions to help problem gamblers, according to a 2016 survey of problem gambling services by the National Council on Problem Gambling and the Association of Problem Gambling Service Administrators. Others operate on a shoestring with half-time positions and volunteers. Seven states with at least some legal gambling (Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Kentucky, Montana, New Hampshire and Texas) spend no state money at all to combat problem gambling. Arkansas, for example, stopped spending state money on problem gambling in 2015, redirecting the $200,000 (which came from the state lottery) to scholarships. (Alaska, Hawaii and Utah are the other three states that don’t spend state money on problem gambling services, but those states have limited gambling opportunities within their borders.)Financial Ruin
Gambling disorder, as the addiction is classified medically, is believed to affect about 2.2 percent of U.S. adults. Unlike those who abuse alcohol or drugs, problem gamblers may not show signs of their addiction until financial ruin is upon them, experts say. Brad Martin, 44, a former school superintendent in Springfield, Ohio, illustrates the problem. “I didn’t know I had an issue until I got caught,” he said. Martin admitted in 2015 to skipping more than 300 hours of work to gamble at casinos, enabling his truancy by falsifying mileage reports, sick leave requests and other documents over a two-year period. He was sentenced to six months in jail, five years of probation and 500 hours of community service. He repaid the school district more than $46,000. Fortunately for Martin, Ohio is one of 13 states that offer free or low-cost inpatient residential treatment for problem gamblers. Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment in 2009 authorizing casinos in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and Toledo and requiring a 2 percent tax on casinos’ gross revenue to be dedicated to a problem gambling fund. Martin was able to leave jail twice a week for counseling sessions. He now has a job he likes managing a warehouse, where he supervises about 130 people. “No one is ever turned away” from counseling for problem gambling in Ohio, said Stacey Frohnapfel-Hasson, Ohio’s bureau chief for gambling services. The state screened more than 68,000 Ohio residents for gambling disorder in 2017, a 35 percent increase from the year before, and increased the number being diagnosed or treated for gambling disorder by 11 percent to 1,159, Frohnapfel-Hasson said. Massachusetts increased its funding for problem gambling by enacting a gaming expansion law that includes addiction services. The 2011 law not only allows construction of up to three destination resort casinos but also calls for addiction services and public health research into problem gambling. Unclaimed state lottery prize money pays for the addiction services, and 5 percent of gross gaming revenues go into a public health trust fund to support the problem gambling research. Plainridge Park, a racetrack with 1,250 slots as well as electronic game tables 35 miles southwest of Boston, opened in 2015 with the nation’s first GameSense information center. GameSense advisers greet customers as they enter and are available to explain the odds of winning before patrons play. They also offer suggestions for voluntary spending, time limits and other tips. “Everybody else is there to push gaming, to push the casino. We’re there to meet the customer wherever they are,” said Warner of the Massachusetts Council on Compulsive Gambling, which operates the GameSense Center at Plainridge. “We’re never going to interrupt someone’s play or touch someone,” but if a customer wants to talk, staffers are ready, she said. Also available is Play My Way, a budgeting program that tracks an individual’s spending at the casino. A customer can set a limit for himself for a day, week or month. “I had very low expectations for this, but 14,000 have enrolled,” said Warner, who likens Play My Way to wearing an exercise monitor or seeing the calorie count at McDonald’s. “Gamblers often don’t know how much they’re gambling. Now people are making a choice. They can decide whether they want to stay longer or come back tomorrow,” she said.‘I Thought I Was Lucky’

Not OK in Oklahoma
Oklahoma, with just under 4 million residents, is tied with Nevada and South Dakota for the most casinos per capita, and is second to Nevada in gaming machines per capita, a recent WalletHub survey found. And more gambling is on the way. Last month Republican Gov. Mary Fallin signed a law allowing games with a ball or dice, effective in November. Tribal gaming operations will be adding craps and roulette to their more than 73,000 electronic games and 5,300 bingo seats. So how will Oklahoma’s small problem gambling council cope with widespread betting windows as well as new craps and roulette games – without additional state funds? “We’re going to pray,” Harwell of the Association for Problem and Compulsive Gambling said.A Whole New World: Sports Betting
Syllabus Opinion Concurrence [Thomas] Concurrence / Dissent [Breyer] Dissent [Ginsburg]Supreme Court Documents:
Problem Gambling Sports Betting Odds
Oral Argument Transcript: Christie v. NCAA / New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, Inc. v. NCAA (December 4, 2017) Online gaming also on the table as Connecticut negotiates with tribes (May 24, 2018)Connecticut governor seeks to negotiate sports betting with tribes (May 22, 2018)
Tribes seek a seat at table as states look into sports betting (May 21, 2018)
Tribes continue to weigh impact of Supreme Court ruling on sports betting (May 18, 2018)
Oneida Nation already lining up sports betting after Supreme Court ruling (May 15, 2018)
Supreme Court opens the door for sports betting for states and for tribes (May 14, 2018)
Cronkite News: Supreme Court decision could open doors to legalized sports betting (May 2, 2018)
Problem Gambling Sports Betting Sites
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Gaming group promotes tribal interests in Supreme Court sports betting case (September 5, 2017)
Indian Country warms up to legislation to repeal federal ban on sports betting (August 21, 2017)
Problem Gambling Sports Betting Gambling
National Indian Gaming Association clarifies position on sports betting coalition (August 8, 2017)National Indian Gaming Association backs effort to legalize sports betting (August 1, 2017)