Cape Breton Post

Advice for CBRM council

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Provincial government­s in the Atlantic region already know the risks.

It remains to be seen just how many will go for the money anyway.

Right now, the Atlantic Lottery Corporatio­n is operating an online casino in New Brunswick that lets residents of that province bet as much as $100 on a single spin of computeriz­ed slot machines — and $500 on a hand of blackjack. The government of Prince Edward Island gave cabinet approval to a provincial version of the ALC’S online casino in late December.

Nova Scotia and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador are still pondering the idea.

The argument doesn’t seem to be about money, but safety. Apparently, while money is flowing out of the Atlantic provinces, the real government concern is not the money at all, but the safety of offshore gambling sites.

P.E.I.’S Finance Department said in a statement that it wanted residents to be able to “play in a safe and regulated environmen­t.”

An official with the Nova Scotia Gaming Corporatio­n used similar language: “Nova Scotia Gaming Corporatio­n’s priority is to run a safe and responsibl­e industry that operates in the best interest of all Nova Scotians.”

The ALC is also decidedly on message, pointing to an Alc-run online casino as a safe, regulated alternativ­e to other websites.

This is, of course, the same logic that brought pernicious video lottery terminals to the region. The responsibl­e leadership of the ALC was needed to oust illegal “grey-market” VLTS that were already operating… somewhere. Rather than charging the illegal operators and seizing the illegal machines, it was apparently better to run the syndicate ourselves.

That’s certainly worked out well — anyone who covers courts knows how often gambling addictions to oh-so-legal ALC video lottery terminals turn up in fraud and embezzleme­nt cases.

Putting the ALC stamp of approval on online casino gambling will certainly keep money in the region that might otherwise go to offshore sites. There are also arguments to be made about personal responsibi­lity — it’s a choice to gamble, online or otherwise.

But the casino would be as close as your home office or kitchen — during the long-running depression of a pandemic. It does not sound like a match made in heaven.

The other thing to keep in mind? The fact that patrons can get in as deep as their credit cards will let them.

As Elizabeth Stephen, a registered counsellin­g therapist specializi­ng in gambling addiction, pointed out to Saltwire Network, “They are going to introduce online gambling slots and VLTS to a whole new number of people that would never go into a bar or a casino to play.”

It’s an idea provincial government­s should think carefully about.

But as we said at the top of this editorial, money talks.

Putting the ALC stamp of approval on online casino gambling will certainly keep money in the region that might otherwise go to offshore sites.

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