The Standard (St. Catharines)

Winners of over $156M waiting for OLG to open

At least 130 people have bought winning tickets since prize centre closed

- KARENA WALTER

The holder of a $10-million lottery ticket sold in St. Catharines isn’t the only big winner waiting to collect prize money.

Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp. said at least 130 people have bought winning tickets with prizes of more than $50,000 since COVID-19 closed down its prize centre.

Their winnings total more than $156.5 million — the amount won from just seven jackpots.

OLG spokespers­on Dita Kuhtey said OLG is working to resume in-person claims by incorporat­ing all necessary and recommende­d health and safety protocols to protect customers and staff.

“We’re hoping to move the process forward as soon as possible and as safely as possible when the time is right,” Kuhtey said.

“Paying big prizes, that’s the best part of our job, making winners. I know lots of winners are obviously anxious to get their prize money.”

OLG closed its Toronto prize centre to the public March 17, the day the province announced a state of emergency due to COVID-19.

Until the building reopens to the public, anyone who has won $50,000 or more must hang on to their ticket.

There have been seven jackpot wins in Ontario since the prize centre was closed, with winnings of $6.5 million to $70 million.

Kuhtey said OLG is keeping in contact with large prize claimants who have reached out it. There are 130 known claims of $50,000 or more that have had tickets validated at retail outlets or tracked through the OLG support centre. Kuhtey said outstandin­g prize claims are being managed on a priority basis.

When the prize office first closed, people could mail in their winning tickets up to $9,999 and the lottery office would send them a cheque through registered mail. A couple of weeks later as the emergency order continued, the amount was increased to $49,999 so more winners could get their prize money.

But OLG requires anyone who has won more than $49,999 to claim their winnings in person to ensure everything is on the level. The winner must be interviewe­d at the prize centre before walking away with a cheque.

“With prizes of that size, to maintain the integrity of the prize claim process, there is a face-to-face interview,” Kuhtey said.

“Our prize claim staff need to look at the ticket, see the ticket first hand. There are a number of controls on that ticket to ensure every time that the right prize goes to the right person.”

Last Friday, a single winning ticket purchased in St. Catharines won the $10-million Lotto Max jackpot. Two Encore tickets from the June 19 draw won $100,000 each and were sold in Burlington and Toronto.

The unknown $10-million ticket holder has been in contact with OLG after validating the ticket in store.

OLG recommends anyone with a winning ticket sign it, validate it at an authorized OLG retail location and keep it safe with the validation slip from the retailer. Anyone who wins up to $1,000 can collect the prize at the retailer.

Kuhtey said OLG hopes to have more informatio­n about its prize centre reopening soon.

“Paying the right prize to the right person is the most important part of it,” she said, “and, of course, celebratin­g with our winners is the fun part of it.”

St. Catharines has had some double-digit lottery wins in the past: In 2007, a Lotto 6/49 jackpot worth $15 million and the following year a Super 7 ticket worth $30 million. That followed a $10-million Super 7 winner in 2006.

 ?? JULIE JOCSAK TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? OLG requires anyone who has won more than $49,999 to claim their winnings in person to ensure everything is on the level.
JULIE JOCSAK TORSTAR FILE PHOTO OLG requires anyone who has won more than $49,999 to claim their winnings in person to ensure everything is on the level.

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