The Peterborough Examiner

Bill on single-game sports betting passes third reading

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

OTTAWA — Lawmakers passed a bill to legalize single-event sports betting Thursday evening, sending the legislatio­n to the Senate.

The would-be law aims to amend Criminal Code provisions around gambling on single games of football, hockey and other sports, which is currently illegal except for horse racing.

The private member’s bill from Conservati­ve MP Kevin Waugh comes after similar NDP legislatio­n zipped through the House with all-party support nearly a decade ago but foundered in the Senate and died when an election was called in 2015.

A second attempt by New Democrat MP Brian Masse also failed after the then-Liberal majority voted down his private member’s bill in concert with Conservati­ves in ’16.

Third time may be the charm, after the Liberals rolled the dice last November on their own legislatio­n, which they subsequent­ly dropped when Waugh agreed to incorporat­e its protection­s for the horse-racing industry into his bill.

The legislatio­n, known as Bill C-218, has garnered tentative support from a tight-knit horse-racing industry that remains wary of casinos and foreign gambling sites encroachin­g on its turf.

Las Vegasstyle betting on single games would also eat into the multibilli­on-dollar black market by legally opening the books to gamblers eager to lay down money on individual games rather than wagering on fixed odds around two or more games.

The prohibitio­n’s initial aim was to curtail match-fixing — it’s easier to scheme when there’s just one game to manipulate — but it became increasing­ly ineffectiv­e amid the rise of offshore betting sites.

The legislatio­n passed third reading with all-party support Thursday evening.

Waugh thanked his fellow MPs for their co-operation on the bill and expressed hope it would not languish in the Senate. “The justice committee’s study on this bill highlighte­d the fact that legalizing single-event sports betting will create great economic opportunit­ies for Canadian workers, businesses, and employees. It will also ensure that provincial government­s have access to the tools necessary to properly regulate sports betting and implement consumer protection and problem gambling programs to protect Canadians,” he said.

Justice Minister David Lametti said the Liberals “fully support these changes, and are eager to see them move forward. The changes put forward would help take illegal betting profits from single-sporting events out of the hands of organized crime, and give provinces and territorie­s the ability to regulate and redirect the funds back into our communitie­s,” he said.

More than two dozen U.S. states have moved to legalize single-event betting after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a federal ban in 2018.

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Kevin Waugh

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