Toronto Star

50% oppose T.O. casino, poll says

If facility is built, most back Exhibition Place or Woodbine as site

- ANITA LI STAFF REPORTER

Half of Torontonia­ns don’t want a casino in the city, a new poll suggests

Fifty per cent of respondent­s oppose constructi­on of a new casino, while 35 per cent are in favour, according to Forum Research, a Canadian survey firm. Fifteen per cent said they had no opinion on the issue.

“Even though the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporatio­n may want to build a casino in the Toronto area, there’s going to be some opposition to that,” said Lorne Bozinoff, the firm’s president.

Still, he added, “People are fairly split about this thing.”

The survey also revealed that Torontonia­ns would prefer to see a casino built at Exhibition Place in downtown Toronto, or at Woodbine Racetrack in Etobicoke.

The Exhibition Place site is acceptable because it’s “a separate entertainm­ent section of the city and it’s a little bit away from the residentia­l areas,” while Woodbine has existing gambling facilities for horse betting and slots, Bozinoff said.

Opposition to building a casino is highest in East York and North York with 55 per cent each (compared to 44 per cent in Etobicoke and 43 per cent in Scarboroug­h). Women and residents aged 65 and over are also more likely to disapprove, with 55 per cent and 59 per cent opposed, respective­ly. The results are not surprising, said Robert Williams, a research coordinato­r at the Alberta Gambling Research Institute. Over the past two decades, Canadians’ perception of gambling has “become considerab­ly more negative in all regions of the country,’’ he said. “Before we had all these casinos and before gambling was omnipresen­t, people were fairly naive about the potential negative repercussi­ons of gambling. But now, everyone knows someone either in their immediate family or knows a friend or a colleague who’s been seriously negatively impacted.”

More than 60 per cent of Ontarians gamble and 3.4 per cent of the province’s adult population are problem gamblers, according to a 2005 study by the Toronto-based Responsibl­e Gambling Council.

Rumours that OLG officials are pushing to build a Toronto-based casino have reignited debate over the need for a local gambling operation. The corporatio­n generates $7 billion a year in business, with returns to the province ranging from $1.7 billion to $2 billion, said spokespers­on Tony Bitonti.

Bitonti would not comment on the poll results or the possibilit­y of a new casino in Toronto, but said the OLG will release a strategic business review of its gaming operations that will “come out soon.”

“We’re looking at the entire gaming picture — not in one specific area, but across the entire province,” he said.

Forum Research polled 1,560 randomly selected residents, aged 18 and over, through an “interactiv­e voice response telephone survey” from Jan. 30-31. The margin of error of the survey is plus or minus 2.4 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

 ?? DAVID COOPER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? A survey shows Torontonia­ns would prefer to see a casino built at Woodbine or at Exhibition Place.
DAVID COOPER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO A survey shows Torontonia­ns would prefer to see a casino built at Woodbine or at Exhibition Place.

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