The Boston Globe

AG plans education to curb illegal sports betting by kids

Skeptics say initiative must address barrage of ads everywhere

- GLOBE STAFF By Chris Serres

Amid growing alarm over the spread of illegal youth sports betting, the massachuse­tts attorney general’s office is preparing to launch a statewide initiative to educate students about the perils of gambling and its risks to public health.

The initiative, unveiled Thursday at Td Garden in the midst of march madness, involves the rollout of an educationa­l curriculum that will teach students from grade school to college about the addictive nature of gambling, including how quickly and easily dabbling in sports betting can lead to disaster. The curriculum will be developed with input from a new coalition that includes new England’s major profession­al sports teams, the NCAA, and the state Gaming commission.

The announceme­nt follows a yearlong explosion in online sports betting and comes amid growing fears over a looming boom in gambling addiction. massachuse­tts bettors have wagered more than $5 billion on sports betting platforms since mobile sports operators went live on march 10, 2023. It is illegal for anyone under 21 in massachuse­tts to wager online. Yet increasing­ly, as the Globe has documented, tech-savvy adolescent­s are circumvent­ing regulatory safeguards and gaining access to the new digital platforms, stoking worries that the gambling industry may be sowing the seeds of a future addiction crisis.

To attract more attention, state officials timed the announceme­nt of the initiative within hours of the tipoff of the ncAA men’s college basketball semifinals, known as the sweet 16, being held at the Garden. Along with the super bowl, the

tournament is one of the biggest gambling events of the year and is expected to generate billions of dollars in wagers. nearby, college players did warmup drills as officials warned of the proliferat­ion of sports betting on college campuses.

“Sports gambling is everywhere. It is accessible, and because it is so accessible, it poses a serious public health risk, particular­ly for young people,” said Attorney general Andrea Joy Campbell at the announceme­nt. “We need to make sure that [sports betting] . . . does not ensnare young people into a cycle of problem gambling, law breaking, or addiction.”

Yet the initiative quickly drew skepticism from some gambling researcher­s and addiction treatment specialist­s for not addressing one of the most controvers­ial aspects of the sports betting boom: the relentless barrage of ads that blanket the airwaves and downtown boston billboards, garbage cans, public transit stops, and stadiums, including td garden. the ads feature some of boston’s most prominent profession­al athletes, including former Red Sox slugger David Ortiz and Patriots legends tom brady and Rob gronkowski.

“If the state attorney general is serious about addressing the major harm being inflicted upon young people in massachuse­tts, it starts with restrictin­g gambling advertisin­g and marketing to protect young people, just like we do for other known dangerous and addictive products,” said les bernal, executive director of the group Stop Predatory gambling, a Washington, D.c.-based nonprofit. “marlboro doesn’t advertise on the green monster or behind home plate at fenway Park like gambling interests do.”

The Red Sox are owned by John Henry, who also owns the globe.

School administra­tors, mental health counselors, and gamblers Anonymous meeting groups from across the state report seeing an influx of young people — some as young as 13 — seeking help for gambling problems. many kids are using their parents’ or older friends’ accounts to make rapid-fire bets tied to hundreds of specific events within a game. the wagers, known as “prop bets,” can be placed on everything from how many points University of Iowa basketball phenom Caitlin Clark will score in an NCAA tournament game, to the number of shots on goal the boston bruins will take in a game.

The rapid-play format of the online sports betting platforms and their easy access through mobile phone apps make them highly addictive, say gambling researcher­s and therapists, and especially harmful to young people, whose brains are still developing.

“Just because online sports betting isn’t a chemical doesn’t mean it’s any less dangerous,” said Cara ferguson, prevention coordinato­r at High Point treatment Center, which provides gambling-addiction counseling for youths at its outpatient clinics in brockton and Plymouth. “We’re seeing an increase in youth who have never gambled before and are now getting swept up in it . . . and their losses are accumulati­ng much more rapidly than in the past.”

The attorney general’s office said the new coalition will develop an education, training, and health curriculum targeted at people ages 12 to 20, though they are still working on the content of the curriculum and how it will be rolled out.

The Supreme Court in 2018 paved the way for the expansion of sports wagering when it struck down a federal law that effectivel­y banned the activity in most states. Seeing a new source of tax revenue, massachuse­tts and 37 other states moved to legalize sports gambling. State gaming commission­s regulate how the betting platforms operate but generally give them wide latitude over what they say in ads and where they can place them.

In Massachuse­tts, state law prohibits sports betting operators from targeting their advertisin­g at those under 21, or running ads in media outlets or events where a quarter of the audience is “reasonably expected” to be younger than 21. State law also prohibits sports betting companies from depicting students or schools in their marketing materials, among other regulation­s.

Yet advocates for problem gamblers say such rules are loosely interprete­d and lightly enforced, with state gaming commission­s largely relying on the public to report any advertisin­g violations.

The prevalence of underage gambling in massachuse­tts is largely unknown because those under 18 have not been included in state-funded surveys. However, over the past decade, behavioral health surveys administer­ed by the state have consistent­ly shown that 40 to 50 percent of massachuse­tts students engage in some form of gambling, such as playing the lottery or participat­ing in fantasy sports.

“If you think kids under the age of 21 aren’t doing this, then you’re kidding yourself,” said former massachuse­tts governor and current NCAA president Charlie baker at thursday’s event.

The SAFE Coalition is a social services agency that provides mental health and substance use counseling for young people in west-central massachuse­tts. Starting last fall, the organizati­on began seeing an influx of children who are struggling in school because they are betting on their phones. In response, the organizati­on has added questions about gambling to its intake process, said Jennifer Knight-levine, chief executive and cofounder of the nonprofit

Knight-levine said she has noticed a trend: many of the children who admit to betting regularly on sports do not view the activity as gambling, even when significan­t sums of money are involved.

“Sports betting has become so normalized that it’s viewed as harmless play, like video games,” Knight-levine said. “A teenager will think of someone who is gambling as an old person in a casino or a smoky room, while sports betting is largely viewed as fun, exciting, and socially acceptable.”

 ?? MATTHEW J. LEE/GLOBE STAFF ?? Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell was joined by NCAA president Charlie Baker on Thursday to announce the program.
MATTHEW J. LEE/GLOBE STAFF Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell was joined by NCAA president Charlie Baker on Thursday to announce the program.

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