Title: Harm Minimisation in the Casino Industry
1Harm Minimisation in the Casino Industry
- 15 September 2006
- Debbie Edwards
- SKYCITY Entertainment Group
- Manager Harm Minimisation
2Overview
- Casino harm minimisation obligations
accountability - Casinos gambling harm
- Supply demand reduction models
- Alcohol gambling, adaptation theory
- SKYCITY Harm Minimisation Framework
3Casinos Harm Minimisation
- Harm prevention and minimisation incorporated in
- Legislation, regulation policy
- Licences (venue and operators)
- Gambling industry operations
- Problem gambling services and research
- Directly accountable to
- DIA (casino inspectors etc)
- Gambling Commission
- Shareholders
- Non-compliance ?
- Gambling harm customers, families community
- Failed in duty of care, and public commitments
- Loss of licence
- Damaged public relations
- Revenue impacts ? unprofitable/unsustainable
business
4Key Legal Obligations
- Training
- Identification of (potential) problem gamblers
- All reasonable steps including behavioural
indicators, customer disclosures, loyalty data
analysis - Information, advice and assistance
- Information about gambling at affordable levels,
odds of winning, characteristics and warning
signs, exclusion, seeking help, treatment
services - Encourage people to limit time/ and to get
help/exclude - Problem limitation programmes
- Assisting at-risk customers to gamble
responsibly - Exclusion
- Self/Third Party
- Conditions Counselling, mentor, SOGS screen,
follow-up - Breaches Must remove
- Other Obligations
- No ATMs, 20 note acceptors, PIDS
- Community liaison, environment and marketing
- All licence conditions subject to harm
minimisation screen
5SKYCITY Group Overview
- 5,000 staff in Australia and New Zealand
- Top 10 listed company (NZ), top 100 (Australia)
- Casinos Auckland, Hamilton, Queenstown,
Adelaide, Darwin - Largest cinema operator in NZ
- Largest food/beverage operation in NZ
- Auckland casino, 7 restaurants, 10 bars/café, 2
hotels, convention centre, live music, theatre,
Sky tower - FY06 Revenue 757.9million profit
120.1million - Problem gambling levy 2million p.a.
6New clients _at_ face-to-face services by primary
mode
7Auckland casino 2004 visitors, exclusions,
harm
- Customers
- Auckland casino 5.5 million p.a.
- Exclusions
- 478 in FY06 (38 third-party and 440 self)
- Access to face-to-face treatment for primary
modes - CGMs 189 nationally
- Table games 109
- 30 of total new clients from Auckland ? 92
8New clients _at_ Helpline Face-to-face services NZ
casinos
? Helpline
Counselling
? Machines
? Machines
? Tables
? Tables
9Access to counselling vs gambling expenditure
CGMs NCGMs
New clients
Exp m
New clients NCGMs
Exp NCGMs
Exp CGMs
New clients CGMs
10Access to Helpline by region - new callers
Auckland
Canterbury
Dunedin Casino opened
Wharf Casino Queenstown opened
SKYCITY Queenstown opened
SKYCITY Hamilton opened
Waikato
Otago
11Supply demand reduction
- PuH assumption increased availability of harmful
products (alcohol, drugs, gambling) increases
harm - Three key elements of (MOH) harm min. strategy
- Supply reduction
- Demand reduction
- Problem limitation
- Is a blanket approach to reducing supply and
demand across all gambling modes justifiable? - Casinos - no simple, linear relationship between
- harm (service utilisation)
- access/demand for the product (expenditure)
12Alcohol gambling
- Alcohol Consumption has been reducing while harm
has been increasing -
- ALAC Its not the drinking, its how were
drinking - Certain patterns of drinking behaviour are
associated with alcohol related harm - Effective strategy target the underlying
determinants of the behaviour (personal,
environmental, social) - Gambling Focus on certain patterns of gambling
behaviour associated with harm
13Adaptation Theory
- Abbott, Williams and Volberg (1999)
- As people and society more generally obtain
increased experience with new forms of gambling,
adaptions will be made that enable problems to be
more readily countered or contained and the
proposed relationship between rising gambling
participation and increasing problems may be
attenuated or possibly reversed. - Adaptation hypothesis (Abbott, 2006)
- Initial exposure --gtincreases prevalence, then
attenuates - Attenuation hastened by regulatory PuH
interventions - Prevalence service utilisation
- 1991 3.3 (Abbott and Volberg)
- 1999 1.3 (Abbott and Volberg)
- 2002/03 1.2 (problem), 0.7 (at-risk) (MOH,
2006) - Service utilisation 2005 20.9 decrease new
clients, 15.8 all clients, sustained in 2006 - Non-gamblers gamblers not at risk 98.1 (MOH,
2006)
14Harm Minimisation Framework
- Proposed Vision
- To ensure customers have an enjoyable and
safe entertainment experience by minimising
gambling and alcohol-related harm. - Purpose
- Duty of care to customers social responsibility
- Meet legal obligations
- Voluntary compliance/self-regulation
- Sustainable business
- Principles
- Customer and staff focused
- Aligned business and harm minimisation goals
- Consistent across the Group
- Evidence based (best practice, outcome
measurement) - Recognising and responsive to diversity
- Aligned with established models and strategies
15Harm Minimisation Framework Key Objective Areas
- Internal culture
- External relationships
- Policy and regulations
- Prevention of gambling harm
- Host responsibility
- Research and data
- 7. Monitoring and quality improvement
16Key Challenges
- Testing some fundamental assumptions/models
- Blanket approach to reducing supply demand
- Relationship between expenditure and harm
- All gambling ? patterns of gambling behaviour
- Measuring outcomes and effectiveness
- How can we measure harm minimisation?
- Need an integrated approach to measuring outcomes
- Collaboration with stakeholders
- Development of Harm Minimisation Framework and
revised Host Responsibility Programme - All have obligations to prevent minimise harm
COMMON GROUND