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Northern Ireland Inquiry Recommends New Regulator, Affordability

July 1, 2024
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Northern Ireland鈥檚 All-Party Group on Reducing Harm Related to Gambling has made 57 recommendations to the Northern Ireland Executive, including a new independent regulator and spending loss limits.
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Northern Ireland鈥檚 All-Party Group on Reducing Harm Related to Gambling (APG) has made 57 recommendations to the Northern Ireland Executive, including a new independent regulator and spending loss limits.

The regulator would be tasked with enforcing gambling laws, licensing and issuing fines, according to the APG鈥檚 of its inquiry into public health approaches to tackling gambling-related harm, which was published on June 19.

The APG said: 鈥淭he findings of this inquiry come at a critical juncture for NI and gambling reform. As noted in the report, NI is falling behind neighbouring jurisdictions in this regard 鈥 we remain a 鈥榃ild West鈥 as Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland proceed with wide-ranging updates to their gambling laws.鈥

The report also recommends treating gambling as a public health issue in line with the approach adopted for alcohol and tobacco, establishing a gambling ombudsman and introducing a financial levy on operators to fund research, education and treatment.

Additionally, the APG wants the Department for Communities (DfC), which oversees gambling policy, to be mandated to consult the Department of Health when developing gambling-related policies and regulations, and that a Health Impact Assessment should be undertaken for the next phase of gambling reform.

A spokesperson for the DfC told 91天堂原創 GamblingCompliance that it 鈥渞eceived the report on June 23 and will consider its contents and recommendations鈥.

Other notable recommendations include creating a 鈥渟ingle sign-on mechanism (SSO)鈥, which would create a single user profile for verification and affordability cap on gambling spending, which it recommends should be set at 拢150 or 拢100 losses a month.

It also says consideration should be given to an advertising ban and regulating loot box mechanisms in video games.

The APG, whose members are lawmakers from various political parties, based the report on written and oral evidence it received between December 2022 and January 2024.

Gordon Lyons, the minister for communities since February 2024, said his current mandate would be used to ensure gambling legal changes would be ready to be introduced as soon as possible at the start of the next mandate.

Lyons met the APG on April 30, saying that 鈥渢his would be the biggest piece of legislation ever passed鈥 by the Northern Ireland Assembly.

The Betting, Gaming, Lotteries and Amusements (Amendment) Bill was passed in 2022, which was the first of two stages to reforming the country鈥檚 gambling laws, with a second piece of legislation expected to address online gambling more directly.

The DfC has commissioned a new gambling prevalence survey, the first of its kind in almost eight years, as it works on the next stage of reforming the country鈥檚 gambling laws.

The DfC will also provide a set of industry codes of practice for consideration 鈥渋n due course鈥.

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