Minority report by Labor Senators
Summary of findings and Recommendations
Labor Senators believe that the most effective way to manage
interactive and Internet gambling is to have State and Territory cooperation in
formulating a national regulatory regime. Labor supports Federal co-ordination
of consistent State-based regulatory regimes. The appropriate forum is the
Ministerial Council comprising relevant State and Federal Ministers.
Labor Senators consider the approach taken in the Bill to be
flawed and inappropriate because it will not achieve the stated objectives of
the legislation. Labor Senators note that there are a number of specific
concerns with the drafting of certain provisions in the Bill which render the Bill’s
impact uncertain or unjust.
Labor Senators are concerned to ensure that problem gambling
arising from interactive gambling is minimised to the greatest possible
extent. We are concerned that the Government approach implemented by this Bill
does not control or limit problem gambling in the online environment.
Labor Senators do not support the Government’s Bill. There is one
policy that will provide Australians with the highest possible degree of
protection. Labor believes that effective regulation of interactive gambling
is the only practical way to minimise resultant social harm, including criminal
harm. This approach will also maximise the benefits that will flow to
consumers, the racing, gambling and IT industries, and the Australia economy.
Labor Senators support the approach that we have detailed in
minority reports to the Netbets and Interactive Gambling (Moratorium) Bill 2000
inquiries. Having considered the alternative policy approaches to interactive
gambling, Labor Senators conclude that the overriding objective is to protect
Australians from the potential harms and problem gambling that could arise from
gambling through new media.
Overwhelmingly, the partial ban that the Government seeks to
adopt through the Interactive Gambling Bill 2001 has been criticised for
its inefficacy and futility. Not only have the ultimate objectives of the
Government’s policy been defeated by its implementation and flawed approach,
but its legislation is likely to exacerbate the very harms that it is intended
to minimise.
It is likely that
this partial ban on interactive gambling will exacerbate problem gambling by
removing a regulated service with in-built safeguards whilst still allowing
access to unregulated and unlicensed offshore sites (in addition to regulated,
reputable offshore sites).
Labor Senators do not support an outright ban of gambling on the
Internet because we do not consider it to be technically feasible or necessary.
Labor Senators consider that a partial ban on interactive gambling
will not prevent access to online gambling and will not prevent Australian
gamblers from accessing offshore sites that are unregulated and do not offer
consumer protection or probity. For this reason we cannot support the
Government’s Bill when it is so patently not in the best interests of
Australians and fails to achieve its stated objectives.
Labor Senators acknowledge that the online gambling industry
is currently subject to a high degree of regulation and oversight and that
State and Territory governments already ensure that online and interactive
gambling operators meet the highest standards of probity, auditing and
licensing agreements.
Labor Senators recommend that current regulatory
requirements applying to off-line and land-based casinos, clubs or wagering
venues should be extended to online casinos and online wagering facilities.
Considering that existing AFP funding is seriously inadequate and
the AFP (and other police forces) is expected to fund this additional role from
within existing resources, the AFP will be unable to effectively fulfil its
role under the Bill, thereby compromising implementation of the measures in the
Bill. Labor Senators restate the need for the AFP to be adequately resourced
if it is to have any significant impact on the regulation of interactive
gambling in Australia.
Labor Senators do not believe
that this Bill will overcome any of the problems associated with
interactive gambling, so the extent of the relative problems for various modes
of gambling (such as wagering and lotteries) is not relevant to our assessment
of the Bill. Labor Senators will oppose the Bill in its entirety.
Labor Senators conclude that the apparent lack of clarity in
defining the defence in subsection 15(3) of the Bill needs to be remedied in
light of the seriousness of penalties for committing the offences in section 15
of the Bill (the offences relate to the provision of services to Australians by
Australian Interactive Gambling Service Providers (IGSPs)).
Considering that the gambling modes that are apparently
inadvertently prohibited pose a minimal threat to problem gambling, a rationale
for their inclusion is unclear, and the Explanatory Memorandum does not provide
any guidance on that account. NOIE has stated that they are not intended to be
banned so this appears to be another flaw in the Bill, albeit one that the
Government could be expected to rectify.
Labor affirms its support for a regulatory framework, and
industry wide codes of practice including:
- mechanisms to exclude those not eligible to gamble under
Australian law;
- problem gambling controls (eg, exclusion from facilities,
expenditure thresholds, the availability of transaction records);
- privacy protection;
- regulation of propriety in advertising; and
- software and accounting procedures.
The overall policy approach of the Government is flawed,
this is evident from the fact that the legislation seeks to put in place a
system that cannot even achieve its stated objectives, and threatens to defeat
and even worsen the consequences sought to be avoided.
The Government’s approach to interactive gambling is
nonsensical, in fact, only one true rationale can be derived and that is
blatantly political scaremongering. Rather than act in the best interests of
present and potential Australian consumers of Internet gambling services, the
Government seeks to capitalise on the general public’s fears of gambling and
misunderstanding of the issues, to the ultimate detriment of all Australians.
INTERACTIVE GAMBLING BILL 2001
Minority Report by Labor Senators
Introduction
1.1
This inquiry into the Interactive Gambling Bill 2001 is
the third opportunity at which Senate Committees have examined the appropriate
response to interactive gambling in Australia. There have been three substantial inquiries into online gambling
(including the two Senate Committee inquiries), all of which addressed the
feasibility of a ban on interactive gambling:
- Australia’s Gambling Industries – Inquiry Report, Productivity
Commission, November 1999;
- Netbets, A Review of online gambling in Australia,
Senate Select Committee on Information Technologies, March 2000;
- Inquiry into Interactive
Gambling (Moratorium) Bill 2000 Senate ECITA Legislation Committee, 4
September 2000.
1.2
In the latter two reports, Labor Senators have clearly expounded our
carefully considered position on the appropriate policy for the regulation of
interactive gambling. Labor Senators believe that the most effective way to
manage interactive and Internet gambling is to have State and Territory cooperation
in formulating a national regulatory regime. Labor supports Federal
co-ordination of consistent State-based regulatory regimes.
Interactive Gambling Bill 2001
1.3
This Bill implements the policy approach for which the Government
ultimately opted. The Bill regulates interactive gambling services in
Australia by:
- creating an offence of providing an Australian-based interactive
gambling service to Australian customers; and
- establishing a complaints scheme to enable Australians to make
complaints about interactive gambling services on the Internet which are
available to Australians.
The complaints scheme comprises:
- complaints mechanism for a person to complain to the ABA about
prohibited Internet gambling content;
- if content is hosted in Australia, the ABA must refer complaints
to police if the ABA considers complaint should be so referred (eg if it
appears Interactive Gambling Service Provider (IGSP) is committing offence of
providing an Australian-based interactive gambling service to Australians);
- if content is hosted offshore, the ABA must notify the content to
police if it considers the content should be so referred. Additionally the ABA
will notify the content to ISPs so that providers can deal with it in
accordance with procedures specified in an industry code or standard (or if
none, the ABA has power to issue notice to ISP to take ‘reasonable steps’ to
prevent access).
1.4
As indicated in the Explanatory Memorandum, the Bill implements the
second of three policy options considered by the Government:
- status quo – not impose a ban on interactive gambling, other than
existing program initiatives in the context of the Ministerial Council on
Gambling.
-
targeted ban – ban the provision of interactive gambling services
by Australian operators to users in Australia and also give Australian users
the capacity to filter out these services from offshore providers.
- comprehensive ban – apply banning strategy to both domestic and foreign
IGSPs by completely prohibiting Australian IGSPs regardless of whether they are
providing services to Australians or offshore residents and aggressively
preventing strategy to prevent Australians’ access to offshore interactive
gambling services (blocking measures at ISP level).
1.5
Labor Senators consider the approach taken in
the Bill to be flawed and inappropriate because it will not achieve the stated
objectives of the legislation. Labor Senators note that there are a number of
specific concerns with the drafting of certain provisions in the Bill which
render the Bill’s impact uncertain or unjust.
Labor approach
to interactive gambling
1.6
Labor Senators are concerned to ensure that problem gambling arising
from interactive gambling is minimised to the greatest possible extent. We are
concerned that the Government approach implemented by this Bill does not
control or limit problem gambling in the online environment.
1.7
Labor Senators do not support the Government’s Bill. Instead, Labor
Senators support a policy of strong regulation of interactive gambling as the
only practical and effective way of restricting social harm from gambling to a
minimum, including criminal harm, and maximising the benefits that will flow to
consumers, the racing, gambling and IT industries, and the Australia economy.
1.8
Effective regulation of interactive gambling involves the legalisation
of interactive gambling within a national regulatory framework which addresses
harm minimisation and consumer protection issues as well as criminal issues
potentially arising from new criminal opportunities.
1.9
Labor Senators recommend that a national regulatory framework for online
gambling regulation should include:
- consumer protection - ensuring a quality gambling product by
financial probity checks on providers and their staff, maintaining the
integrity of games and the proper working of gaming equipment;
- mechanisms to exclude those not eligible to gamble under
Australian law;
- problem gambling controls, such as exclusion from facilities,
expenditure thresholds, no credit betting, and the regular provision of
transaction records;
- measures to minimise any criminal activity linked to interactive
gambling;
- privacy protection;
- containing the social costs by ensuring that adequate ongoing
funds are available to assist those with gambling problems;
- address revenue issues that impact upon state government
decisions relating to interactive gambling;
- consistent standards for all interactive gambling operators;
- an examination of international protocols with the aim of
achieving multilateral agreements on sports betting and other forms of interactive
gambling;
- regulation of propriety in advertising, including preventing
advertising from targeting minors;
-
limiting the exploitation of monopoly market positions; and
- mechanisms to ensure that some of the benefits accrue more
directly to the local community.
1.10
Given that prohibition is not feasible or desirable,[1]
that under a partial ban Australians would still be able to access offshore
sites and it is likely that Australian gambling service providers will move
offshore and offer gambling services to Australians, Labor Senators support the
implementation of an effective co-regulatory regime as the only way to minimise
the extent of problem gambling online in Australia.
1.11
The Netbets minority report by Labor Senators recommended that
the existing regulatory requirements for land-based casinos, clubs and wagering
venues should be extended to online casinos and wagering facilities. Probity,
audit and licensing requirements should be equally strict to maintain the level
of gambling regulation that presently exists.[2]
1.12
Additionally, a range of consumer and problem gambling protections will
and have been implemented that are specific to the online environment. Those
protections go beyond simply counteracting the potential harms specifically
arising in the online environment. In fact, Labor Senators are convinced that
the technological means exist to minimise harm to a greater extent than
land-based gambling forms and to a far greater extent than achievable by the
partial ban proposed by this Bill.
1.13
The position adopted by Labor Senators has been widely supported by
those well acquainted with gambling policy and the objective of harm
minimisation. Notwithstanding the Productivity Commission’s conclusion that
there are serious social concerns about the prevalence and widespread
availability of gambling activities in Australia, the Commission noted that it:
...does not consider that there is enough evidence to warrant
banning any existing gambling form...a better policy course is to pursue a range
of strategies to reduce the social risks associated with legalised gambling.[3]
1.14
The Commission gave weight to the extension to interactive gambling of
regulatory controls applying to traditional land-based forms of gambling:
...there are also grounds for regulation of internet gambling,
along the lines of regulations applying to other gambling forms. The
Commission considers that there are ways of controlling online gambling
sufficiently to exercise such regulations.[4]
1.15
With respect to interactive gambling, the Productivity Commission found
that, while new technologies potentially increased opportunities for the spread
of gambling and resultant social dysfunctions:
Online gambling offers significant potential benefits to some
consumers and scope for commercial returns.[5]
1.16
The Productivity Commission noted in its key findings that:
Policy approaches for the gambling industries need to be
directed at reducing the costs of problem gambling – through harm minimisation
and prevention measures – while retaining as much of the benefit to recreational
gamblers as possible.[6]
1.17
Labor Senators consider this to be the most appropriate approach to
interactive gambling. The Productivity Commission further confirmed that the
Internet can provide certain consumer protection measures for problem gamblers:
There are some features of internet gambling which may moderate
problem gambling.[7]
1.18
These measures include the possibility of increased scrutiny by
household members, the absence of cash transactions, the issuing of transaction
records and payment of winnings by cheque. Furthermore, as the odds for
Internet gambling are often lower due to lower tax rates and lower technology
costs:
Player losses will tend to be smaller...thereby reduc[ing] some of
the harms.[8]
1.19
The National Crime Authority, in evidence to the Senate Select Committee
on IT during the Netbets inquiry, assured that online safeguards for
Australian interactive gambling operators offer the consumer protection needed
to address problem gambling:
If Australian citizens gamble in Australia, some of the advantages
are: they will get better odds, they probably will not get ripped off – they
may actually have a chance of getting paid some winnings – we can regulate it,
and there will be taxes available for problems caused by gambling. If
Australian citizens gamble offshore, it is virtually the opposite to all of
those: they are often run by undesirables, we cannot regulate it, the odds are
usually terrible [and] there is no money going back to the Australian
government to deal with social problems caused by gambling.[9]
Labor Senators support the approach that we have detailed in
minority reports to the Netbets and Interactive Gambling (Moratorium)
Bill 2000 inquiries. Having considered the alternative policy approaches
to interactive gambling, Labor Senators conclude that the overriding objective
is to protect Australians from the potential harms and problem gambling that
could arise from gambling through new media.
There is one policy that will provide Australians with the highest
possible degree of protection. Labor believes that effective regulation of
interactive gambling is the only practical way to minimise resultant social
harm, including criminal harm. This approach will also maximise the benefits
that will flow to consumers, the racing, gambling and IT industries, and the
Australia economy.
Flaws in Government policy approach (criticisms of
partial ban)
1.20
It is considerably more difficult to implement a policy of prohibition
than to advocate it, from a technological and practical perspective. An effective
ban of Internet gambling would require global cooperation and enforcement
strategies, since there are already gambling sites operating internationally.
The community interest is not best served by a policy of prohibition, as there
are several insuperable obstacles that would prevent effective implementation
of the policy and distinct advantages of which the community would be deprived.
1.21
The Productivity Commission has noted technical difficulties in imposing
a ban or moratorium on Internet gambling and cautioned against the expense and
viability of such an approach:
It should be emphasised that the relevant question for public
policy is not whether online gambling can be controlled, but the extent
to which it can be controlled. Full control is an unobtainable objective,
which would be undesirable to achieve because of its attendant costs.[10]
1.22
The Explanatory Memorandum confirms that a complete ban of interactive
gambling is not technically feasible and that this legislation will not prevent
problem gamblers accessing online gambling sites. The Bill:
restricts the access of offshore providers to the Australian
market, but only to the extent that Australian users choose to ... filter these
services.[11]
1.23
Overwhelmingly, the partial ban that the Government seeks to adopt
through the Interactive Gambling Bill 2001 has been criticised for its
inefficacy and futility. Not only have the ultimate objectives of the
Government’s policy been defeated by its implementation and flawed approach,
but its legislation is likely to exacerbate the very harms that it is intended
to minimise. [12]
1.24
Should the Parliament agree to this Bill, Australians will be able to
access overseas sites. Those sites are frequently less strictly regulated than
Australian sites, if they are regulated at all, and are likely to give rise to
higher incidence of problem gambling than if Australia were to have a strictly
regulated industry. Gambling revenue will go overseas while Australia is left
with the attendant social costs of problem gambling. Additionally
technological expertise and expenditure associated with the industry will go
overseas.
1.25
The Government’s partial ban
on interactive gambling will not reduce its accessibility, and arguments that
problem gambling justifies or necessitates the partial ban rely on two
assumptions:
- that the partial ban will
restrict accessibility of interactive gambling; and
- that the incidence of problem gambling increases commensurate
with availability of interactive gambling services.
1.26
The evidence supports neither of these assumptions. The Bill does not
ban access to gambling via the Internet. In fact, it does not even take the
issue seriously by prohibiting Australians from accessing interactive gambling
sites. The Bill neither prohibits Australians from accessing overseas sites
(or Australian sites for that matter) nor does it implement any measures that
will restrict, in any real sense, the accessibility of Australians to
interactive gambling.
1.27
As noted above, the Explanatory Memorandum indicates that the Bill “restricts
the access of offshore providers to the Australian market, but only to the
extent that Australian users choose to ... filter these services”.[13]
That is not a meaningful restriction to the Australian market. It is misleading
for the Explanatory Memorandum to claim that the passage of the Bill will
provide increased levels of protection against problem gambling (by minimising
the scope for problem gambling among Australians)[14]
when it is probable it will have the contrary effect.
1.28
In practice, access to online
gambling will not be restricted and provided the service is conducted offshore,
Australians will not be prevented from accessing interactive gambling sites.
The nature of the online environment is such that placing a partial ban on the
industry will not reduce the accessibility of online gambling. A proliferation
of online gambling sites in Australia would simply mean greater consumer choice
of regulated, Australian services. It would not increase the accessibility of
interactive gambling.
1.29
Even if a link could be
identified between the accessibility of online gambling and the incidence of
problem gambling (none has been), this Bill does nothing to limit the
accessibility of online gambling. As long as there are online gaming and
wagering sites on the Internet, accessibility to online gambling will increase
commensurate with increasing Internet accessibility.
1.30
In fact, the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Bill states that:
... a restriction on
Australians’ access to this industry would result in increased patronage of
entertainment activities that are taxed at a higher rate than interactive
gambling, with a corresponding increase in State and Territory revenue.[15]
1.31
This suggests that
interactive gamblers will return to land-based gambling forms where the odds of
winning are lower, the taxes are higher and the incidence of problem gambling
irrefutably high. That can hardly be considered a desirable consequence of the
legislation.
1.32
Contrary to the Minister’s
contention that Australians will be very reluctant to gamble on Mafia.com or
Dodgeybros.com (ie offshore sites) because they mightn’t get their money back,[16] the Committee received
evidence that there are ample reputable gambling service providers to provide
for the Australian market.[17]
There are also significant numbers of disreputable sites, of dubious probity
from which Australians will not be protected. Some gamblers might favour those
sites, particularly those susceptible to problem gambling (because of the ease
of logging on etc) and it is very difficult to distinguish reputable sites from
those that are not.[18]
1.33
In fact, some
sites mislead consumers into believing that they are Australian sites to
capitalise on the good international reputation of Australian gambling
regulation. Evidence to the Netbets Inquiry
demonstrates this point: [19]
Prof. McMillen—It
is Australia that is the brand in terms of regulatory reputation and standards.
CHAIR—That is
perhaps why a couple of illegal sites in the Caribbean have koala bears and an
Australian flag.
Prof. McMillen—Or
the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
1.34
Australian online gambling
operators have indicated that they will simply relocate offshore if this Bill
is enacted, and continue operating and servicing local and international online
gamblers from outside Australia.[20]
In this way, there is unlikely to be any reduction in interactive gambling
services available to Australians as a consequence of this Bill.
Arguments for a ban
1.35
The need for public protection from the social impact of problem
gambling is argued in support of an outright ban on online gambling by
community and church and welfare organisations that regularly encounter problem
gamblers and see the extent of the negative effects gambling has on their
lives.
1.36
Widespread community concerns about the prevalence of problem gambling
are not addressed by this legislation. Nor are concerns about the availability
of gambling opportunities in the home. While the Bill purports to address
problem gambling, it will not prevent the 2.1 per cent of Australians who are
problem gamblers from accessing almost all of the gambling sites on the
Internet.[21]
1.37
Essentially the arguments
that have been presented to the Committee for a ban are misguided. Support for
the Bill arises from the erroneous view that the Bill will achieve its stated
objective of protecting Australians from problem gambling. Labor Senators
believe that the Bill will be counterproductive in that respect.
Problem
gambling and interactive services
1.38
Growth in the incidence of problem gambling in recent years is
attributable to increased accessibility of land-based gambling forms,
particularly electronic gaming machines (EGMs). Indeed, evidence presented to
the Committee during the Netbets Inquiry relating to the increased
availability of EGMs in New South Wales and Victoria and limitation of
availability in Western Australia and Tasmania indicates an incontrovertible
link between EGM availability and the incidence of gambling problems.
1.39
Currently, online operators
derive most of their income from overseas, with Australian online gamblers
making up approximately 5 per cent of the market.
1.40
Whilst this market is likely to
grow, it is clear that online gambling offers a range of consumer and problem
gambling ‘protections’ unavailable in traditional forms of gaming and wagering.
The ALP believes that online gambling provides the technological means
to minimise harm to a greater extent than land-based gambling forms.
Regulation of the industry to minimise problem gambling can involve a
prohibition of credit betting, imposition of expenditure thresholds and
self-exclusion mechanisms, and even require providers to examine unusual
spending habits. We consider that such controls can minimise the harm of
gambling to a lower level than achievable by an outright ban under which unregulated
and overseas sites could proliferate.
1.41
In practice, it is
likely that this partial ban on interactive gambling will exacerbate problem
gambling by removing a regulated service with in-built safeguards whilst still
allowing access to unregulated and unlicensed offshore sites (in addition to
regulated, reputable offshore sites). As
with the Broadcasting Services Amendment (Online Services) Bill 1999,
this legislation will lull the community into a false sense of security by
contending that the Internet will be free from interactive gambling sites.
1.42
Whilst other forms of
interactive gambling continue unabated (poker machines, casinos, TABs,
scratchies, phone betting), Internet gambling is being singled out by the
Coalition in an attempt to placate community concern, but no real solution is
being offered, because there is no means of entirely preventing the harm, and
the most effective option to minimise the harm has not been implemented.
1.43
A primary concern for
Australian online gamblers is being ‘ripped off’ on the Internet. A partial
ban will drive Australian punters wanting to bet online to offshore to
unregulated and potentially dubious sites that do not necessarily provide
credit card and consumer protection.
1.44
Last year there were
approximately 800 unregulated offshore Internet casinos worldwide, which cannot
guarantee personal security or provide the safeguards Australian online
operators currently practice. That number has now almost doubled to some 1400
sites, with Australian sites comprising less than 2 per cent of the Internet
gambling sites worldwide.[22]
It is nigh on impossible to distinguish reputable sites from those that are
not.[23]
1.45
It may be true in theory that
a complete ban on interactive gambling by Australians is the only way to avoid
consequential problem gambling, if it could be achieved. However, a complete
ban is technically unfeasible and practically impossible and the Government is
not even attempting to ban Australians from participating in interactive
gambling.
1.46
Whilst there may be some
value in the mere denunciation of interactive gambling that this Bill purports
to give, the question needs to be asked - at what cost? Labor Senators do not
think that the consumer and problem gambling risks which are the necessary
consequence of such a limited approach permit its serious consideration as
satisfactory public policy.
1.47
If the regime proposed by
this Bill is implemented, potential problem gambling will be unchecked, unable
to be monitored and there will be none of the protection measures in place that
can restrict the harm. The Explanatory Memorandum concludes that pressure on
welfare agencies will potentially be reduced,[24]
however no evidence has been adduced to support that conclusion. Certainly
funding for dealing with problem gambling is likely to decline as gambling
revenue goes offshore. Meanwhile the rate of problem gambling may remain
unchanged or possibly increase.[25]
1.48
As stated in a Ministerial media
release on this issue, there are “very disturbing examples of how Internet
gambling organisations actually feed the addictions of problem gamblers”.[26] There are no examples of
such unscrupulous behaviour by Australian gambling operators; rather, it is
offshore operators, at whose mercy the Government plans to leave Australian
gamblers, who are engaging in such activity.
1.49
Some Australian online gambling operators have maintained that problem
gambling has not been evident. Centrebet stated that there is no evidence of
problem gambling amongst gamblers utilising its company’s services:
We say that on the basis that we maintain an online account for
all our customers and there is a transaction record for those people. We can
see their betting record and we can see the history of their betting
experience. We also communicate with our customers quite regularly with
queries and the like. On average, about one customer a year would come to us
and say that they would like their account closed for a reason which might
include that they think that they should limit their gambling opportunities. But
it is not always for that reason; there are sometimes other reasons why they
might be saying that. There is a very low incidence of that sort of problem.
When we examine our client’s accounts and our records, we do not see the
transaction histories that would suggest that there is problem gambling: we do
not see funds being refreshed and reinvested in accounts. It is partly because
sports wagering online does not create the continuous opportunities to place a
bet as other mediums do. [27]
1.50
Similarly during last year’s public hearings for the Interactive
Gambling (Moratorium) Bill 2000, Canbet advised:
We have not had one complaint that we have taken a bet from a
problem gambler... We have not had one request from a spouse of a punter to
say, ‘Please, stop my spouse betting; he is sending us broke’, nor have we had
one request from a punter. We have had some losers and we have also had some
winners, but never has it been brought to our attention that there is a problem
gambler.[28]
1.51
This suggests a well-regulated industry such as that existing in
Australia is the most effective means of substantially restricting problem
gambling. This Bill, if passed, would mislead the community, potentially
creating a false sense of security by contending that the Internet users would
be ‘safe’ from ‘harmful’ interactive gambling sites. It is clear from the
Explanatory Memorandum that access to online gambling sites on the Internet
will still be available to any online user.
Labor Senators do not support an outright ban of gambling on the
Internet because we do not consider it to be technically feasible or necessary.
Labor Senators consider that a partial ban on interactive gambling
will not prevent access to online gambling and will not prevent Australian
gamblers from accessing offshore sites that are unregulated and do not offer
consumer protection or probity. For this reason we cannot support the
Government’s Bill when it is so patently not in the best interests of
Australians and fails to achieve its stated objectives.
Labor Senators recommend that a national regulatory framework for
online gambling be implemented which includes: Consumer protection - ensuring a
quality gambling product by financial probity checks on providers and their
staff, maintaining the integrity of games and the proper working of gaming
equipment; mechanisms to exclude those not eligible to gamble under Australian
law, problem gambling controls, such as exclusion from facilities, expenditure
thresholds and the availability of transaction records; provision to minimise
any criminal activity linked to gambling and privacy protection.
Existing State/Territory Regulation
1.52
The online gambling industry
is already subject to a high degree of regulation and oversight by State and
Territory governments and Australia has a reputation as providing good consumer
protection legislation:
The approach that the Australian States and Territories have
taken is widely regarded by overseas players as being without question the
world’s best practice ...the high reputation that the existing online gambling
sites currently have accounts for the fact that most of their traffic is coming
from offshore, and that their businesses are growing so rapidly.[29]
The strict regulatory regime that has existed in Australia has
worked to the advantage of the industry, in that it enjoys a high reputation
worldwide. Australia leads the way in responsible [interactive] gambling and
the AUS Model only serves to enhance this reputation. Indeed, many overseas
jurisdictions have modelled their regulatory regimes on the Australian model.[30]
1.53
The AUS
Model (Australia: Uniform Standards for the Regulation of Interactive Gaming)
is an effective co-regulatory regime that has been developed by the States and
Territories and is due to be implemented as soon as it is finalised (it is
presently in the final stages).
1.54
The Northern
Territory Government advised the Committee that the new AUS Model has a
considerable new player protection features including:
-
the capacity to set a deposit
limit (presently $500 per month at Lasseters);
- players are given the option
of setting a bet limit and a loss limit;
- self-imposed breaks in play
are available;
- credit betting or playing on
credit is not allowed; and
- improved national
self-exclusions.
1.55
The Australian
Casino Association and its membership (includes all Australian land-based
casinos) have endorsed the model. Western Australia is not participating in
application of the model, although it did participate in its development and
does endorse its contents, because WA will not license gaming machines,
interactive or otherwise.[31]
Labor Senators acknowledge that the online gambling industry is
currently subject to a high degree of regulation and oversight and that State
and Territory governments already ensure that online and interactive gambling
operators meet the highest standards of probity, auditing and licensing
agreements.
Labor Senators recommend that current regulatory requirements
applying to off-line and land-based casinos, clubs or wagering venues should be
extended to online casinos and online wagering facilities.
Other concerns with Government’s approach
1.56
This legislation has the potential to inflict significant harm to
Australia’s reputation as a place for investment in the Information Economy.
Interactive gambling is part of the broader e-commerce environment and
regulation ensures security and trust in online trading, be it in shares and
stock, or interactive gambling.
1.57
Labor Senators maintain that Australia’s international reputation for
delivering both good consumer protection laws and workable gambling regulations
would be jeopardised by a ban or moratorium and this could result in a rise in
criminal activities, such as money laundering.
1.58
Labor believes that a partial ban on Internet gambling is contrary to
the best interests of the Australian Internet industry and the development of
e-commerce in Australia.
1.59
In our report to the Netbets Inquiry, Labor Senators concluded
that it was
The Australian Federal Police should be empowered to direct
ISP’s to takedown foreign or offshore gambling sites engaging in illegal or
grossly improper activities. This will minimise, although not eliminate, the
harm that these actions can potentially inflict. The Federal Government has
a responsibility to ensure that the AFP is adequately resourced to effectively
deal with these issues.
1.60
In spite of the present funding crisis of the
Australian Federal Police,[32]
this Bill requires the Australian police forces to take on a similar role to
that recommended by Labor Senators, yet the Government’s Explanatory Memorandum
states:
The cost of the Government’s monitoring role under the
legislation has been estimated at around $1.5m in 2001-02 for start up, and
then $0.75m for each of the forward years. These costs should be
absorbed.[33]
[Emphasis added]
1.61
It is obvious that the AFP’s role in enforcing
this legislation will be severely restricted because it will be required to
perform this role within existing, inadequate resources.
Considering that existing AFP funding is seriously inadequate and
the AFP (and other police forces) is expected to fund this additional role from
within existing resources, the AFP will be unable to effectively fulfil its
role under the Bill, thereby compromising implementation of the measures in the
Bill. Labor Senators restate the need for the AFP to be adequately resourced
if it is to have any significant impact on the regulation of interactive
gambling in Australia.
Specific flaws in the Bill raised during Inquiry
A number of specific concerns with the Bill and the policy
approach it adopts were raised with the Committee. These include:
- The inclusion of wagering in the Bill – serious detrimental impact on
racing industry, wagering not associated with problem gambling to extent that
online casino games are.
- The penalties imposed on Australian IGSPs if Australians access their
sites are apparently excessively harsh given the practical impossibility of
conclusively determining the location of the gambler.
- Apparently inadvertent ban on lotteries, linked poker machines, keno etc
– it was argued that the rationale for inclusion if intended is omitted from
the Explanatory Memorandum, or if unintended it is unclear and any explanation
is omitted, giving rise to concerns that the Bill unintentionally causes these
industries detriment without justification.
1. Wagering v gaming
1.62
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill distinguishes interactive
wagering and lotteries from interactive gaming in assessing the impact of the
proposed legislation on the interactive gambling industry. The market for
interactive wagering and lottery services is primarily domestic, and therefore
the restrictions in the Bill “may ... have significant negative commercial
consequences for segments of the industry that are focused on a domestic
market.”[34]
1.63
The racing industry has advised the Committee that the impact of the
prohibition of its Internet services will be seriously detrimental, with jobs
and the entire racing industry at risk from the loss of revenue to overseas
operators.
1.64
Arguments have been presented to the Committee that problem gambling
resulting from wagering activities does not justify the ban. The wagering
industry distinguishes itself from the gaming industry in this respect.
However the Productivity Commission concluded that the problem gambling was
most prevalent for EGMs, casinos games and racing. Racing is not excluded from
the problems. There is presently inadequate evidence of the impact of sports
betting as this gambling mode has not been in existence for a sufficient period
of time to undertake any meaningful analysis.
1.65
During last year’s inquiry into the Interactive Gambling (Moratorium)
Bill 2000, the Committee received evidence that despite the availability of
increased online racing services to Australian homes, there was little evidence
of a parallel increase in problem gambling. The Home Racing Channel, which has
been available on Sky Channel since 5 September 1998, has not resulted in a
perceptible surge in problem gambling. TAB Ltd (NSW) told the Committee:
...even with these new technologies or new distribution
mechanisms, we have not seen any outrageous or unwieldy sort of growth in the
business. My point is that the technology will not—as some of the doomsayers
suggest—create rampant growth in wagering. It just will not happen.[35]
1.66
The Productivity Commission agreed:
The case for banning internet wagering (sports betting and
racing) or traditional lotteries are weaker [than for gaming technologies],
reflecting likely lower risks and the fact that other mediums for making these
gambles are close substitutes for the internet.[36]
Labor Senators do not believe that this Bill will overcome any
of the problems associated with interactive gambling, so the extent of the
relative problems for various modes of gambling (such as wagering and lotteries)
is not relevant to our assessment of the Bill. Labor Senators will oppose the
Bill in its entirety.
2. Penalties
1.67
It has been argued that the penalties in section 15 of the Bill are
totally inappropriate because:[37]
- The defence in subsection 15(3) to the offence in subsections 15(1) and
(2) is not defined with sufficient clarity. The defence is that the provider
did not know and could not, “with reasonable diligence” have ascertained that
the service had an Australian customer link. Precisely what constitutes
“reasonable diligence” is unclear, yet the defendant bears the evidential
burden.
- It is inappropriate to imply that technological solutions are available
to support the legislation, and it is unfair to impose severe penalties on
IGSPs which inadvertently allow Australians to access their services as a
consequence of unreliable location methods. Existing geolocation software is
unreliable in locating users.
- The penalty is disproportionate to the crime considering that if the
same bet is taken over the telephone it is perfectly legal.
1.68
Essentially the justifiability or otherwise of the provisions of section
15 depend on the definition of “reasonable diligence”. Certainly existing
methods of location are time-consuming, expensive and unreliable. In light of
the seriousness of the penalties, the complaints of IGSPs seem justified, and
either “reasonable diligence” needs to be defined taking the available
technology and ways of circumventing it into account or the penalties must be
considered unreasonable.
Labor Senators conclude that the apparent lack of clarity in
defining the defence in subsection 15(3) of the Bill needs to be remedied in
light of the seriousness of penalties for committing the offences in section 15
of the Bill.
3. Inadvertent inclusion of lotteries, TV shows,
linked EGMs etc
1.69
A number of submissions to and witnesses before the Committee drew our
attention to some apparently inadvertent and unintended consequences of the
Bill. It was suggested that these deficiencies result from inadequate
consultation processes in the formulation of the Government’s policy, and from
the undue haste with which it has drafted the Bill.[38]
1.70
It seems that the Bill might prohibit:
- some terrestrial-based gambling services linked by
telecommunications services;
- TAB network operations and back-office operations;
- services currently provided by the television networks (TV
games);
- the sale of lottery tickets in newsagencies using
telecommunications services.
1.71
NOIE advised the Committee that it is not the intention of the
legislation to prohibit those types of services, and that if those services are
inadvertently covered there may be a need for some amendments or further
clarification.[39]
It was suggested by NOIE that the Minister’s power to exempt certain services
from the coverage of the prohibition was intended to be used to deal with any
uncertainties that might be discovered in the Bill.[40]
1.72
There are three points that Labor Senators wish to make in this respect:
- The Government’s haste in and lack of consultation prior to the
introduction of this Bill has resulted in flaws which go beyond the fundamental
flaws in the policy approach.
- It is inappropriate to rely on the Minister’s exemption power
considering the extent of uncertainty that has been revealed to exist in the
Bill.
- The flawed approach to public policy in this Bill, namely the technology
specific prohibition that it seeks to impose, is as inappropriate as it is
convoluted and complicated to implement.
Considering that these gambling modes that are apparently inadvertently
prohibited pose a minimal threat to problem gambling, a rationale for their
inclusion is unclear, and the Explanatory Memorandum does not provide any
guidance on that account. NOIE has stated that they are not intended to be
banned so this appears to be another flaw in the Bill, albeit one that the
Government could be expected to rectify.
Conclusions
1.73
Labor Senators maintain that the most effective way to manage
interactive and Internet gambling is to have State and Territory cooperation in
formulating a national regulatory regime.
1.74
Labor supports Federal co-ordination of consistent State-based
regulatory regime. The appropriate forum is the Ministerial Council comprising
relevant State and Federal Ministers developing a national regulatory framework.
1.75
Labor affirms its support for a regulatory framework, and industry wide
codes of practice including:
- mechanisms to exclude those not eligible to gamble under
Australian law;
- problem gambling controls (eg, exclusion from facilities,
expenditure thresholds, the availability of transaction records);
- privacy protection;
- regulation of propriety in advertising; and
- software and accounting procedures.
1.76
Given that a complete ban is not feasible and
would simply allow operators of online casinos and sports betting agencies to
move offshore and remove any protection to consumers, Labor supports the
continued development of an effective co-regulatory regime and opposes the Bill
and the flawed policy it seeks to implement.
1.77
The overall policy approach of the Government is flawed, this is evident
from the fact that the legislation seeks to put in place a system that cannot
even achieve its stated objectives, and threatens to defeat and even worsen the
consequences sought to be avoided.
1.78
The Government’s approach to interactive gambling is nonsensical, in
fact, only one true rationale can be derived and that is blatantly political
scaremongering. Rather than act in the best interests of present and potential
Australian consumers of Internet gambling services, the Government seeks to
capitalise on the general public’s fears of gambling and misunderstanding of
the issues, to the ultimate detriment of all Australians.
_________________
Senator Mark Bishop
Deputy Chair
(ALP, WA) |
________________
Senator Kate Lundy
(ALP, ACT) |
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