AGCO orders Ontario youth sports arena to remove betting ads
Regulation · 2024-07-02

AGCO orders Ontario youth sports arena to remove betting ads

The Canlan Sports arena in Oakville, Ont. has removed adverts for theScore Bet sportsbook and online gaming platform after a review by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) found they violated the rule about not targeting minors.

The ads were removed late last month after a complaint was sent to the commission by the advocacy group Ban Ads for Gambling arguing that the ads’ presence at a facility predominantly used by children contravened the AGCO’s regulations. The branding appeared on locker room doors, on boards at the arena, underneath scoreboards and behind benches.

An AGCO review found that they compromised Section 2 of the registrar’s standards for gaming, which notes that advertising and marketing materials and communications “shall not target underage or self-excluded persons to participate in lottery schemes.” It also specifies that ads may not “appear in media and venues directed primarily to minors, or where most of the audience is reasonably expected to be minors.”

An AGCO spokesperson told Canadian Gaming Business by email that the commission, “is committed to protecting the public interest, including minimizing potential harm to minors or high-risk players.”

“In this instance, the concern is the venue where an ad appears,” said the AGCO. “We became aware of iGaming ads placed by the registered operator in the Canlan arena in Oakville. As outlined in Standard 2.03, there is a requirement that iGaming ads shall not appear in media or venues directed primarily to minors. Therefore, the AGCO contacted the operator that placed the ads to advise them of our concerns and the operator subsequently removed the ads.”

The AGCO investigation stemmed from a complaint lodged by Timothy Dewhirst, a father of a teenage hockey player from Guelph and an expert on policies around tobacco and cannabis advertising, which also falls under the AGCO’s remit. He contacted the AGCO after being shocked by the prominence of the theScore Bet ads at the Oakville venue.

“I’m dropping off my son and the first thing that catches my attention is the sports betting advertisements on the locker room door,” Dewhirst told The Record earlier this year. “And then the game starts, and these advertisements are also on the backdrop of the bench, on the boards, on the scoreboard. It was just everywhere, it was pervasive, and it’s at an under-14 hockey tournament. To me, it’s just clearly inappropriate to be targeting that kind of age group.”

The complaint prompted an AGCO review and the commission ordered the venue to remove the ads, which it did.

Former Olympian Brian Kidd, who co-founded Ban Ads for Gambling, said messaging around these instances should be clearer and that the AGCO should take a harder stance.

“The hope here is that after this, all of the local operators get the message that gambling ads are completely inappropriate in sports facilities where most of the participants are children,” Kidd said, per The Record.

The AGCO noted to Canadian Gaming Business that it has not made any further changes to standards or policies in relation to this incident and noted that, “in this instance, the actions the AGCO has taken have proven to be effective.”

Sports betting advertising is a much-discussed topic in Canada right now.

The AGCO has amended its regulations already, with a change approved last summer and enforced earlier this year preventing gambling brands from using athletes in marketing except for the exclusive purpose of advocating for responsible gambling practices, as well as prohibiting the use of people or messaging that would be expected to appeal to minors.

However, a debate is ongoing about whether more should be done.

Bill S-269, the National Framework on Advertising for Sports Betting Act, was the subject of two recent Standing Senate Committee on Transport and Communications meetings. During those sessions, senators expressed remorse about the “barrage” of advertising that came along with regulated online gambling and questioned whether more can be done to curb it.

Bill S-269 would require the Minister of Canadian Heritage to develop a national framework for sports betting advertising based around “reasonable limits.” It would identify measures to regulate advertising, such as restricting the use of non-broadcast advertising or limiting its scope, as well as attempt to find ways to prevent and help both minors and problem gamblers from being impacted by sports betting advertising.

热门文章
张侨伟参议员排除全面禁止,敦促菲律宾规范网络赌博
东南亚资讯
JILI 宣布与全球板球传奇 AB de Villiers(ABD)达成重磅战略合作
体育游戏
巴西拟将博彩税率提高至24% 税收将用于社保和医疗领域
游戏风向
新泽西州7月博彩收入创6.06亿美元新高,颁布禁令
游戏风向
亚洲游戏市场观察:15大市场热门游戏与用户趋势
线上游戏
越南博彩管控逐步放宽,惟本土需求仍显乏力
东南亚资讯
越南在线博彩业政策收紧 催生市场新机遇
东南亚资讯
GGC Awards 2026 璀璨科伦坡:致敬 iGaming 行业的领航者与创新力量
灰度头条
2027 Global Game Connect(GGC)斯里兰卡招商全面开启!业务人脉尽在掌握!
灰度头条
巴西颁布新法赋权央行封锁非法博彩账户及 Pix 交易
支付动态
印度最高法院受理公益诉讼,要求全国禁封“伪装”成社交游戏的赌博平台
游戏风向
斯里兰卡博弈产业大转型,官方:剑指南亚拉斯维加斯
游戏风向
灰度世界杯嘉年华狂欢派对吉隆坡站即将开启,业务拓展人脉社交从马来西亚开始
灰度头条
横跨全球6个城市,灰度8场派对邀你共看世界杯,重塑高质量社交新场景
灰度头条
密西西比州众议院委员会推进提议增加赌场税的法案
游戏风向
首页
游戏
合作
发现
我的