Major sports leagues warn Canadian lawmakers over…
Sports Game · 2024-10-08

Major sports leagues warn Canadian lawmakers over…

Amid the return of the debate on sports betting advertising to the Canadian Senate in recent weeks, the NFL and the NHL both wrote to lawmakers to advise them against heavy-handed measures.

The Standing Committee on Transport and Communications spent several hours over the last two weeks hearing from witnesses before moving Bill S-269, the National Framework on Advertising for Sports Betting Act, onto the full chamber for further review. Witnesses included the Canadian Gaming Association (CGA), the Canadian Association of Broadcasters, the Responsible Gambling Council, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission and several mental health and youth services organisations.

While those discussions were going on, senators received official letters from the NFL and the NHL which have been published on the Senate website. Each league’s representative argued that federal intervention in how sportsbooks can advertise could have significant repercussions.

“The elimination of illegal gambling, especially offshore betting operators, requires not simply a legal alternative, but robust, active monitoring and enforcement backed by significant civil and criminal penalties for violations,” wrote the NFL’s VP of Public Policy and Government Affairs Jonathan Nabavi. “A state passing sports betting legislation does not guarantee on its own, however, that it will minimise the illegal market in that state due to several factors.”

In particular, Nabavi argued (in italics, for emphasis) that “unreasonably curtailing responsible advertising will inevitably hamper the important effort to channelise illegal sports betting into the legal market.” He asserted in his letter that illegal sports betting operators do not use integrity monitoring processes and do not protect Canadian consumers.

“Canadians’ money wagered on these illegal platforms is flowing offshore to fund enterprises and individuals with no transparency,” he wrote.

Conal Berberich, group vice president and deputy general counsel for the NHL, added in his own letter that while the league supports Bill S-269’s “consumer protection orientation,” the league does not believe national legislation is needed. Berberich pointed to “the healthy cooperation among industry stakeholders promoting consumer protection that already exists and the ongoing successful sportsbook regulatory environment at the provincial level.”

“We also believe that limiting sportsbook advertising by legislative caveat may ultimately prove to be counterproductive,” added Berberich, noting that such advertising offers brands an opportunity to compete and distinguish themselves from one other. Ontario’s market does not allow operators to advertise sign-up bonuses and similar inducements, something numerous observers have said forces them to get creative with their advertising.

The NFL and NHL letters echoed a call made by Canadian Football League (CFL) commissioner Randy Ambrosie earlier this year.

Back in June, Ambrosie wrote that “while Bill S-269 may be well-intentioned, we do not agree a national framework is required to regulate the advertising of sports betting in Canada.” He, like the NFL and NHL officials, pointed to measures that the league already takes to monitor the amount of nature of sportsbook advertising.

“We strongly believe that the measures we, and other sports leagues, have put in place support our contention that a national framework, as envisioned by Bill S-269, is not necessary,” added the CFL chief.

It’s not only sports leagues.

At last week’s committee session, CGA President and CEO Paul Burns told senators in his opening remarks that he does not believe a national framework is required. Instead, he called for more research and consultation on the advertising issue.

Leaders of Canadian broadcast associations reported at the same session that the volume of advertising being requested by operators has already decreased from the initial peak during the early days of the regulated Ontario market. It was also stressed during the meeting that much of the advertising seen on Canadian broadcasts of major-league sports comes in from the U.S. and therefore is difficult to curb.

热门文章
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
菲律宾博彩技术赛道迎来新变局,B2B 供应模式加速渗透
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
超级PAC筹资4800万美元:体育博彩势力加码
游戏风向
灰度在iGB L!VE 2026展位T70和你相约7月,一起点燃伦敦的热情!
灰度头条
哈萨克斯坦计划对在线赌场促销活动进行处罚
游戏风向
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
PropellerAds 分享了新的 iGaming 案例研究:在 3 个月实现 97,674 次安装和 12,701 笔存款
广告营销
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
BETFAIR 网络攻击80万用户资料泄露
游戏风向
准备好了将你的收益最大化吗?尝试ProPush.me Constructor!
广告营销
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
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
首页
游戏
合作
发现
我的