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How we help to regulate gambling and betting venues in Auckland.
We have responsibilities under the Gambling Act 2003 and Racing Act 2003 to set policies that help regulate and manage Class 4 gambling (pokie machines) and TAB (racing and sports) betting venues.
The number of TAB and pokie venues in Auckland is a concern for our communities, especially in low-income areas.
However, we are limited in what we can do. Legislation only allows us to create policies to help regulate New Zealand Racing Board (TAB) and Class 4 gambling venues.
We set these policies to help:
We do not have the authority to:
We do not have the authority to manage TAB facilities in pubs, clubs or on self-service TAB machines.
We have a 'sinking lid' policy for TAB venues and venues with pokie machines across Auckland. This means that when an existing Class 4 venue closes, we do not give consent for another to open.
This also means that:
Over time, this will reduce the number of gambling venues and machines in Auckland.
The policy also means that existing Class 4 venues cannot relocate from one part of the city to another.
Sometimes two pokie venues will merge into one venue. Class 4 venues can only merge if they are club venues. This means that the venue must be operated by a recognised club and is only available to club members and their guests.
A merged venue must have fewer gaming machines than the total combined number of machines each venue had before merging.
We regularly review our gambling venue policies to ensure they are still effective. We completed reviews in:
After each of these reviews, the Regulatory and Community Safety Committee agreed to keep the existing policies with no changes.
We submitted four recommendations to the government between 2012 and 2016:
In 2012 we submitted recommendations to the Commerce Committee on the Gambling (Gambling Harm Reduction) Amendment Bill.
We proposed that local authorities should have more powers to regulate pokie venues in their districts to help reduce problem gambling.
In 2013 we gave formal feedback on a public consultation about four Class 4 gambling proposals.
In our feedback we raised issues about how money from pokie grants is given out. We showed that grant money is not always returned to the communities from where it was generated.
Visit Gambling Consultation Archive on the Department of Internal Affairs website to read the public consultation on four Class 4 gambling proposals.
In 2016 we gave formal feedback on another Department of Internal Affairs public consultation on the Discussion Document: Review of Class 4 gambling.
We again raised issues about pokie grants money and recommended that a percentage of the grants money should be returned to the community from where it was generated.
We also recommended stricter enforcement, like fines and prosecution for non-compliance Does not meet the required regulations. with gambling laws, to help minimise the impact of problem gambling.
In 2016 we submitted a recommendation to the Governance and Administration Committee on the Gambling Amendment Bill (No 3).
To protect the purpose of the Gambling Act to minimise problem gambling, we recommended against the introduction of new venue payment systems that could:
We requested an amendment to make it clear that any new payment system must not give venue operators an incentive to maximise gaming machines earnings.