Friday, November 28, 2008

State lottery ads set to promote video gambling

State lottery ads set to promote video gamblingProjected losses from a smoking ban spur the move to use new advertisements

Published: Nov 27, 2008 06:44AM

Home: Story

SALEM — Starting early next month, an actor dressed as a knight will urge Oregonians to try their hands at video gambling.

In one TV ad, this “knight of fun” gives a novice a ride on a white horse from his dreary living room to a neighborhood bar, where video terminals with slot machine-style games await.

The Oregon Lottery is hoping people take the cue and venture into any of Oregon’s 2,353 video lottery retailers after a Jan. 1 smoking ban forces all the establishments to go smoke free.

The ads will mark the first time in Oregon government’s 16 years in the video gambling business that the Oregon Lottery uses advertising to promote video poker and slot machine gaming.

[Read the full article here]

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What effects of this advertising do you anticipate? 

How can problem gambling prevention providers address the increased marketing of games that are cited as the favored games of 70% of problem gamblers in Oregon problem gambling treatment? 

Please post your comments!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Three Rivers to serve alcohol on entire gaming floor


Siuslaw News
, 11/8/08:

Three Rivers to serve alcohol on entire gaming floor
Florence casino will be first in Oregon to offer service.

Three Rivers Casino and Hotel in Florence is the first Oregon casino to announce it will offer alcohol service on the entire gaming floor beginning Dec. 19.

The announcement was made by Michael Rose, COO of Three Rivers Casino and hotel, who said the new service was being conducted with the assistance and cooperation of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission and was in response to numerous customer requests.

"Everything we have done since the facility opened has been geared to enhance the guest experience," said Rose. "And this service has been the number one request from the beginning."

The service will be available daily from 7 a.m. until 2 a.m.

The Hotel and Casino is in the midst of a casino-wide training program conducted with OLCC for frontline employees to upper management, whether they serve alcohol or not.

"there is a large responsibility to the strep we are taking," Rose said, adding that the OLCC has extensive experience in hospitality service and that their programs dovetail nicely with the goals and service standards set by the Three Rivers Casino and Hotel.

At the same time, Three Rivers Casino and Hotel will pen a new non-smoking slot room. The room is designed to hold up to 50 new slot machines with gives players a total of 700 machines to choose from.

"The gold standard for the casino experience is, of course, Las Vegas," said Rose. "And we have been leading the way in bringing that to Oregon."

Rose said that since opening in 2004 Three Rivers has been a leader in providing the most complete gaming experience in Oregon in regards to availability of the various gaming options from slot machines to table games, Keno and major promotions. Gaming began in Oregon in 1992.


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This is unprecedented in Oregon.  The article in the Florence paper last Saturday was apparently the first time the community heard about it. In Lane County,  a recovering gambler from the Florence area wanted to bring this to our group's attention in concern that other casinos in Oregon may soon follow suit. Since this has just now come known even to our community, now is the time to start working. We need help!

Knowing what we know about the high co-occurrence with problem gambling and alcohol abuse/dependence, what effects might we expect from this change?

How would this issue be best addressed, knowing the tribes are under different jurisdiction than state government laws? How could groups in Oregon address this policy change? How could we work with OLCC?

Monday, October 06, 2008

Bus Ads: In Action & On the Go

More sightings of the latest bus ad installment, "Lost to Addiction." There is Hope and Help.

At the Lane County Bus Station:



By the Lane County Courthouse:

Monday, September 29, 2008

9/29/08 | Problem Gamblers Awareness Day



For Immediate Release 09/29/08
Bus Ads to Raise Awareness of "Hope and Help" for Problem Gamblers

Contacts: Julie Hynes, Lane County Problem Gambling Prevention coordinator, 682-3928, julie.hynes@co.lane.or.us; Ronda Hatefi, Oregonians for Problem Gambling Awareness Organization founder, 541-688-7101, ogao.ronda@gmail.com

Thirteen years ago, Ronda Hatefi’s brother Bobby Hafemann took his life. Bobby suffered with a gambling addiction that his family knew about, but had few resources to help during a time when not much help was available in the state of Oregon. Bobby was only 28 years old.

To commemorate Bobby’s life and raise awareness about the availability of "Hope and Help" for problem gamblers and their loved ones, Lane County Health and Human Services and Oregonians for Problem Gambling Awareness Organization have partnered to place "Lost to Addiction " ads on Lane County buses beginning today, Sept. 29 – Bobby’s birthday. The ads will run through the month of October.

Hatefi, chair of the Lane County Problem Gambling Advisory Committee and Executive Director of Oregonians for Gambling Awareness Organization, wants to let people know that there is hope and help for problem gamblers in Oregon – and that the help is free and confidential.

Julie Hynes, Lane County’s Problem Gambling Prevention coordinator, said the ads are meant to honor Bobby’s life while presenting a message of hope and help.

"This is a reminder that there now is help and hope for people and their loved ones who are dealing with gambling problems," Hynes said. "Help is available – and it’s right here in Lane County at the Emergence Gambling Treatment Program."

While the majority of people gamble with few or no adverse consequences, the rate of problem gambling has risen as gambling opportunities have become more available. Research shows that about 80,000 Oregonians experience problems with gambling. Consequences of problem gambling include more than just debt; families and jobs are often lost, and depression and alcohol or drug abuse is quite common among problem gamblers. In Oregon’s gambling treatment programs this year, one in five problem gamblers said they had suicidal thoughts, and seven percent made an attempt on their lives in the six months leading up to treatment. About one in five problem gamblers in Oregon said they committed crimes to obtain gambling money.

Thirteen years ago, Bobby Hafemann and other problem gamblers had few resources to help with gambling problems. Hatefi knows there are people who continue to need the help, but are unaware that it is available. Fortunately, more people in Oregon are seeking help for gambling problems than ever before. Getting help early is key to saving lives and avoiding the pain that Bobby Hafemann's family knows too well.

Hatefi said of her efforts,"I know that many family members feel alone and helpless against this addiction, I want them to know that help is available for them too. The best way to help someone you love is to become educated about the addiction. My motto has not changed in thirteen years: No Problem Gambler Stands Alone."

Anyone concerned about his or her own gambling, or a loved one's gambling problem, can get free help by calling the 24-hour problem gambling Help Line, housed at the Emergence Gambling Treatment Program in Eugene, at 1.877.MY.LIMIT (877-695-4648), or by going online at 1877mylimit.org. People can get more information about problem gambling at Lane County's problem gambling prevention website, www.lanecounty.org/prevention/gambling.

The "Lost to Addiction" ad, a reminder of Bobby Hafemann’s life and that there is "Hope and Help," will appear on five LTD buses through the month of October. The ads were designed by Problem Gambling Advisory Committee member and artist Michel Savage.
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Friday, September 26, 2008

New Site Includes "Videos to Beat the Odds"

The Minnesota Department of Human Services’ Problem Gambling Program has a new site, BeatTheBet.com. The program also created the Videos to Beat the Odds competition to address the issue of teen problem gambling.

Some of Oregon Problem Gambling Services' regional prevention coordinators have been discussing the potential to offer a "video search" component in 2009 for the annual Oregon Problem Gambling Awareness Week. For six years, the state has been coordinating problem gambling awareness "art searches" (a.k.a. poster contests), in middle schools throughout Oregon. This next year may be an opportunity to expand the searches to high schools with a multimedia approach.

Take a look at the Minnesota high school student videos featured online at http://www.beatthebet.com/hs_FilmContestResults.asp.

What are your thoughts, or previous experiences, with this sort of awareness effort? Share your comments below.

Friday, August 22, 2008

New outreach materials


With the help of Oregon Problem Gambling Services, the Oregon Lottery has recently produced new materials that promote the 24-hour 1877-my-limit help line number, as well as the online helpline website, 1877mylimit.org.

Posters, business cards and brochures have recently been sent to Oregon's state-funded prevention and outreach contact persons, and more can be ordered from Oregon Problem Gambling Services as needed. PGS encourages prevention & outreach coordinators to get the word out by sharing these materials with partners, placing materials in a variety of visible locations, and used in outreach efforts.

If you are not part of a state-funded program, but would like to spread the word, please contact Wendy Hausotter know and PGS will send you a supply of these materials.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

A Legal Alternative To Online Gambling

Forbes.com, 6/12/08
Source: http://www.forbes.com/entrepreneurs/2008/06/12/online-gambling-centsports-ent-manage-cx_jb_0612onlinegambling.html

by Jonathan Berke

Here's a business model for you: Give people money and let them place any bet they'd like. If they win, they get to keep the spoils; if they lose, give them more money to play with.
No, we're not talking about the subprime mortgage business. We're talking about a new--and perfectly legal--online gambling outfit called Centsports.com, founded by budding Webpreneur Victor Palmer in College Station, Texas.

Online gambling has always been illegal, even though people got away with it for years. In 2006, U.S. federal prosecutors started cracking down on payment processors, making things a little harder, even for off-shore virtual casino operators and their customers.

Palmer skirts this pesky problem by banking his customers. Three elements have to be present to violate most state gambling laws--namely "prize, chance and consideration," says attorney Chuck Humphrey, a gaming-law specialist and author of the Gambling Law U.S. blog. Because Centsports.com doesn't allow users to bet their own stash, no "consideration" is involved, and thus all is kosher. Quips Palmer: "Congress assumes if you’re dumb enough to give away money, then go for it."

Here's how the site works. Each user starts off with 10 cents in his or her account, provided by Centsports. (You need only register a name and password.) From there, they can bet on any event for which Las Vegas bookmakers set a line.

Once users accumulate $20 in winnings--the equivalent of doubling your money eight times, or striking gold on a 200-to-1 long shot--they can cash out a minimum of $10 and receive an actual check in the mail. (In terms of "consideration," winnings on that initial 10-cent stake don't constitute ownership until actually cashed out.) Losers risk nothing--except perhaps a touch of pride--and get immediately restaked with fresh dimes.

Cashing out is not exactly straight forward. To ensure he can always pay the electric bill, Palmer puts the breaks on payouts (talk about having a house edge). Users compete with each other to snag their winnings from a community pot; big winners get preference.

Users can also earn money by referring friends to Centsports.com. The incentive: 5% of any winnings their friends rack up.

How does Palmer aim to turn a profit? Hungry advertisers--which thus far include Skype, Pizza Hut and the National Basketball Association--and a meager marketing budget consisting of those 10-cent initial stakes and a few teaser videos on YouTube. (Most of Palmer's initial investment went to cover a mere $5-a-month lease on a computer server.) So far, so good: Palmer says his registered user base, now at 200,000 strong, is nearly doubling every month.

Palmer's not your average 26-year-old. He began college at Lubbock Christian University (in Lubbock, Texas) at age 11. He graduated at 16 with a BS in mathematics; soon after began working on a Masters degree in physics at Texas Tech University; and in 2006 bagged a Ph.D. in computer science from Texas A&M University.

That résumé notwithstanding, Palmer is more frat boy than power geek. On the phone, he jokes freely about girls and alcohol. With any luck, he may soon have plenty of reasons to raise a glass.

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Comments?

Thursday, June 12, 2008

ADAPT Problem Gambling PSAs

Thanks to Pauline Martel & ADAPT for sharing these videos.






Comments?

CADCA Coalitions Online encourages online coalition building

June 12, 2008

VIEWPOINT: Is a Blog Right for Your Coalition?
by: LaDonna Coy, MHR, CPS, CDLA, New Media and Prevention Specialist

Source: http://cadca.org/CoalitionsOnline/article.asp?id=1894

What are blogs and why should a coalition consider them? For starters, blogs have upset the way we´ve grown accustomed to communicating! And that´s a very good thing if you are involved in the work of creating community change. Clay Shirky, author of Here Comes Everybody, says, "when we change the way we communicate, we change society."

A blog at its most basic is an individual or group Web site that is updated often and the newest information always appears first. While often described as an online journal, you also can think of it as a coalition news channel. This channel is your own, for your news and information based on your needs and schedule—but with an interesting twist. Unlike Web sites, blogs allow comments, opening up two-way communication loops. Good blogs encourage exchanges of information, ideas and resources.

What can a coalition do with a blog? Some coalitions use blogs for distributing news, information or to celebrate community events in ways similar to a Web site. Others use blogs to replace and expand the reach of their newsletter. Some post thoughts, comments, opinions, descriptions, or stories. We are more limited by own imaginations than by the technology.

If you have a computer, Internet connection and a browser, a blog is quick and easy to start and can be free. What else can blogs do for a coalition? They can:
• provide an anchor from which coalitions can launch ideas/events/products and link to ANY other source that appears online;• open communication and feedback loops offering community “conversation” online; and
• make dramatic ripple effects possible as conversations between the coalition and the community happen and expand to encompass other coalitions across the country, the research community, and provider network.

If we change the way we communicate—the way information flows between, among and around us—we will naturally create change.

[...]

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Check out this blog for more great info on blogging in the prevention world: http://technologyinprevention.blogspot.com/

Friday, June 06, 2008

Overall youth gambling down, but Internet's lure draws concern, DHS reports

Oregon DHS News Release, 5/29/08

General contact: Ken Palke, 503.947.5286
Program contact: Wendy Hausotter, 503.945.9703

Overall youth gambling down, but Internet's lure draws concern, DHS reports

One of every 20 Oregon adolescents may be a problem or at-risk gambler and many youngsters are being drawn to free gambling-type games on the Internet, according to a recent study sponsored by the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS).

The study findings, which are in a report titled "Oregon Youth and Their Parents: Gambling and Problem Gambling Prevalence and Attitudes," will be used to refine and develop Oregon's model problem gambling prevention programs.

Oregon's techno-savvy youth indicate that they're gambling for free on the Internet. Many are playing less poker, which used to be the number one gambling activity among youngsters.

"The emergence of free gambling on the Internet is no surprise, but is of real concern," said Paul D. Potter, DHS problem gambling services manager. "Ads for online games pop up, and kids think that if money's not involved there's no risk.

"Kids don't realize they're being primed to play for money later, which is illegal. They can also become a victim of identity theft," he said. "Parents need to be vigilant about their kids' Internet use."

Despite the increase in Internet play, gambling among Oregon 12- to 17-year-olds has declined significantly in the past decade, primarily due to a change in attitudes about young people and gambling.

"When parents learn more about the potential risks of youth gambling, they do a better job of helping their kids make different choices about using their leisure time," said Potter. "Our statewide and local prevention and awareness efforts are paying off, especially when you realize that during the same decade opportunities to gamble have increased."

Potter said Oregon's awareness-raising job isn't finished, because the survey shows that despite evidence to the contrary, most parents and kids still don't see gambling as a behavior that can lead to serious problems, even addiction.

In the past 10 years the number of youths playing the Lottery has declined 80 percent. Potter praised the vigilance of casinos and the Oregon Lottery in helping to reduce underage gambling.

"Selling to anyone under the age of 18 is a violation of a retailer's contract with the Lottery and could put the business's ability to sell our games in jeopardy," said Carole Hardy, Oregon Lottery assistant director for marketing. "We are diligent about providing our retailers with training about the perils of underage play and other responsible selling programs."

According to the study, parents who gamble become role models in their households. Chances are double that their children will become at-risk gamblers and four times as likely that they will become problem gamblers.

Approximately 1.3 percent of Oregon adolescents are problem gamblers, which is narrowly defined as having an extreme pattern of behavior. Another 4.6 percent score as at-risk gamblers, which means that several risk factors are present. Young people who gamble are more likely to use alcohol and drugs, get into fights, skip school and engage in other risky behaviors, according to the study.

"When we hear parents say, ‘What's the harm in kids playing poker? At least I know where they are. They could be doing much worse things.', it tells us that they haven't seen the real data," said Potter. "If they did, they'd think twice."

Oregon parents and children in 1,550 families were interviewed by researchers from May to August 2007. The study found that 63 percent of adolescents gambled at least once, 46 percent gambled in the past year and three percent gamble weekly or more often. Boys gamble on a more regular basis than girls, and older teens are more likely to gamble regularly than younger ones.

The report recommends these improvements to awareness and prevention programs for youth gambling:

  • Use alternative approaches to help Oregon youth with gambling problems, such as teaching parents, teachers, counselors and other youth workers to understand that youth gambling is a problem and recognize its symptoms.
  • Integrate problem gambling information into existing school-based curricula on healthy choices and addictions.
  • Target awareness efforts to athletic coaches and similar groups because of higher problem gambling rates among school sports participants.

Information on problem gambling is available on the Web at 1877mylimit.org.

To reach the free and confidential Oregon Problem Gambling Hotline, call 1-877-MY-LIMIT or visit 1877mylimit.org.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Survey: Free online gambling puts teens at risk

Source: Oregon's Statesman Journal, May 27, 2008

Survey: Free online gambling puts teens at risk

Perceived as safe, it can groom youths for wager activities

By Eunice Kim, Statesman Journal

Sex. Drugs. Alcohol. They're all topics that parents, teachers and community leaders tend to talk to children about in hopes of preventing risky behavior.

But there is another issue officials think should be discussed: online gambling.

Gambling for free on the Internet has become the most popular gambling activity among youths in Oregon, according to a new survey.

That concerns officials who say it introduces teenagers to gambling and grooms them for other forms in which money is waged.

"You're learning that gambling is fun, it's stimulating, and it's risk-free," said Wendy Hausotter, problem gambling prevention coordinator with Oregon Department of Human Services. "That's not true at all."

There's an estimated 1,700 gambling sites on the Internet that offer everything from casino-type gambling to poker to bingo. Many offer the option of gambling for free or for money.

The survey, commissioned by DHS last year, found that 33 percent of youths ages 12 to 17 — an estimated 94,659 teens — gamble online for free.

It's an activity that is convenient and easily accessible, officials say, because it can be done at home at any time, often under no supervision from parents. Its novelty, high level of stimulation and low level of physical exertion also appeal to youths, many of whom are tech-savvy.

"It's the game of choice among youth, which is surprising for us," Hausotter said. "It wasn't on the radar screen."

The last survey done on youth gambling in Oregon was in 1998. It didn't ask teens and their parents about free online gambling.

At the time, waging money on card games such as poker was the most common type of gambling among Oregon youths. It's now a close second.

Gambling on the Internet for money, which is illegal, has remained fairly unpopular, with less than 1 percent of teens participating last year, officials said. Overall, gambling among youths has gone down in the past 10 years.

"We're not saying don't gamble," said Yvonne Kays, a prevention health educator with Marion County Health Department. "Our message is, you need to recognize the risk factors and when it becomes a problem … It's a problem when you're spending too much time or money (doing it)."

Gambling, officials said, is when you bet something of value on an event with an uncertain outcome. That something often is money but also can be time, emotion or attention.

The fact that free online gambling doesn't involve money can be a draw for youths, who think they're not doing anything harmful, officials said.

Also, the odds of winning tend to be higher when there's no money waged, Kays said. That can lead kids to think they're lucky or skillful, or that they can win money at other games.

"It disconnects them from the reality of the situation," Hausotter said. "We're afraid that they're going to want to do this more and more. If they do this with money, they're at risk for many things."

That includes loss of money and identity theft, officials said. Online gambling, which is growing in popularity, also is unregulated, so there's no guarantee of a payout.

And even if money is not bet, officials have concerns, given that gambling in general has been correlated with other "risk" behaviors such as drinking.

This year's Oregon Healthy Teens survey found that the percentage of 11th-graders who binge drank, carried a handgun or attacked someone in the past 30 days was higher among those who gambled than those didn't.

Hausotter said state officials plan to meet with gambling prevention specialists next month to figure out how to curb free online gambling and get information out to parents and youth.

In Marion County, the issue already is being addressed in problem gambling prevention presentations given at schools, Kays said. The presentations include a national award-winning youth video that debunks gambling myths.

Deidre Eriksen, a health teacher at Jefferson Middle School, discusses gambling in her health classes along with other risks such as drugs and alcohol abuse. With the Internet, she said, students now can gamble without leaving their homes.

"It's so much more accessible now than it was before," said Eriksen, who received the Outstanding Teacher Participation award last year from the Oregon Problem Gambling Committee. "Now they just have to flip the computer on. It's being inundated in our lives, and we need to learn how to control it."

Statewide, a plan to tackle online gambling likely will be developed this summer in time to hit schools in the fall, Hausotter said. Strategies could include written material and classroom activities.

Internet safety is expected to be a focus, with officials urging parents to pay attention to yet another activity that children could be doing online.

"Just about every kid has a casino in their bedroom if they want," Hausotter said.

ekim@statesmanjournal.com or (503) 399-6721


Survey results
Results of the survey "Oregon Youth and Their Parents: Gambling and Problem Gambling Prevalence and Attitudes" found that:
  • Six in 10 Oregon adolescents surveyed (63 percent) have gambled at some time in their lives
  • 46 percent have gambled in the past year
  • 3 percent gamble once per week or more often

Comparison
Comparing 1998 and 2007 survey results:

  • Gambled in the past year: 66 percent in 1998, 46 percent in 2007 (an estimated 131,949 12-year-olds to 17-year-olds)
  • Gambled on the Internet for free: 33 percent in 2007 (an estimated 94,659 12-year-olds to 17-year-olds)
  • Gambled on the Internet for money: 0.3 percent in 1998, 0.6 percent in 2007 (an estimated 17,210 12-year-olds to 17-year-olds)
  • Gambled via cards: 31 percent in 1998, 32 percent in 2007 (an estimated 91,503 12-year-olds to 17-year-olds)

Getting help

Risk factors
Risk factors for youth problem- gambling include:

  • Living in a single-parent household
  • Being male
  • Living in households with incomes less than the median
  • Playing school sports
  • Having lost more than $50 in a month
  • Starting gambling before entering eighth grade

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Oregon problem gambling awareness poster search winners now online


[Above: top-selected poster in Oregon (2009 calendar cover); created by Cirra Halter, 8th grade, of Mt Angel Middle School.]

The top ten posters in Oregon for the 2008 Problem Gambling Awareness Week middle school poster search are now online here.

Lane County's top 10 posters are below.


Would you like to see more? Upload your region's posters to the blog or send them to Julie Hynes.