{"id":6396,"date":"2021-05-19T12:56:32","date_gmt":"2021-05-19T12:56:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bettingwebsites.org.uk\/?page_id=6396"},"modified":"2021-09-16T14:15:26","modified_gmt":"2021-09-16T14:15:26","slug":"gambling-machines-in-public-places","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.bettingwebsites.org.uk\/articles\/betting-guide\/gambling-machines-in-public-places\/","title":{"rendered":"Gambling Machines In Public Places"},"content":{"rendered":"
When it comes to protecting minors, there are specific rules in place for the likes of casinos and bookmakers. Those under the age of 18 are not allowed into premises that have gambling as its main function, with the protection of young people being at the top of the list of priorities for the United Kingdom Gambling Commission when issuing licences and deciding upon the rules and regulations that must be followed.<\/p>\n
Yet people under the age of 18 are allowed into a pub where slot machines are out on display, to say nothing of airports and amusement arcades. Even motorway service stations have slot machines, albeit in an alcove with an age warning sign on display. How come it is one set of rules for certain establishments and a different set for others? What are the licensing rules and laws that are in place on this issue?<\/p>\n
The reason why this is a topic worth exploring is that gaming machines are one of the most common forms of gambling that you\u2019ll find around the United Kingdom. That\u2019s not really a surprise when you think about it, given how much easier it is to put a gaming machine in a pub than something like a roulette wheel or a blackjack table. This is why you\u2019ll find them in the majority of venues aimed at adult audiences.<\/p>\n
Whether it be a bowling alley or a pub, a service station or an airport, venues where kids can be preset usually only with an adult are prime areas for gambling machines to be located. In order to have such a machine, all the venue has to do is have a gaming machine licence. The Gambling Act of 2005 allows certain venues to hold such a licence and therefore have these types of machines, whilst others are banned from doing so.<\/p>\n
You won\u2019t be able to play on a gaming machine whilst you\u2019re waiting for your taxi to arrive to the minicab office, for example, nor will you be able to play on one whilst you eat the chips and cheese that you\u2019ve ordered from a takeaway venue. Own a different type of business, however, and you\u2019ll be able to apply for a licence to offer various types of machines, with each machine type having a different sort of licence.<\/p>\n
Pubs are able to have two Category C or Category D machines on offer as long as they\u2019ve notified the licensing authority. These machines have a maximum stake of \u00a31 and maximum prize of \u00a3100, so not exactly slim pickings. Airports and service stations, meanwhile, can have areas that are considered to be adult gaming centres, meaning that they can offer many more of the same type of machines.<\/p>\n
Adult gaming centres can offer Category C and Category D machines, in addition to 20% of the total machines on offer being Category B3 or Category B4 machines. These allow a maximum stake of \u00a32 and the ability to win as much as \u00a3500. It\u2019s for this reason that Welcome Break Gaming exists, operating as a gaming sector for the UK\u2019s biggest motorway service brands Welcome Break.<\/p>\n
If a premises only wants to offer Category D machines then they don\u2019t need to ask the UKGC for a licence, needing instead to get a permit from their Local Licensing Authority. These earn less money, of course, so most places go one step further and get a licence from the Gambling Commission for Category C machines to be included too. They promise the opportunity to earn good money to premises that boast them.<\/p>\n
The hypocrisy of such things must annoy casino operators and bookmakers up and down the country, who aren\u2019t allowed to let children onto their premises but who can take their kids to the pub and see them be distracted by the bright lights and load noises of gaming machines. What message does it send out that service stations are allowed to have \u2018adult gaming centres\u2019 that have scores on the machines on display for all to see?<\/p>\n
Whilst there are signs up saying that the areas are limited strictly to people over the age of 18, vulnerable people will still be able to see them and be attracted to them. It\u2019s not as if people that suffer from gambling addiction can simply not attend service stations when on a long journey, so why is it ok for them to be subjected to gaming machines when they just want to use the toilet or get a bite to eat?<\/p>\n
Yes, the areas where you\u2019ll these machines will have required the venue\u2019s owner to obtain a licence to operate them, but these are generally easy enough to obtain for businesses that are well run and above board. Someone who has self-excluded because of a gambling addiction might have the will-power not to enter a casino or to steer clear of a bookmakers, but they should be allowed to go to a pub without being tempted by the gaming machines.<\/p>\n
The United Kingdom Gambling Commission puts protecting young and vulnerable people at the top of its list of priorities, regularly coming up with new rules that the likes of online operators must jump through in order to ensure that their games don\u2019t appeal to them. All of that seems quite pointless when a simple trip to the toilet at a service station sees such gaming machines thrust in their faces in the most public of circumstances.<\/p>\n
How many parents don\u2019t realise the harm that is being done to their young child when they allow them to stand next to them and watch them playing on these machines or, even worse, actively encourage them to press the buttons. It\u2019s hardly unheard of for such things to happen, or for parents to get their little ones to wait for the money to fall into the tray and scoop it out for them, which they wouldn\u2019t be allowed to do in a casino, say.<\/p>\n
Theoretically, licence holders are supposed to stop those under the age of 18 from using machines, even to the extent of pressing the buttons. It still happens on a regular basis, however, and the licensees face little to no punishment unless they\u2019re extremely unlucky. Is a bartender in their late teens or early twenties really going to go up to a punter and tell them not to let their kids press the buttons on the machines? Is that realistic?<\/p>\n
Yes, the adults that allow their children to press the buttons on slot machines are technically breaking the law, but the likelihood is that they\u2019ll get defensive about allowing their kids to get involved rather than admit their liability. This is hardly surprising, given the fact that the machines are on display for all to see, with nothing but a small sign a sticker making the point that they are for people over the age of 18 only.<\/p>\n
Between 2016 and 2019, the number of children addicted to gambling had gone up four-fold. As many as 140,000 young people<\/a> aged between 11 and 16 either already were addicted to gambling or else were at risk of becoming so. It\u2019s true that a lot of that will be down to the ready availability of online gambling, but how many will have first experienced the world of gambling somewhere supposedly innocent like an airport?<\/p>\n Many will wonder if it is fair for the likes of the Gambling Commission to be putting the onus on stopping youngsters seeing gambling machines on the likes of bar staff, motorway service station workers and people who dish out the shoes at bowling alleys. Is there not an issue with the licensing that needs to be considered? It\u2019s not as if the UKGC doesn\u2019t realise<\/a> there\u2019s a problem with young people being stopped from using machines in pubs.<\/p>\nThe Machines Can Be A Gateway<\/h2>\n