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The UK Gambling Commission has written to the pub industry, after an investigation of a test sample within England found that almost 90 per cent failed to prevent children accessing gaming machines only suitable for ages 18 and above.

Working with local licensing authorities and police forces to test compliance with laws in place, the current failure rate of 89 per cent is significantly higher than that of other age restricted products such as alcohol and tobacco, which sit at 15 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.

The commission details that clear signage should be on display indicating age restrictions, and that there is a clear expectation upon staff to stop children playing on such machines.

The UKGC does not regulate gaming machines in pubs, with the Category-C machines, which have a maximum stake of £1 and a maximum prize pay-out of £100, granted by local licensing authorities, who hold the responsibility of ensuring compliance in line with the law.

Helen Rhodes, programme director at the Gambling Commission, commented: “We are extremely concerned that pubs across England are failing to stop children playing gaming machines designed for adults.

“We urgently call on the pub sector to take action immediately to enforce the laws in place to protect children and young people.”

The letter in question can be found in full below.

Dear Trade Association

Age Verification on Category C (adult only) gaming machines in pubs

In June 2018 the Gambling Commission set out further commitments to protecting children and young people from the dangers of gambling, building on work already underway in this area.

The Commission asked its expert advisers, the Responsible Gambling Strategy Board (RGSB), for specific advice on the critical theme of children, young people and gambling. Bringing together existing work and acting on the advice provided by the RGSB, the Commission’s strengthened focus seeks to ensure the right protections are in place, to reduce the risk of harm to children and young people.

The Commission called for all those responsible for safeguarding children, to work together with the Commission to address the wide range of issues identified in RGSB’s advice. Amongst the actions identified was the need to address access and exposure to gambling by children and young people.

The Commission has therefore been working in conjunction with licensing authorities across England for the last six months, to test the compliance of pubs with the requirement to prevent under 18s playing on Category C machines. These exercises were led by licensing authorities (and trading standards staff) or police officers, who had volunteered their resources to work with the Commission.

The interim results are sufficiently concerning that we consider it to be in the public interest to release them immediately. The current failure rate is 89% based on 61 tests. This compares to a pass rate of 70 – 85% for most age restricted products such as alcohol or tobacco. (Source: Serve Legal.)  

The pubs tested were a matter for the licensing authority to determine based on their local priorities. The failure rate did not vary significantly between licensing authorities nor between [large] pub companies and independents. The results were uniformly poor.

To summarise the legal position, at s46 of the Gambling Act 2005 (the Act)

(1)   A person commits an offence if he invites, causes or permits a child or young person to gamble.

At s284, a licensing authority may remove the exemption (to make gaming machines available on a licensed premises) if:

        ‘an offence under this Act has been committed on the premises’.

The Commission has published a Code of Practice[1] for gaming machines in clubs and premises with an alcohol licence under s24 of the Act. The Code makes it a condition of the permit that:

‘All gaming machines situated on the premises must be located in a place within the premises so that their use can be supervised, either by staff whose duties include such supervision (including bar or floor staff) or by other means.’

Section 3.1 of the code sets out good practice in relation to access to gambling by children and young people:

‘Permit holders should put into effect procedures intended to prevent underage gambling. This should include procedures for:

  • Checking the age of those who appear underage
  • Refusing entry to anyone unable to produce an acceptable form of identification.

Permit holders should take all reasonable steps to ensure that all relevant employees understand their responsibilities for preventing underage gambling.’

The Commission, the Local Government Association and the Welsh Local Government Association are very concerned about the findings and the clear risks that they indicate to children and young people’s access to gambling. Further tests will be undertaken over the coming months.

We urgently call the industry and their Trade Associations to take the results as a serious indication of the need to improve matters. We expect that the action taken will be reflected in significant improvements in future test results.

As a part of the Commission’s wider focus on children and young people, we will support licensing authorities in their further actions against operators who fail to meet the conditions of their permits, and will also not hesitate to amend the Code of Practice for gaming machines in clubs and pubs if that is proved necessary.         

Yours sincerely

Richard Watson, Executive Director Enforcement