It seems like you just can’t win when it comes to pokie reform. Earlier this month, Tony Abbott proposed an alternative to Andrew Wilkie’s precommitment scheme – but the plan has received its fair share of criticism, as well. Abbott’s plan aims to deal more directly with problem gambling.
He wants there to be improved counseling and support services available to problem gamblers, and encourages the training of casino employees to recognize signs of gambling addiction. While the idea seems effective on paper, it is being criticized. The Greens believe that the proposal does nothing to address problem gambling. According to Richard Di Natale, the Green believe that it could have been written by the industry itself.
Gambling addiction experts like Laura Hancock at Deakin University are also unsure of the plan’s efficacy. “ I actually think it would be very much a business-as-usual policy measure that had very little effect”, Hancock says. Nick Xenophon, another anti-pokies politician, quoted a recent report that has revealed that only 10% of problem gamblers actually seek help.
If this is truly the case, the majority of those suffering from gambling addiction will not be able to receive the help they require – even with improved counseling and support services.