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The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling
The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling

In the ongoing battle to tackle problem gambling in NSW, some stories offer the occasional glimmer of hope. And then some developments truly infuriate. The plight of counsellor Gareth Wyatt and his bid to tackle gambling addiction among young men in the suburbs of Sydney, which have the highest poker machine losses in NSW, manages to do both. As the Herald's Harriet Alexander reports, Wyatt and his not-for-profit Canterbury Earlwood Caring Association Ltd (CECEAL) have benefited from a scheme where pubs and clubs must direct some of their profits to a central fund when they are approved to increase their number of poker machines. The payments are meant to offset the potential harms that might be generated when more pokies are introduced into the neighbourhood. So when the Hurlstone Park Hotel received 10 new gaming machines, CECAL became one of a handful of nearby groups to receive funding. Wyatt has used some of the $707,985 received over the past five years to spruik his service by sponsoring a rugby league-based podcast popular among young men, the group statistically most likely to gamble at risky levels. Loading The government insists that only small numbers of the NSW population are experiencing high-risk gambling harm, but Wyatt's backyard experiment proves that there are swaths of people who want help if you know where to find them. These are the figures that the government does not want to know. 'The link between gambling and DV is plain to see for everyone … except perhaps the government. I have invited government figures to come along and listen, yet they are always too busy,' he said. Wyatt's funding came via the Community Benefit Payment Scheme, established in 2018 following a Herald report that exposed the then-shameless exploitation by hotels seeking to increase their poker machine numbers by offering donations to community groups of their choice.

The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling
The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

The backyard experiment that exposed the swaths who want help with gambling

In the ongoing battle to tackle problem gambling in NSW, some stories offer the occasional glimmer of hope. And then some developments truly infuriate. The plight of counsellor Gareth Wyatt and his bid to tackle gambling addiction among young men in the suburbs of Sydney, which have the highest poker machine losses in NSW, manages to do both. As the Herald's Harriet Alexander reports, Wyatt and his not-for-profit Canterbury Earlwood Caring Association Ltd (CECEAL) have benefited from a scheme where pubs and clubs must direct some of their profits to a central fund when they are approved to increase their number of poker machines. The payments are meant to offset the potential harms that might be generated when more pokies are introduced into the neighbourhood. So when the Hurlstone Park Hotel received 10 new gaming machines, CECAL became one of a handful of nearby groups to receive funding. Wyatt has used some of the $707,985 received over the past five years to spruik his service by sponsoring a rugby league-based podcast popular among young men, the group statistically most likely to gamble at risky levels. Loading The government insists that only small numbers of the NSW population are experiencing high-risk gambling harm, but Wyatt's backyard experiment proves that there are swaths of people who want help if you know where to find them. These are the figures that the government does not want to know. 'The link between gambling and DV is plain to see for everyone … except perhaps the government. I have invited government figures to come along and listen, yet they are always too busy,' he said. Wyatt's funding came via the Community Benefit Payment Scheme, established in 2018 following a Herald report that exposed the then-shameless exploitation by hotels seeking to increase their poker machine numbers by offering donations to community groups of their choice.

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