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the money changers .....The gambling industry is up in arms about the Gillard government's proposed poker machine reforms; of course they are. Clubs NSW is leading the charge; understandable. But what about the Catholic clubs? You see, there's several registered clubs in NSW that are known as the Catholic clubs. They were started years ago, generally by prominent Catholic businessmen or parents from the local Catholic school, and grew to a point where they took on a life of their own. They are well respected, very successful and, as far as I know, still hold true to their original Catholic ideals. There are five Catholic clubs in NSW that I'm aware of, and four of them are online. Those four have grown to become very successful indeed, and they are The Catholic Club (also known as The Castlereagh Club), the Campbelltown Catholic Club (also known as King of Clubs), Dooleys Lidcombe Catholic Club and Liverpool Catholic Club. All four of these clubs have poker machines, and plenty of them. Now I'm not going to say that there's anything hypocritical about linking Catholicism with gambling. Bingo, anyone? There's nothing wrong with gambling, in and of itself, and it certainly isn't a sin. But what about problem gambling? Remember, church groups across the country are concerned about problem gambling. Both the Victorian InterChurch Gambling Taskforce and the Australian Churches Gambling Taskforce support the Gillard government's reforms and have repeatedly expressed their dismay with the tactics employed by the industry, Clubs NSW and Clubs Australia in particular, in fighting these reforms. Many gambling counselling services are faith-based, and there is no doubt that the Catholic Church, like so many other religious organisations in this country, has seen its fair share of human carnage as a direct result of poker machine addiction. But these clubs ... The signs say "Catholic" but their bosses are Clubs NSW. All four of the Catholic clubs I listed above support the "It's Un-Australian" campaign. This was on the "What's On" page of The (Castlereagh) Catholic Club website: Am I the only one who is appalled that these clubs, founded on Catholic ideals, are actively supporting a campaign that portrays its opponents as un-Australian? That places the blame for gambling problems squarely on the shoulders of poker machine addicts and absolves the industry? That plays politics with people's lives? Or for these clubs, is the word "Catholic" simply a remnant of a bygone time ... a reminder of where they came from, but by no means an indicator of where they're heading? For me, it's troubling on a personal level. Regardless of what I am now, I was born and raised Catholic. I went through the Catholic school system, participated in Catholic youth groups, heck I was even a lay minister for a while. I understand Catholicism. But I don't understand this. There's a famous story from the Gospels, about how Jesus threw the money changers out of the temple. I think these clubs have it the wrong way around. *Tom Cummings, a gambling survivor, blogs about gambling reform and problem gambling awareness. This post originally appeared on www.cyenne.com.
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sins of inconvenience .....
Anglican Archbishop Peter Jensen has used his moral authority as a church leader to condemn sports clubs that benefit from the losses of pokie addicts.
In his opening speech to the 49th Synod of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney, Jensen took aim at the pokies lobby, which is trying to block new laws to combat problem gambling.
Sports clubs are "at the mercy of commercial interests appealing to our greed," he warned. "The social capital created by sporting associations is being funded by the real capital of addicts."
"The Gillard government's moral leadership about gambling addiction is to be commended," Jensen added.
But where does the archbishop's Catholic counterpart sit in this debate? And why has he not joined the fight?
Last November in a speech entitled God and Mammon: Need or Greed in the big end of town Sydney's Cardinal Pell told a business audience that his church could not condemn pokies because Catholic clubs were full of them.
''I must confess I do feel a bit uneasy about that," he admitted, "But only a bit uneasy, because culturally I'm an Irish Australian and we grew up gambling.''
Only when gambling became an addiction, threatening the well-being of oneself and one's family, did it become a sin, Pell explained.
But is it not also a sin for Catholic clubs to take money from addicts and help them destroy their lives? Especially since the Productivity Commission states that 40% of the clubs' pokie winnings come from problem gamblers.
Cardinal Pell did not address that obvious question. But his silence-then and now-says plenty.
And so does the fact that Catholic clubs in NSW are fighting tooth and nail against Andrew Wilkie's proposed reforms.
But it seems they have told the Cardinal that "problem gambling is not a major issue in Catholic clubs", according to the Sydney Morning Herald.
Does he actually believe them?
God & Gambling - The Cardinal Goes Missing
red ricepaper lanterns .....
Fairfield is one of Sydney's most disadvantaged areas yet the pokies earn billions there. Matthew Moore and Jacob Saulwick investigate.
At 2.30 on Sunday morning, one of the state's largest clubs starts handing out $100 notes.
In the St Johns Park Bowling Club, about 130 gamblers are fixed to their pokies. Most are still slapping the ''play'' button but a few have already lost heavily and are heads-down, resting on their machines, awaiting a final chance.
To win one of the $100 envelopes they need to swipe membership cards at a rewards centre machine some time after 2am, and a small queue starts to form.
Most of those lining up are migrants, many from Asia, a lot from Europe, and almost half of them women. Few are under 30 and almost no one talks. When the machine prints out their name cards they drop them into the plastic lottery barrel next to the ATM, just three metres from the gaming floor.
And then they wait.
''First one out is L.John ... $100 is yours,'' the raffle host declares over the PA system at 2.35am, and the first punter collects his prize and walks back to his machine.
For an hour there's a draw every six minutes. And every winner takes their money back to one of the 398 machines that have made St Johns, a suburban bowling club near Cabramatta which opened more than 60 years ago, the 14th biggest earning club in the state.
Despite that, the club's CEO, David Marsh, says the draws are ''not related to gaming'' and simply ''a general members promotion''.
St Johns Park is in the council area of Fairfield, home to around 2.6 per cent of the NSW population, or more than 180,000 people.
The council estimates the area's unemployment rate is more than 10 per cent, double the state average. Fairfield residents are twice as likely to receive the disability support pension as others in NSW. On the Bureau of Statistics' measure, it is Sydney's most disadvantaged region.
And yet Fairfield is at the heart of Sydney's poker machine industry and the licensed clubs that dominate it. On every measure Fairfield, which takes in suburbs such as Cabramatta, Mount Pritchard and Bossley Park, is the stand-out location for clubs and poker machines in NSW.
On the statistics alone Fairfield demonstrates why there can be no discussion of clubs and poker machines, and what they give to and take from communities in NSW and Australia, without considering this pocket of south-west Sydney.
In the three months to May, poker machine players pushed more than $11 billion through NSW clubs, according to figures from the Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing. Almost $1.3 billion came from Fairfield, more than double the next highest local government area, Canterbury, which had $600 million.
Within these turnover figures, NSW clubs cleared a net profit for the quarter, before taxes, wages and the like, of $834 million. Fairfield clubs dropped $70 million into this profit pool, contributing almost 8.5 per cent. When it comes to the number of pokies, therefore, Sydney's most disadvantaged council area punches above its weight by a factor of more than three.
This figure becomes even more striking when set against the number of poker machines in the area. Clubs in Fairfield own about 4 per cent of the state's total. Not only is there an above-average number of poker machines in Fairfield per head of population, but the machines are played at almost double the intensity of machines in other suburbs.
Little wonder, then, Fairfield's largest club, Mounties, is trying to repatriate pokies from satellite clubs on the northern beaches to its Mount Pritchard base.
Mounties, also known as the Mount Pritchard & District Community Club, has 561 poker machines and ranks second in the state's poker machine profit rankings, behind the Bulldogs League Club in Belmore.
At its Meadows Road premises, Mounties offers a major entertainment complex, childcare facilities, a health and fitness centre with pool, a hair salon, and drinks at any one of 13 bars. Last year, the Mounties Group earned $87 million, $67 million of which came from gaming machines.
Yet while Mounties is atop the pile of Fairfield clubs, others are close behind. Fairfield's second club is the Cabra-Vale Ex-Active Servicemen's Club, known as the Diggers, which is the sixth most profitable poker machine club in the state.
Last year, the Diggers earned $67 million, $51 million from gaming machines. Diggers has a high proportion of so-called multi-terminal gaming machines, especially electronic roulette and blackjack tables favoured by the club's Vietnamese members. It's clear the club knows its market - the croupiers on their electronic screens are depicted as Asian.
It's a similar story at the City of Fairfield RSL Memorial Club, Fairfield's third biggest and the ninth most profitable gaming club in the state. Of the $42 million it earned last year, $39 million came from poker machines, a remarkable 93 per cent. St Johns Park also earned $42 million last year, $34 million of which came from gaming machines, a more modest ratio of 81 per cent.
Despite tough economic conditions, St Johns increased its revenue by 10 per cent last year, all of it due to gambling. The year before revenue leapt 22 per cent and the club is about to start a $25 million renovation mainly to expand its outdoor gaming area where smokers can play as they look out over the bowling greens.
Laws require clubs to donate to the community and the club gave sporting and community groups $658,000 last year. It's a large amount, but barely one-third of the $1.9 million it spent on advertising and promotion.
At 3am, St Johns bar staff stop serving alcohol. A couple of hours earlier the gaming room was teeming, with few spare machines. As the night wears on, people drift home and despite the $1000 doled out between 2.30am and 3.30am, the room thins to about a third full.
After running out of money, an elderly European woman propped on a stool with a walking stick says she would have gone but is waiting for the raffle. When her daughter's name is drawn out, the pair, like all the other winners, head back to the machines.
Like many clubs, the machines in St Johns have an ''attendant'' button, a sort of room service so pokie players don't have to leave their machines to get a drink. The practice is banned in Victoria but popular in NSW.
Attendants are kept busy selling alcoholic drinks but most go for the free soft drinks and it's the ''slushee iced coffees'' in tall glasses that are in heaviest demand.
A tense Fijian woman, aged about 70, is playing the Hot Chili machine. She drinks lemon squash and shares a box of nuggets with her disabled adult stepson who waits patiently for the club to close so he can, once again, walk his mother home.
''I've lost $400 tonight,'' she says, snorting involuntarily each time she smacks the machine and chases her losses. ''I lost $3000,'' she adds, snorting again, before locking eyes back on the spinning reels, too distracted to explain.
It is clear St Johns' cash draw encourages some people to extend their stay at the club. Yet Wendy, a counsellor who has worked in the area, says such largesse is not usually needed to attract serious gamblers. Serious gamblers, she says, do not break their rhythm.
''Once they are on that machine, the world could blow up around them, and they really wouldn't notice,'' she says.
(Wendy is not the counsellor's real name; she fears her employer will lose funding from the Office of Liquor Gaming and Racing if she speaks out. This is a common fear among those paid to clean up the mess of problem gambling.)
''Often people will say to me: 'I looked up and, oh my God, I've been there for five hours. I didn't eat anything, I didn't drink anything, I didn't go to the toilet.'
''And then I will ask them how much money did they put into the machine and they'll go: 'I don't know, I was just feeding it money.'''
Yvonne, from nearby Wentworthville, echoes Wendy's description of the mindlessness of many players. ''Your mind stops, you don't think,'' Yvonne, who developed a gambling problem after taking up with a boyfriend who liked to punt, says.
''Everybody's got problems and concerns. Sometimes your head gets too loud and too busy, and if you gamble, if you sit in front of a machine, you don't think.''
Yvonne estimates she has lost about $100,000 in the past eight years and after running out of money she is now trying to kick her gambling habit. She has not told her adult children about her losses and is working with a counsellor to try to find another activity to replace the quietude gambling gave her.
''Apart from the money you don't have a care in the world,'' she says of the attraction of poker machines.
Yvonne used to gamble at just one club and research by the clubs shows many poker machine players value regularity.
In its application to the Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing to introduce another 60 machines to the area, Mounties cites a survey of its patrons suggesting that few gamblers like to travel far to play. Almost two-thirds of all gambling Mounties members play only at Mounties.
Toai Thi Nguyen, an illiterate 55-year-old Vietnamese mother of four, also gambled at just one club. She racked up debts of $28,000 to loan sharks in 2003 when she first started gambling at The Star (then Star City) before her family got her to sign self-exclusion documents.
But in 2008, she started gambling again, this time at the local St Johns Bowling. Loan sharks lent her $25,000, which grew to $40,000 as her lenders piled on high interest rates.
With no hope of repaying the money, Nguyen succumbed to their threats and flew to Vietnam, where a gun was held at her head. She returned with 10 kilograms of pseudoephedrine, used for making ''ice'', hidden in her bags.
When District Court Judge Robyn Tupman this month sentenced Nguyen to five years in prison, she attacked St Johns for allowing a member, whom she described as ''mildly retarded'', who'd never had a paid job and who had banned herself from a casino, to lose $25,000.
''It is unfortunate in the extreme it seems to me that registered clubs, like the one referred to here, allow this sort of problematic gambling to occur to the extent that it did,'' the judge said. ''That this was allowed to occur by an organisation trusted by the community of NSW with a licence is a matter of concern.''
Nguyen's case was one ''where upper limits on daily gambling amounts might well have saved this woman'', she said.
''In the absence of safeguards like that, however, it seems to me that clubs such as this one owe a greater responsibility to those who they allow to play their poker machines and continually lose, and to the community generally, in order to discharge their general moral duty to the community and to those who they allow through the front doors of their premises,'' Judge Tupman said.
At the same time Nguyen started gambling at St Johns, the club was applying for extended opening hours.
To restrict the damage caused by problem gamblers, the Gaming Machines Act requires clubs and pubs to stop machines from 4am to 10am, but many don't.
Clubs and pubs can apply to the Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing to halve the shutdown period from six hours to three on Saturdays, Sundays and sometimes during the week.
Exemptions are granted if other clubs nearby are open late, if clubs traded late before laws were tightened in 2003, or if shutting machines down causes financial hardship. But to get an Exemption, clubs must show all required harm minimisation measures have been taken.
Big clubs have been successful in reducing shutdown hours and most of the top 10 earning clubs now stay open until 6am at weekends, and some every day.
Bulldogs League Club earns more gambling revenue than any other club and closes only from 6am to 9am seven days a week, as does Bankstown Sports Club, ranked number three, and the sixth-ranked Parramatta Leagues Club.
St Johns said it wanted 6am closing for shift workers and members who wanted to watch sport on pay TV and could not afford to do so at home. It won approval early last year and since then has stayed open until 6am at weekends. However, Fairfield Council insists it only has approval to stay open until 3.30am at weekends.
A fortnight ago, the club lodged a new development application seeking permission for the ''proposed'' 6am closing. Mr Marsh, said it was to ''ensure consistency'' with planning laws and the Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing's approval.
When the last soft drinks are served at four, there's nothing to do but gamble.
By 4.am, the numbers have thinned further and the last 38 people remaining are playing intently.
Red ricepaper lanterns hang over the electronic roulette and blackjack games where nine women, all middle-aged Asians, are still busy. One flicks through a pile of $100 bills before slipping one into the machine.
Wendy says her clients are often drawn to the homeliness of clubs. ''The younger males tend to be in pubs and there's usually alcohol related with it,'' she says.
''With the more middle-ranged to older people, especially the females, they like the clubs. Because it's safer, that's often the words that I've been told, it's: 'I feel safe.
They know me, they know the drinks I like, they'll say hello to me.' One lady said: 'I feel like I've come home when I go there.'''
The club industry and its defenders say rates of problem gambling are falling. They say the attempt to impose a ''pre-commitment'' system on poker machine players, as promised by the Gillard government, will only hurt clubs and provide no benefit to the community.
''My concern is that people believe that clubs are venues only for poker machines,'' Tony Issa, the Liberal MP from Granville, told Parliament recently as the O'Farrell government introduced legislation to give clubs almost $300 million in tax breaks.
''That is not correct,'' he said. ''Clubs are part of the social fabric of our society.''
Until 6am.
The machines that are draining a city
holy dooley .....
DOOLEYS Lidcombe Catholic Club prides itself on being one of the pillars of the community, a social hub where locals can eat, drink - and feed close to $36 million a year into its poker machines.
The 64-year-old club, which now occupies nearly a whole block in the western Sydney suburb's town centre and two smaller satellite clubs at Regents Park and Silverwater, has 432 gaming machines.
On average, Dooleys's members each contribute about $950 a year to the gaming revenue bottom line.
This year the club is returning $1.4 million from gambling revenue under the compulsory ClubGRANTS Scheme to local organisations including schools, hospitals, welfare groups and charities such as Barnardos, the Leukaemia Foundation and the Exodus Foundation.
From conservative beginnings - in 1947 only Catholic men aged 21 and over were allowed membership - the club now has a diverse membership base, a big chunk of it made up of people from Asian, European and Middle Eastern backgrounds. Dooleys members like a flutter on the machines scattered across its two main gaming areas at Lidcombe, with its muted brown and cream carpeting and exposed wooden beams and roof slats.
Early on Wednesday afternoon there were close to 100 people, many of them aged over 50, quietly churning through the credits on poker machines.
Gamblers with a smoking habit were punting on a terrace, surrounded by shrubbery. There was barely a murmur, or a smile, as the gamblers concentrated on the spinning poker machine wheels in front of them.
When asked what she thought of the federal government's proposed precommitment cards, Jenny, from nearby Berala, said government should keep its nose out of ordinary people's business.
''Most of us don't have any problem with the amount we gamble and we do it for a bit of fun with our mates,'' she said. ''Why should we have to sign up to some sort of licence just to have a bit of fun?''
The Dooleys chief executive, David Mantle, said the club wanted to change its constitution to remove a restriction on political activities so it could lobby against the proposed poker machine reforms.
''The feedback we were getting back from the floor of the clubs was that members want to know what's going on,'' Mr Mantle said.
Dooleys supported initiatives that were proven to reduce problem gambling, but Mr Mantle said mandatory precommitment would threaten the club's financial viability.
''Like all of the clubs, we truly don't believe that mandatory precommitment is a solution. Every club manager I have spoken to says 'for heaven's sake, we don't want problem gamblers in our club. Let's get them out and get them proper support.' We've got members who have been with us for 30, 40 and 50 years ... because we look after them not because we fleece them and throw them out on to the street.''
Hooley Dooleys for holy rollers with 432 machines
good corporate citizenship .....
from Crikey .....
Woolworths v Wesfarmers: good corporate citizens or irresponsible pokies pariahs
Stephen Mayne writes:
BRUCE MATHIESON, POKIES, WESFARMERS, WOOLWORTHS
Pressure is mounting on the blue-blood directors of Woolworths to decide whether they are pillars of the community feeding and clothing Australians, or pariahs who target problem gamblers and bankroll misleading campaigns against elected governments.
The contrast was there for all to see today when The Australian Financial Review's Street Talk column described the retailing giant as follows in an item about hybrid debt rollovers headlined: "Woolies keen on perfect redemption":
It also begs the question why Woolies didn't just leave its 2006 vintage on issue and pay the stepped up interest margin of 3.1 percentage points above the bank bill rate -- about the same rate or lower than the potential cost of fresh hybrid capital. Because Woolworths is a good corporate citizen, that's why.
Fairfax Media chairman Roger Corbett would have been delighted to read such a description of his old employer in our national financial daily, but there are others views circulating.
Victorian Greens Senator Richard Di Natale today responded to the revelation on Friday that Woolies is pumping $250,000 into the anti-pokies campaign with a savage press release that included the following lines:
Woolworths are the largest pokies operator in Australia with more than 12,000 machines. Now they are contributing to a campaign which is intent on fighting reforms to help problem gamblers. No responsible corporate citizen should have anything to do with the poker machine industry's grubby campaign.
When people buy their bread, milk or breakfast cereal from Woolies they should know that they are helping fund a campaign that will see the misery and suffering caused from problem gambling continue.
Woolies should take the same position as their main competitors Wesfarmers, which operates almost 2000 pokies through its Coles hotels division but has refused to fund the anti pokies campaign.
The pokies industry's supposed $40m "war chest" would be more than enough to pay for the implementation of our proposed reform to cap bets at $1 per spin to reduce problem gambling.
In other pokies developments, The Age broke the story today about House Speaker Harry Jenkins making an unusual policy intervention with a strong attack on the pokies. Surely it is only a matter of time before a federal Coalition MP follows suit.
The Age probably should have disclosed that Sam Alessi, the Whittlesea councillor quoted in the story, is a fellow member of the ALP's Socialist Left faction who used to work on the Speaker's staff until the Brumby government made this illegal in 2009.
It is also interesting to note that Whittlesea Council, which takes in Jenkins' seat of Scullin, has just launched a strong attack on Woolworths for its attempted changes to the council's proposed $100 million town centre development at Mernda on Melbourne's northern outskirts.
Several Victorian councils have noticed some increasingly aggressive tactics from Woolworths in recent years, which makes the hard line against pokies reform easier to understand.
But how are councillors to reconcile such tactics with this speech delivered by new Woolies CEO Grant O'Brien in front of 900 local government delegates in Canberra three months ago?
O'Brien's predecessor Michael Luscombe only finally shuffled out the door on September 30, so maybe it is taking his successor a little time to put a different stamp on the business that has the fattest profit margins of any grocery retailer in the world.
Then again, the hard-line position of the Woolies board is probably more a reflection of chairman James Strong, who is also one of the Qantas directors happily going to war with his own workforce at the moment.
Politicians from all three tiers of government and right across the political divide have been lining up to slam Woolies in Manningham for its Supreme Court litigation to prevent a rival supermarket opening on council-owned land in East Doncaster after the Safeway supermarket was converted into a Dan Murphy's grog shop.
This litigation is listed for a three-day slugfest next month and has already cost Manningham ratepayers well over $100,000.
In a totally unrelated development, Manningham councillors have also resolved to debate the introduction of a special rating charge on commercial pokies venues in the 2012-13 financial year.
Woolworths and its billionaire pokies partner Bruce Mathieson control more than 80% of the $60 million-plus a year lost on the pokies in Manningham.
And with a market capitalisation of $30 billion, they can well afford to pay a bit more.
Stephen Mayne is a councillor in the City of Manningham and was not paid for this contribution.