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Appeal Court Judges Consider Fundamental Changes to Ontario DFS Rules – Casino.org

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Appeal Court Judges Consider Fundamental Changes to Ontario DFS Rules – Casino.org

Posted on: December 5, 2024, 07:57h. 

Last updated on: December 5, 2024, 07:57h.

A decision that could fundamentally change the free and paid daily fantasy sports and online poker scene in Ontario is now in the hands of five appeal court judges.

Canadian Gaming Association President Paul Burns, left, shown here at the Canadian Gaming Summit last summer. Image/Mark Keast

Decision On Legality Could Take Months

Canadian Gaming Association president and CEO Paul Burns, who was on hand last week for the Ontario Court of Appeal proceedings, over three days, said a decision around allowing Ontario-based gamblers to play peer-to-peer games (free and paid daily fantasy sports and online poker tournaments) against players outside the province, without violating the Criminal Code, could take months.

Gambling sites licensed by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario can only take wagers from people in Ontario. When the Ontario open, regulated market went live in April 2022, operators had the choice of building a separate Ontario-only DFS platforms or shutting them down. Operators like DraftKings and FanDuel, now licensed in Ontario, decided to close daily fantasy contests in the province.

Legal Arguments at Court of Appeal

The CGA, represented in court last week by McCarthy Tetrault’s Adam Goldenberg, also stood with counsels representing the Ontario Attorney General’s office, as well as those representing igaming operators, arguing to allow for Ontario players to connect with those outside the province, with the provincial regulator having control over oversight of international games in coordination with the corresponding jurisdiction regulator.

Lawyers for the Canadian Lottery Coalition (CLC) and the Mohawk Council of Kahnawà:ke (MCK) argued against allowing this. The arguments boiled down to what constitutes international play, and what doesn’t, and the legality or illegality of that, based on the Criminal Code.

Changes Coming for Ontario Market

“Talking about the nuances and intricacies of a section of the Criminal Code, it made for an interesting three days,” Burns said. “We were trying to keep things from the CGA perspective very simple in terms of approach, that what Ontario is proposing is legal, because Ontario will continue to regulate the activities taking place in the province, and that the Ontario customers would never leave the conduct managed regime of iGaming Ontario.”

iGaming Ontario (iGO) works with the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario and the provincial government to regulate the igaming industry, protect consumers in areas like responsible gambling, and provide more digital gaming choices. It was announced just a few weeks back the status of iGO was being changed – it will no longer be a subsidiary of AGCO, and the new iGaming Ontario Act to be proclaimed in 2025 makes iGO an independent agency, further distancing it from the provincial lottery corporation.

Offering Liquidity for Online DFS and Poker

“It was quite interesting, because at the same time you’re talking about the law you’re also trying to educate the justices on how the igaming industry works, so doing two things at the same time, and that was the challenge for the lawyers,” Burns said.

The court will now go away and review evidence and write a decision, which could take up to six months, Burns said, because of a court backlog.

It may be some time before a decision of the Court is available,” added a spokesperson for the appeal court.

Said Burns: “I think that the understanding that players in Ontario will always be governed by the rules of play and the regulatory standards, and they never leave that in (an international) liquidity pool. I think the court understood that, and how it works, so that was important.”

 

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