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Provinces Can Allow Single-Event Sports Betting

Full Title: An Act to amend the Criminal Code (sports betting)

Summary#

This bill changes the Criminal Code to let provinces and territories allow single-event sports betting. It removes the federal ban on betting on a single game, race, or fight within a provincial “lottery scheme.” Provinces decide who can offer it and under what rules. The Act took effect on August 27, 2021, by Order in Council.

  • Repeals the Criminal Code clause that barred single‑event sports betting in provincial lottery schemes (Bill s. 1 amending Criminal Code s. 207(4)(b)).
  • Provinces and territories may run or license single‑event sports betting; rules differ by province (Bill s. 1).
  • Betting on horse racing remains under the federal pari‑mutuel system; provinces cannot license single‑event horse race betting (Justice Canada backgrounder, 2021).
  • No federal program or spending is created; it is a legal change (Bill text).
  • Came into force on August 27, 2021 (Order in Council).

What it means for you#

  • Households and bettors:

    • You may place single bets (one game or event) through your province’s legal channels if offered. Age limits, locations, and bet types depend on your province’s rules (Bill s. 1; provincial discretion).
    • Parlay products (multiple picks) remain available where offered; this bill adds the option for single‑event wagers (Bill s. 1).
    • Horse race betting remains through the federal pari‑mutuel system, not through new single‑event sportsbooks (Justice Canada backgrounder, 2021).
  • Workers:

    • More jobs may arise in sportsbook operations, casinos, call centres, compliance, and technology, but the scale depends on each province’s market design (Data unavailable).
    • Responsible gambling and integrity monitoring roles may expand (Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Businesses (casinos, online operators, media, data firms):

    • You may offer single‑event sports betting only if authorized and licensed by a province or territory. Compliance, reporting, advertising, and integrity standards apply and vary by province (Bill s. 1; provincial discretion).
    • Marketing must follow provincial rules. Some provinces permit private operators; others use only a lottery corporation channel (Data unavailable at federal level).
  • Sports leagues and teams:

    • Regulated sportsbooks enable formal data‑sharing and integrity monitoring where provinces require it. Leagues may enter official data or sponsorship deals under provincial rules (Committee testimony, 2021).
    • Match‑fixing remains a Criminal Code offence; regulated markets can support reporting and detection (Criminal Code; Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Provinces and territories:

    • You gain authority to conduct and manage single‑event sports betting or to license others to do so. You set consumer protection rules, tax/fee rates, and enforcement priorities (Bill s. 1).
    • You must keep horse racing under the federal pari‑mutuel framework (Justice Canada backgrounder, 2021).
  • Local governments:

    • No direct new powers in this bill. Land‑based sportsbook venues must still meet local zoning, business licensing, and public health rules (Bill text; existing law).

Expenses#

Estimated net federal cost: CAD $0 ongoing; provincial fiscal impact depends on implementation choices.

  • No federal appropriation, transfer, or new federal program is created in the bill (Bill text).
  • Federal administration: Minimal; the change is decriminalization, not a new federal scheme (Bill text).
  • Provincial revenues and costs: Provinces may collect licensing fees and taxes and will bear regulatory and enforcement costs. Amounts vary by province and market design. Data unavailable at the federal level (Data unavailable).
  • Problem gambling funding: The bill does not earmark funds; any increases depend on provincial decisions (Bill text; Data unavailable).

Proponents' View#

  • Moves betting from illegal or unregulated channels to regulated provincial markets, improving consumer protections and age controls (Justice Canada backgrounder, 2021).
  • Creates a new legal product that provinces can tax or fee, supporting own‑source revenues for health, education, or responsible gambling programs (Bill s. 1; provincial discretion).
  • Regulated operators can report suspicious wagering, helping deter and detect match‑fixing compared with an underground market (Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Aligns Canada with many U.S. states that allow single‑event betting, reducing cross‑border leakage of bets and revenue (Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Maintains federal control of horse race betting via the existing pari‑mutuel system, addressing industry concerns (Justice Canada backgrounder, 2021).

Opponents' View#

  • Greater access to single‑event betting may increase gambling harms without dedicated funding in the bill for prevention and treatment (Bill silent; Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Sports integrity risks may rise if provincial standards differ; critics seek national baselines for data sharing, officiating education, and reporting (Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Enforcement against illegal offshore sites remains challenging; the bill does not add new tools, so unlicensed operators may continue to attract bettors (Bill limited to decriminalization).
  • Regulatory capacity and costs could strain smaller provinces; uneven rules may confuse consumers and businesses (Committee testimony, 2021).
  • Some First Nations and community gaming operators raised concerns about consultation and revenue sharing, warning of potential harms to existing gaming revenues (Committee testimony, 2021).

Timeline

Feb 25, 2020 • House

First reading

Feb 27, 2020 • House

Second reading

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