Facts About Gambling
Facts About Gambling
Gambling Facts:
(from United Methodist publications and Citizens for Community Values)
• If gambling is within 50 miles, the chances of people in your community becoming addicted to
increases by 50% (75% if your community is poor).
• 60%of casino revenues come from gamblers making less than $25,000 per year.
• Bankruptcy rates are 100% higher in counties in casinos than in counties without.
• Dramatically increased rates of divorce are associated with gambling.
• Significant child neglect has been reported, with 10-17% of children of compulsive gamblers being
abused.
• An estimated 40% of white-collar crime has its roots in gambling.
• In counties with neighboring casinos, 8.6% of property crime and 12.6% of violent crime are caused
by casinos. In counties with casinos, the rates are much higher.
• Suicides in cities with casinos are 4 times higher than in comparable cities without gambling.
• For every one tax dollar generated the cost to the state is 3 dollars.
• A study in Aurora, IL found that after the arrival of riverboat gambling, 97% of businesses
experienced a decline that resulted in loss of jobs.
• In Atlantic City, 25% of small businesses closed 3 years after casinos opened.
• Prior to casinos, Atlantic City had an unemployment rate 30% higher than the rest of the state. 10
years later it is 50% higher than the rest of the state.
• Approximately 3% of those who visit casinos will develop addictions at the problem or pathological
level. 30-50% of casinos revenues come from such addicts.
• New traditional businesses are reluctant to invest in communities with casinos and other gambling
enterprises because of the ensuing bad debts, delinquent time payments and bankruptcies.
• Ohio’s own experience with lotteries has proven that the promises of the gambling industry are most
often empty promises.
• In Deadwood, SD, after two years of casino gambling, child abuse cases increased 42 percent, while
domestic violence and assaults increased by 80 percent.
• In Indiana, 72 children were found abandoned on casino properties during a 14 month period.
The casino owners do not care about our state or our citizens.
The proponents of Issue 3, just like their predecessors, allege they want to operate casinos in order to help
the citizens of Ohio. Nothing could be further from the truth. Their well crafted promises of economic
development, jobs and millions in revenue are motivated by greed, not by good will. In reality, they are
seeking extravagant profits for themselves and are fear-mongers, not benefactors.
It is bad public policy to allow for-profit casino interests to write their own section of the Ohio Constitution.
Yet, this is precisely what they have done. They wrote the language in the proposed amendment and they
paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to gather signatures to place their self-serving proposal on this
November’s ballot. Their language not only grants them an exclusive monopoly on casino gambling for all
time, it also dramatically limits the ability of the Ohio General Assembly to regulate their activities. The
amendment specifically prohibits our state government from controlling the days or hours of operation, the
size of the bets or even the types of gambling that will be allowed.