New Brunswick video lottery terminal referendum, 2001

New Brunswick video lottery terminal referendum, 2001

A referendum on video lottery terminals was held on 14 May 2001 (to coincide with municipal elections) in 103 municipalities in New Brunswick. According to the chief electoral officer's report, "229,814 voters" or "44% of eligible provincial voters, cast referendum ballots"[1]

Contents

Background

According to the Canada West Foundation, New Brunswick was the first province to allow video lottery terminals in 1990.[2] The terminals create large profits for the provincial government, with the New Brunswick government alone receiving $53.4 million from the machines between 1999 and 2000.[2] The private businesses that house these machines also make a profit, with 47% ($47 million) of the revenue going to the private sector.[2]

Despite the economic benefit, there is a strong social backlash against the terminals, and gambling in general, especially in Atlantic Canada, according to a 1999 survey by the Canada West Foundation.[2] The survey found that 60% of those surveyed wanted more restrictions on gambling, 56% knew a problem gambler, and 62% agreed that “VLT gambling should be banned in your province”.[2][3]

During the 1999 New Brunswick election, Progressive Conservative leader Bernard Lord promised to hold a referendum on the terminals if elected Premier.[3]

Referendum question

The question was as follows:

Should the Province of New Brunswick continue to permit the legal and regulated operation of video gaming

devices (commonly referred to as video lottery terminals or VLT’s)?

[1]

Results

The vote was, in several regions, close to within dozens of votes. The "Yes" side won by just over 53%:

No: 107 753 (46.89%) Yes: 122 061 (53.11%)

The municipal electoral officer's report showed that, regionally, the areas who largely voted against the VLT's were located in Anglophone sections of the province, or Central and Western New Brunswick (Carleton, York, Victoria, Charlotte, Sunbury and Kings counties) while largely francophone and Acadian areas, such as Moncton, Bouctouche, Bathurst, Miramichi, and Northern New Brunswick (Madawaska and Campbellton) were more in favour of the Terminals.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Hollies, Annise. Report of the Municipal Electoral Officer on the Triennial Municipal Elections and on the Video Lottery Scheme Referendum. Rep. Government of New Brunswick, 2001. Web. 30 July 2010. <http://www.gnb.ca/elections/pdf/2001MunRpt.pdf>.
  2. ^ a b c d e Gambling in Canada Special Report: Video Lottery Terminals in New Brunswick. Rep. Canada West Foundation, 2001. Web. 24 August 2010. <http://www.cwf.ca/V2/files/200103.pdf>.
  3. ^ a b Hyson, Stewart. "New Brunswick’s VLT Gambling Policy: Morality Politics and the Legitimisation of Vice." Proc. of Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Dalhousie University, Halifax. Canadian Political Science Association, 30 May 2003. Web. 24 August 2010. <http://www.cpsa-acsp.ca/paper-2003/hyson.pdf>.

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