Email:
Password:
forgotten password
|
register
Home
Taxi Law Reform
About Us
What licensing practitioners do
Our Committees
Disciplinary Code
Code of Ethics
Licence Conditions Code of Practise
Qualifications
Professional Development
Disclaimer
News
Consultations
Jobs
Regions
London
South East
Home Counties
South West
West Midlands
East Midlands
East
North West
North East
Wales
Northern Ireland Branch
Events
Membership Application
Inland Revenue Information
Online membership
Projects Library
Library
Our Publications
More resources
Links
General
Alcohol & Entertainment
Commercial Organisations
Community Safety
Gambling
Legal
Taxis and Private Hire
Contact
09/09/2010
browse licences
Please Select
Acupuncture
Adult Gaming Centres
Alcohol
Amusements with Prizes
Animal Boarding Establishments
Betting Shops
Betting Tracks
Camping Sites
Casinos
Canal Boats
Caravan Sites
Charities for Disabled Persons and War Charities
Cinemas
Consumer Credit Licences
Common Lodging Houses
Dangerous Wild Animals
Dog Breeding
Door Supervisors
Ear-piercing
Electrolysis
Explosives
Family Entertainment Centres
Filling Materials
Food Premises
Hackney Carriages
House to House Collections
Houses in Multiple Occupation
Late Night Refreshment Premises
Lotteries
Marriage Premises
Milk Distributors, Dairies and Dairymen
Motor Salvage Operators
Nurseries and Child Minders
Performing Animals
Pet Shops
Petroleum
Pleasure Boats
Poisons
Pool Promoters
Private Hire Vehicles
Private Members' Clubs
Regulated entertainment venues
Residential Homes
Riding Establishments
Scrap Metal Dealers
Sex Establishments
Slaughterhouses, Knackers' Yards and Cutting Premises
Sports Grounds
Street Collections
Street Trading
Tattooing
Theatres
Vehicle Registration Plate Suppliers
Zoos
Report proposes new cross-sports betting integrity unit
Published Date: 01/Feb/2010
The proposal is one of the key recommendations in a report from Parry, and a panel of sports betting integrity experts, that was commissioned by Sports Minister Gerry Sutcliffe last June. This was prompted by Sutcliffe’s concern with the number of suspicious betting cases being reported to the Gambling Commission.
The report recommends that the proposed Sports Betting Intelligence Unit must be efficient in its handling of intelligence from sports and betting and have an effective investigation process in place, which where appropriate will lead to disciplinary action under sports’ rules or criminal prosecution.
A Director would be appointed to lead the Sports Betting Intelligence Unit which would be housed within the Gambling Commission, the report also proposed.
The Unit was one of a number of recommendations that the sports betting integrity panel put forward.
Other key proposals include:
The implementation of a comprehensive education programme on sports betting integrity for competitors, run with the help of sports governing bodies and players associations
A new code of conduct on sports betting integrity for all sports governing bodies to adhere to
The setting up of a Sports Betting Group, made up of individuals from the world of sport that will assess sports’ compliance with the code of conduct
Every sport to have a system for capturing intelligence and report regularly to the Sports Betting Intelligence Unit
A review of the definition of ‘cheating’ in the Gambling Act 2005 to see if it needs greater clarity
A review of the Gambling Commission’s investigative powers to ensure they are sufficient to best tackle corruption in sports betting
A review of the 2 year maximum sanction, under the Gambling Act
Rick Parry said:
“The report that I’ve delivered to the Minister today presents a clear way forward in tackling the growing threat of corruption to the integrity of sport. We have to take the toughest possible approach if we want to stamp out cheating – and that’s why it’s so vitally important that the recommendations are taken on board and followed through. This should be a no compromise approach – the panel has identified a number of areas that need work and we now need the full sign up of the Government, the gambling industry, sports governing bodies, the Police and the Gambling Commission to put them into practice.”
Government response to sports betting integrity report (1 February 2010)
Minister for Sport Gerry Sutcliffe said:
“I want to thank Rick Parry and the rest of the panel members for submitting a very focused and interesting report. I will now consider the recommendations that have been put to Government and announce next steps in due course. I am very keen to keep up the momentum on this vitally important work. There is no place in sport for cheating of any kind and we must make sure we’re doing all we can to protect its’ integrity.
“But this issue cannot be tackled by Government alone. The report puts a range of recommendations to sports governing bodies, bookmakers, the Police and importantly the Gambling Commission. I hope all of these bodies will take this report seriously and consider in detail what practical steps they are now going to take. We must all work together towards one common goal – an effective, watertight intelligence-led system that means cheats have nowhere to hide.”
Institute
Members can comment on this story by logging in to the website
Back to top »