Venue: Conference Room 3 and 4 - Civic Centre. View directions
Contact: Mark Pirnie
Emily Goodwin
Link: Link to meeting
Items
No. |
Item |
10. |
Apologies and Changes in Membership (if any)
To note any changes
in membership of the Panel made in accordance with Council
Procedure Rule 4.3.
Minutes:
The apologies of Councillor
Powell-Vaughan were noted.
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11. |
Minutes of the Previous Meeting (including matters arising) PDF 372 KB
To approve and sign as a correct record the
minutes of the meeting held on 16 January 2025 and to deal with any
matters arising, attached.
Minutes:
The Panel noted that the
apologies of Councillor Webb should have been recorded in the
minutes
RESOLVED: that the minutes for
the Panel meeting on 16 January 2025:
i)
be amended to include the apologies of Councillor Web
ii)
and be approved and signed as a correct
record.
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12. |
Secondary Prevention PDF 699 KB
Report of the Scrutiny Manager informing the
Panel that, in accordance with the Inquiry Plan, at the fourth
meeting of the inquiry the Panel will be considering the importance
of early identification of those who have recently started to
engage in at-risk gambling behaviour to prevent escalation of (and
ideally reduce) any early-stage gambling-related harms.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Panel considered the report of the
Scrutiny Manager informing the Panel that, in accordance with the
Inquiry Plan, at the fourth meeting of the inquiry the Panel will
be considering the importance of early identification of those who
have recently started to engage in at-risk gambling behaviour to
prevent escalation of (and ideally reduce) any early-stage
gambling-related harms.
Secondary prevention - Early identification of
those who have recently started to engage in at-risk gambling
behaviour to prevent escalation of (and ideally reduce) any
early-stage gambling-related harms.
Summary of
information provided:
1) Harmful Gambling
and Tenancy Insecurity for Birmingham City Council Tenants
– Dr Halima Sacranie, Director of Housing Research at the
Centre for the New Midlands & Professor Andy Lymer, Director of
the Centre for Personal Financial Wellbeing at Aston
University
- A presentation was
delivered by Dr Sacranie and Prof Lymer, outlining the key findings
from a project with Birmingham City Council to
understand the links between gambling harm and tenancy insecurity
and the development of an intervention
framework.
Key points raised in the
presentation included:
- A 2-year Centre for Personal
Financial Wellbeing (CPFW), Aston University, project with
Birmingham City Council (BCC).
- Aim - Understand the links between
gambling harm and tenancy insecurity and help develop intervention
strategies to prevent tenancy loss as a result.
- Project cost £300k - Funded by
the Regulatory Settlement Funds of the UK’s Gambling
Commission (cost for other LAs to replicate this approach would be
significantly lower).
- Harmful Gambling and Tenancy
Security online survey sent to 57,333 BCC council tenants. 1,058
responses (226 said they were impacted by harmful gambling, 249
said they gambled personally, and 111 were identified though the
questions as those who could be classed as problem gamblers) (2/3
respondents were female).
- Screening question: “Has
your gambling or the gambling of someone
close to you had a negative impact on your life?”
- Survey findings - 1 in 5 of tenant
respondents affected by harmful gambling; 8 in 10 problem gamblers
have borrowed money in the past 2 years to pay for their expenses,
compared to 5 in 10 among the other gamblers; Over 50% of problem
gamblers who tried to control or stop gambling did not receive any
support. For those who received support, none received support from
BCC; The main reasons that prevent problem gamblers or affected
others from seeking support are ‘embarrassment’ and
‘shame’; Over 60% of problem gamblers mentioned
physical or mental health issues caused by their gambling
behaviours, compared to less than 6% among the other gamblers.
- Qualitative interview findings highlighted
issues like the concentration of bookmakers in deprived
neighbourhoods, the ease of gambling online and the exposure to TV
and social media gambling advertising as well as heightened
cultural stigma for women of different nationality
backgrounds.
- Harmful Gambling leading to tenancy
precarity - 4 in 10 problem gamblers currently in rent
arrears, compared to 2 in 10 of the other gamblers (harmful
gambling cited as main reason for rent arrears); 30% of problem
gamblers say gambling ...
view the full minutes text for item 12.
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