Commissioner Wendy night told the committee that enforcement and problem-gambling programs remain priorities as the state expands lottery and sports-wagering services.
"We had 1,244 compliance checks for the youth access prevention initiative, and we had 2,360 regulatory inspections," she said, adding the combined enforcement effort resulted in 399 administrative violations and 10 criminal arrests in the period reported. The commissioner described that performance as consistent with a department strategy that emphasizes education and compliance: "We're about 91% compliant."
On problem gambling, the commissioner said the department submitted a responsible-gaming report and funds prevention and treatment resources jointly from Vermont Lottery and sports-wagering revenues. She said the department has built a relationship with the Department of Mental Health and that operators provide in-app signposting to a helpline and referral URL maintained by DMH.
The commissioner told members the helpline saw 158 engagements in the reporting period but that 57 were prank calls or hangups; the department also offers a live chat and free training for providers in the winter, and operators can flag customer behavior for referral to DMH resources.
Committee members asked whether the department collects demographic and age data for people who may have gambling problems but do not call the helpline; the commissioner said operators provide participation demographics and the department receives data from operators to support oversight and intervention work.
No formal committee action on enforcement or responsible-gaming proposals was taken at the meeting; the department said it will provide additional oversight data as requested by members.