Assembly requires New York hotline on sports‑betting video ads and tightens safeguards
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Summary
The Assembly passed A.382‑A to extend casino advertising rules to mobile sports wagering, require the New York problem‑gambling hotline be visible in video ads seen by New Yorkers, and give regulators enforcement authority. Sponsors said the change supports prevention and treatment.
The New York State Assembly on March 24 approved a bill extending advertising protections for casinos to mobile sports‑wagering platforms and requiring that video advertisements directed at New York users display the state problem‑gambling hotline number.
Sponsor Clyde Vannell, the bill’s floor sponsor, said the measure “strengthens the consumer protections in mobile sports wagering by applying the same advertising requirements that already govern casinos to mobile sports wagering licenses” and adds requirements such as truthful disclosures, opt‑out mechanisms and recordkeeping. Vannell told colleagues the measure also requires the New York hotline to appear on video ads that reach New Yorkers to ensure callers are connected to state services.
Assemblymember Walsh asked whether the New York number must be displayed on national or regional spots and whether platforms would need unique New York‑specific creative. Vannell responded: “If you’re gonna advertise to New Yorkers, if your platform reaches New Yorkers … that number has to be the New York phone number.” He added that ads are preapproved by the New York State Gaming Commission and enforcement would be the commission’s responsibility.
Members debated practical concerns for national advertising buys during major sporting events and whether listing multiple state or national numbers could comply; sponsors said the bill requires the New York number be present but does not prohibit listing other numbers. The sponsor said the statute takes effect 90 days after enactment and the Gaming Commission will use its regulatory authority to enforce compliance.
The Assembly recorded Ayes 141, Nays 0. Supporters framed the bill as a public‑health step to link New Yorkers to locally available treatment and tracking, while some members urged regulators and industry to work through implementation details for national advertising campaigns.
What happens next: the bill will be transmitted for enactment and the Gaming Commission will draft implementing rules and advertising review processes.
