State leaders didnโ€™t anticipate its casino industry to grow this rapidly when New Hampshire first allowed private companies to operate full-scale gaming venues a decade ago.

The 13 operating casinos are generating substantial revenue for both the state and nonprofits, but that financial gain has also come with a problem: gambling addiction.

In response, the New Hampshire Council for Responsible Gaming was launched on Friday, aiming to reduce the harms of problem gambling and encourage responsible betting.

โ€œWhen you have gaming and an expansion of gaming at this level, you would invite problems, and the problems are addiction,โ€ said Lou Dโ€™Allesandro, former state senator and board member of the council. โ€œYouโ€™ve got to have something in place to deal with this, and the Council for Responsible Gambling is going to create that.โ€

In recent years, New Hampshireโ€™s gaming landscape has changed dramatically, evolving from small-scale bingo nights into a broader industry that now includes slot machines and a rapidly expanding sports betting market. Wager limits on table games were eliminated last year.

With the expansion, the state’s financial returns have been significant.

Since sports betting launched in New Hampshire in 2019, it has generated more than $153 million in revenue for education, according to the New Hampshire Lottery Commission.
In the most recent fiscal year alone, sports wagering contributed about $39 million to the stateโ€™s coffers, with most of the bets being placed for the Super Bowl and March Madness.

State Sen. Tim Lang, R-Sanbornton, who has worked on multiple gaming bills, said the councilโ€™s launch reflects a growing recognition that the state needs to address the consequences of its rapidly expanding casino industry.

โ€œWe are behind 8 ball on this topic, and weโ€™re trying to play catch-up,โ€ he said.

During last yearโ€™s legislative session, lawmakers made some progress in addressing problem gambling by creating a voluntary statewide self-exclusion program.

Under the new system, anyone who places their name on the exclusion list at one casino is automatically barred from all others in the state.

Prior to that change, residents had to visit each casino individually to request exclusion, with no unified registry in place.

Council board member Jim Rafferty outlined an initiative he hopes to advance through the groupโ€™s work: encouraging primary care physicians to include a question about gambling addiction as part of their standard patient intake process.

โ€œThere are problems. Weโ€™re going to step up to them,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re going to do and be effective in trying to combat gambling addiction problems.โ€

Gopalakrishnan reports on mental health, casinos and solid waste, as well as the towns of Bow, Hopkinton and Dunbarton. She can be reached at sgopalakrishnan@cmonitor.com