Baguio signature campaign vs gambling reaches 20,000
>> Monday, June 29, 2015
Officials in quandary
whether to allow e-Bingo operations
By Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO
CITY – The city council is studying its next move on e-Bingo operations in the
city even as oppositionists garnered 20,000 signatures to stop all forms of
gambling.”
The
body on Monday tasked its committee on laws under Councilor Richard Carino to
study and recommend succeeding actions in the light of the revelation by
Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. representatives that there is a way to
revoke gaming license and that is to cancel the business permits issued by the
local government.
The
move is protracted to center on the information that another kind of online
betting game called e-Games has been allowed to operate in an area within the
border of the city and Tuba town.
The
said e-Games is cause for concern in the city because it is known to
offer casino-style online gambling.
Casino
has been banned in the city by virtue of city council resolutions prodded by
massive church-led campaigns.
PAGCOR
representatives Gaming Licensing and Development Department remote gaming unit
senior manager Nelia Lorenzo and Corporate and Legal Services Department senior
legal counsel Arnie Salvosa said that cancellation of the business permit
granted an entity by the local government is one of PAGCOR’s bases in annulling
the gaming license.
They
said this is because based on PAGCOR charter, business permit is proof of
the local government’s consent to the e-Bingo operation. It was only in
June 2012 that PAGCOR required a letter of no objection (LONO) from the local
governments before allowing bingo joints to operate in a locality.
The
e-Bingo joints in SM Baguio and Baguio Center Mall were granted licenses on
November 2010 or before June 2012 and thus were given the go signal on the
basis of only the business permits granted by the local government. The
outlets started operating in September 2011 and in December 2010, respectively.
The
e-Bingo outlet at the Centerpoint Plaza in Bakakeng Central started operating
last year based on an alleged resolution of consent by the city council, the
authenticity of which was later questioned.
Last
May, the body formally allowed its operations.
PAGCOR
representatives said the licenses are renewed every two years without requirement
for a new LONO.
SM
joint’s license will expire on in January 2017, Center Mall in March 2016 and
Centerpoint in May 2017.
When
informed of the signature campaign against the e-bingo outlets as presented by
Councilor Betty Lourdes Tabanda, Salvosa stopped short of saying that the
signatures numbering 20,000 are immaterial because their sole basis is the go
signal of the city officials.
Salvosa
said as per their procedure in revoking licenses, the request of the local
government is referred to the legal department for study and recommendation to
the board of directors.
The
board will decide and the operator will be asked to comment.
Two
more applications for e-bingo outlets in Maharlika Livelihood Center and the
Albergo Hotel are currently in the works and both will require LONOs.
Meanwhile,
the body asked PAGCOR representatives to verify the location where the approved
e-Games outlet will operate in Tuba in the light of the unresolved boundary
issue between the city and Tuba.
The
named location is included in the unresolved portion, according to Vice Mayor
Edison Bilog.
The
city’s anti-casino measures include Resolution No. 236 series of 1991 entitled
“A Resolution opposing the return of casino to Baguio or the establishment of a
new one under any other form or guise,” Resolution No. 122-02 entitled
“Expressing the Sentiment of the People of Baguio and the Policy of the City
Government against Gambling…” and Resolution No. 446 series of 2008 “Vigorously
opposing the establishment of a casino or the conduct of a gambling activities
at Camp John Hay and anywhere in the city.”
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