{"id":"sr:gambling-regulations-2015","name":"Gambling Regulations 2015","slug":"gambling-regulations-2015","collection":"regulation","jurisdiction":"vic","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":183267,"registerId":"vic-sr:gambling-regulations-2015-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"Part 1—Preliminary\n\n","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Objectives","content":"\t1 Objectives\n\nThe objectives of these Regulations are—\n\n(a) to provide for matters relating to—\n\n(i) gaming machines; and\n\n(ii) wagering and betting; and\n\n(iii) trade promotion lotteries; and\n\n(iv) community and charitable gaming; and\n\n(b) to prescribe fees relating to gaming; and\n\n(c) to prescribe certain offences to be infringement offences; and\n\n(d) to prescribe infringement penalties in respect of those infringement offences; and\n\n(e) to provide for other matters that are authorised or required to be prescribed by the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003**.\n\n","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Authorising provision","content":"\t2 Authorising provision\n\nThese Regulations are made under section 11.2.1 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003**.\n\n","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"\t3 Commencement\n\n(1) These Regulations, except Part 10, come into operation on 20 June 2015.\n\n(2) Part 10 comes into operation on 1 July 2015.\n\n","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Revocations","content":"\t4 Revocations\n\nThe Regulations listed in Schedule 1 are **revoked**.\n\n","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"\t5 Definitions\n\n(1) In these Regulations—\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *accumulated credits* inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 4.\n\n***accumulated credits*** has the same meaning as in section 3.5.33 of the Act;\n\n***appropriate controlling body*** means—\n\n(a) in the case of horse racing, Racing Victoria; and\n\n(b) in the case of harness racing, Harness Racing Victoria; and\n\n(c) in the case of greyhound racing, Greyhound Racing Victoria;\n\n***betting office*** means any place at which the wagering and betting licensee or operator or an agent of the wagering and betting licensee or operator accepts bets;\n\n***book-buyer's prize*** means a prize for which a person is eligible by reason of having purchased a particular book of tickets;\n\n***cashier area*** means an area in an approved venue or casino where a person may collect or redeem gaming tokens from a cashier;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *cashless gaming terminal* inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 4.\n\n***cashless gaming terminal*** means a device (other than a gaming machine) that a person can use to—\n\n(a) increase the value of a non-cash gaming token; or\n\n(b) redeem any of the value of a non-cash gaming token; or\n\n(c) obtain a non-cash gaming token;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *Department* inserted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(a).\n\n***Department*** means the Department of Justice and Community Safety;\n\n***electronic game information*** means the following information in relation to a game that may be played on a gaming machine—\n\n(a) the return to players of that game;\n\n(b) the average number of individual games played for each win, based on one line being played per game, which may be described as \"theoretical number of individual games played per win\";\n\n(c) the odds of achieving the 5 most valuable individual winning combinations;\n\n(d) the odds of achieving the 5 least valuable individual winning combinations;\n\n(e) the maximum and minimum bet options available;\n\n(f) if the gaming machine is part of a linked jackpot arrangement—\n\n(i) a statement that the gaming machine is part of a linked jackpot arrangement; and\n\n(ii) the sum of the return to players contributed by the game and the return to players contributed to the linked jackpot arrangement, which may be described as \"total return\"; and\n\n(iii) the return to players of the game contributed by the linked jackpot arrangement;\n\n***electronic player information*** means the following information in relation to a continuous period of gaming on a gaming machine by an individual player—\n\n(a) the amount of money the player has put into the gaming machine during the period, which may be described as \"cash in\";\n\n(b) the amount of money wagered by the player on the gaming machine during the period, which may be described as \"credits played\";\n\n(c) the amount of money won by the player on the gaming machine during the period, which may be described as \"credits won\";\n\n(d) the difference between the credits won and the credits played during the period, which may be described as \"session win or loss\";\n\n(e) the amount of money paid out by the machine during the period which may be described as \"cash out\";\n\n(f) the amount of money that is currently available for the player to wager on the machine, which may be described as \"credits available\";\n\n(g) the time at which the period started;\n\n(h) the current time of day;\n\n(i) the length of the period;\n\n(j) if amounts won in a jackpot are not included on the credit meter of the gaming machine, a statement that the information displayed does not include amounts won in a jackpot during the period;\n\n***event*** includes contingency;\n\n***family member*** of an individual means—\n\n(a) the individual's spouse or domestic partner; or\n\n(b) a parent, grandparent, brother or sister of the individual; or\n\n(c) a child (including an adopted child, step-child or ex-nuptial child) or a grandchild of the individual; or\n\n(d) the spouse or domestic partner of an individual referred to in paragraph (b) or (c);\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *first training module* inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 7, amended by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(b).\n\n***first training module*** means the training course that—\n\n(a) is provided by or on behalf of the Department; and\n\n(b) is provided, and is to be completed, by use of an Internet site; and\n\n(c) covers the content specified under regulation 124(1)(a);\n\n***first prize***, in respect of a raffle having more than one prize, means the most valuable prize offered in the raffle;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *fourth training module* inserted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(a).\n\n***fourth training module*** means the training course that—\n\n(a) is provided in person by—\n\n(i) a person employed or engaged as a venue support worker by an entity specified under regulation 125(1); or\n\n(ii) a person employed by the Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation established under section 4 of the **Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation Act 2011**; and\n\n(b) covers the content specified under regulation 124(1)(d);\n\n***gaming equipment software*** means the software used in relation to gaming equipment and includes game software;\n\n***incorporated association*** has the same meaning as in the **Associations Incorporation Reform Act 2012**;\n\n***linked jackpot arrangement*** has the same meaning as in the **Casino Control Act 1991**;\n\n***logic area*** means the area of a gaming machine—\n\n(a) described as a logic area by section 2.3.36 of the Australian/  \nNew Zealand Gaming Machine National Standard made by the Commission under section 3.5.3(1) of the Act and amended under that section from time to time; and\n\n(b) containing the electronic components and items set out in section 2.3.37 of that Standard;\n\n***lucky envelope permit*** means  a minor gaming permit that authorises the holder to sell lucky envelopes as specified in the permit;\n\n***majority interest*** means a relevant interest in a corporation of more than 50%;\n\n***majority shareholder*** means—\n\n(a) in the case of a private company in which the voting shares are not divided into classes—a person entitled to more than 50% of those shares; and\n\n(b) in the case of a private company in which the voting shares are divided into classes—a person entitled to more than 50% of the shares in one of those classes;\n\n***minor gaming permit*** means a permit issued under Division 2 of Part 3 of Chapter 8 of the Act;\n\n***notional value***, in respect of a series of lucky envelopes, means the lucky envelope price multiplied by the number of lucky envelopes in the series;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *old refresher course* inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 7, revoked by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(c).\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *old training course* inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 7, revoked by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(c).\n\n***player information brochure*** means a brochure, booklet, pamphlet or leaflet that—\n\n(a) is in the form specified for brochures in the player information standards; and\n\n(b) contains, in English, the information specified for brochures in the player information standards;\n\n***player information poster*** means a poster that—\n\n(a) is in the form specified for posters in the player information standards; and\n\n(b) contains, in English, the information specified for posters in the player information standards;\n\n***player information standards*** means the standards made by the Minister under regulation 11(1);\n\n***player information talker*** means a sign that—\n\n(a) is designed to be affixed to a gaming machine; and\n\n(b) is in the form specified for talkers in the player information standards; and\n\n(c) contains, in English, the information specified for talkers in the player information standards;\n\n***private company*** means a company that is not limited by shares, or whose shares are not quoted on the Australian Stock Exchange or any exchange of the World Federation of Exchanges;\n\n***punchboard*** means a device which contains a series of lucky envelopes and is designed so that the lucky envelopes are dispensed by being punched out of the device;\n\n***raffle permit*** means  a minor gaming permit that authorises the holder to conduct a raffle as specified in the permit;\n\n***Registrar*** means the Registrar of Incorporated Associations under the **Associations Incorporation Reform Act 2012**;\n\n***relevant interest*** means an interest in a corporation with an entitlement to a distribution of the corporation's property on its winding up;\n\n***responsible person*** means—\n\n(a) in the case of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act, the natural person nominated by a community or charitable organisation under section 8.4.2A(2)(c) of the Act; and\n\n(b) in any other case, the nominee within the meaning of section 8.1.2 of the Act;\n\n***rolling jackpot sequence*** means the sessions of bingo games in respect of which a rolling jackpot operates;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *RSG certificate* inserted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(a).\n\n***RSG certificate***,  in relation to a training module, means a certificate of completion issued to a person on successful completion of that module;\n\n***scratch and win card*** means a ticket in a trade promotion lottery in which the tickets that entitle the holders to claim a prize have been determined and announced before the commencement of the trade promotion lottery;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *second training module* inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 7.\n\n***second training module*** means the training course that—\n\n(a) is provided in person by—\n\n(i) a person employed or engaged as a venue support worker by an entity specified under regulation 125(1); or\n\n(ii) a person employed by the Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation established under section 4 of the **Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation Act 2011**; and\n\n(b) covers the content specified under regulation 124(1)(b);\n\n***selection*** means a person, team, animal, object, event or contingency or a combination of 2 or more of those things nominated by the wagering and betting licensee or operator on which the wagering and betting licensee or operator is willing to accept a bet;\n\n***series***, in relation to lucky envelopes, means all the lucky envelopes in a particular lottery;\n\n***sign*** means either a single sided sign or a double sided sign;\n\n***small raffle*** means a raffle—\n\n(a) for which the value of the prizes—\n\n(i) in that raffle does not exceed $500; and\n\n(ii) in that and every other raffle conducted for the benefit of the same community or charitable organisation on the same day or within an 8 hour period together does not exceed $1000; and\n\n(b) for which the sale of the first ticket and the drawing of the raffle occur on the same day or within an 8 hour period;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *statement period* revoked by S.R. No. 121/2023 reg. 16.\n\n***street frontage*** means any side of an approved venue that abuts or is aligned to a road or road related area within the meaning of the **Road Safety Act 1986**;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *the Act* amended by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(d).\n\n***the Act*** means the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003**;\n\nReg. 5(1) def. of *third training module* inserted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 5(a).\n\n***third training module*** means the training course that—\n\n(a) is provided by or on behalf of the Department; and\n\n(b) is provided, and is to be completed, by use of an Internet site; and\n\n(c) covers the content specified under regulation 124(1)(c).\n\n(2) In these Regulations, a reference to the value of a prize (other than a monetary component of a prize) in a trade promotion lottery or a raffle or in respect of a lucky envelope is a reference to the price at which a person might reasonably expect to purchase that prize in the absence of a discount or special incentive.\n\n(3) For the purposes of the definition of ***family member*** in subregulation (1), an individual referred to in paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d) of that definition does not cease to be a family member merely because of the individual's death.\n\n","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Authorised gambling","content":"Part 2—Authorised gambling\n\n","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Standards and conditions—Games at amusement centres, fetes, carnivals etc.","content":"\t6 Standards and conditions—Games at amusement centres, fetes, carnivals etc.\n\nReg. 6(1) amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 121.\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 2.2.3(3)(b) of the Act, the prescribed standards and conditions are the following—\n\n(a) in the case of a device or game, the device or game is not—\n\n(i) a game approved under section 60 of the **Casino Control Act 1991**; or\n\n(ii) a gaming machine within the meaning of the Act;\n\n(b) in the case of a device or game, the device or game is such that the prize or prizes available to be won at a particular attempt are clearly and unambiguously identified to participants;\n\n(c) in the case of a device or game that is a spinning wheel—\n\n(i) the wheel is divided into approximately equal divisions; and\n\n(ii) the design of the wheel allows an approximately equal and random chance of the wheel finishing in or on a particular division; and\n\n(iii) the wheel is maintained in such a way that it operates as designed; and\n\n(iv) the number of tickets sold in each spin is equal to the number of divisions of the wheel;\n\n(d) in the case of a device or game that is not a spinning wheel—\n\n(i) there is no systemic bias to a particular outcome in the rules or design; and\n\n(ii) a prize winning outcome is achievable; and\n\n(iii) reasonable steps are taken to explain to participants, in language likely to be understood by them, the way in which the game is played or the device operates (including the extent to which skill is relevant); and\n\n(iv) the game is played in the manner explained and the device (or any device forming part of the game) is maintained in such a way that it operates as designed.\n\nPart 3—Gaming machines\n\nDivision 1—Preliminary\n\n\t7 References to venue operator\n\nIn this Part, ***venue operator*** does not include the casino operator.\n\n","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"Div 2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Lighting and external views","content":"Division 2—Lighting and external views\n\n","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Lighting requirements","content":"\t8 Lighting requirements\n\n(1) At any time when a gaming machine is available for gaming in an approved venue, the venue operator must ensure that lighting in the gaming machine area containing the gaming machine complies with this regulation.\n\n(2) At any time when a gaming machine is available for gaming in a casino, the casino operator must ensure that lighting in the casino complies with this regulation.\n\n(3) Lighting in an area complies with this regulation if—\n\n(a) the horizontal illuminance at each point that is 0·3 metres in front of the base of each gaming machine in the area and 1·5 metres above the floor is 50 lux or greater; and\n\n(b) the average vertical illuminance in front of each gaming machine in the area is 30 lux or greater; and\n\n(c) in the non-gaming parts of that area—\n\n(i) the average horizontal illuminance 1·5 metres above the floor is 40 lux or greater; and\n\n(ii) there is no point where the horizontal illuminance 1·5 metres above the floor is below 20 lux.\n\n(4) For the purposes of this regulation, illuminance is to be measured without any person other than the person making the measurement being within 5 metres of the measuring instrument.\n\n(5) In this regulation, a reference to the average vertical illuminance in front of a gaming machine is the average of the vertical illuminance measured at each of the following points—\n\n(a) the point that is 1·5 metres above the floor and 0·3 metres in front of the left edge of the video screen of the gaming machine; and\n\n(b) the point that is 1·5 metres above the floor and 0·3 metres in front of the centre of the video screen of the gaming machine; and\n\n(c) the point that is 1·5 metres above the floor and 0·3 metres in front of the right edge of the video screen of the gaming machine.\n\n(6) In this regulation, a reference to the average horizontal illuminance in an area is a reference to the average of the horizontal illuminances measured at the centre of each square in a grid of points that are—\n\n(a) 0·5 metres apart within a 2·0 metre radius of any gaming machine in the area; and\n\n(b) 2·0 metres apart within any other part of the area.\n\n(7) For the purpose of subregulation (3)(c)—\n\n(a) the non-gaming parts of the gaming machine area of an approved venue are the parts of that gaming machine area that are not within 2·0 metres of a gaming machine; and\n\n(b) the non-gaming parts of the casino are the areas designated by the Commission under regulation 9(1).\n\n","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Casino must designate non-gaming parts of casino","content":"\t9 Casino must designate non-gaming parts of casino\n\n(1) For the purposes of regulation 8, the Commission must designate parts of the casino that contain seating provided for the comfort and convenience of players of gaming machines.\n\n(2) The Commission must notify the casino operator of each designation under subregulation (1).\n\n","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Windows in approved venues and casinos","content":"\t10 Windows in approved venues and casinos\n\n(1) This provision applies to a window that provides a view—\n\n(a) from a gaming machine area in an approved venue to an area or space outside the approved venue; or\n\n(b) from a position in front of a gaming machine in a casino to an area or space outside the casino.\n\n(2) A venue operator or casino operator must not remove the whole or any part of a window to which this regulation applies except for the following purposes—\n\n(a) replacing the window with a window of equal or greater size;\n\n(b) repairing the window.\n\n(3) A venue operator or casino operator who removes the whole or any part of a window to which this regulation applies for the purpose of replacing the window with another window of equal or greater size must complete that replacement within 10 business days.\n\n(4) A venue operator or casino operator who removes the whole or any part of a window to which this regulation applies for the purpose of repairing the window must complete that repair within 10 business days.\n\n(5) A venue operator or casino operator must not obscure a window to which this regulation applies except by installing blinds.\n\n(6) For the purposes of subregulation (5), a window is not taken to be obscured only because it is treated for the purpose of temperature control or the reduction of glare from direct sunlight (including by tinting or shading the window).\n\n","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"Div 3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Player information standards and printed information","content":"Division 3—Player information standards and printed information\n\n","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Minister may make player information standards","content":"\t11 Minister may make player information standards\n\n(1) The Minister may make standards setting out—\n\n(a) the information that is to be contained in, and the required form of—\n\n(i) the posters, talkers and brochures referred to in Division 3; and\n\n(ii) responsible gambling signs referred to in regulation 35; and\n\nReg. 11(1)(a)(iii) inserted by S.R. No.  \n139/2015 reg. 18.\n\n(iii) brochures relating to the  \npre-commitment system; and\n\n(b) the information that is to be contained in the written statement referred to in regulation 21.\n\n(2) On making the player information standards, the Minister must give the standards to the Commission.\n\n(3) On receiving the player information standards from the Minister, the Commission must publish the standards on the Commission's website.\n\n(4) Player information standards have effect on being published on the Commission's website.\n\n","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Posters","content":"\t12 Posters\n\n(1) At all times when gaming machines are available for gaming in an approved venue, the venue operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that player information posters are displayed in accordance with subregulations (5) and (6) in the gaming machine area of the approved venue.\n\n(2) Without limiting subregulation (1), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 16 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (1).\n\nReg. 12(3) amended by S.R. No. 121/2023 reg. 17.\n\n(3) At all times when gaming machines are available for gaming in a casino, the casino operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that player information posters are displayed in accordance with subregulation (6) in the gaming machine area of the casino.\n\n(4) Without limiting subregulation (3), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 15 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (3).\n\n(5) Player information posters must be displayed as follows—\n\n(a) if there are 15 or fewer gaming machines available for gaming, at least one poster must be displayed;\n\n(b) if there are more than 15 gaming machines available for gaming—\n\n(i) at least one poster must be displayed for every 15 gaming machines; and\n\n(ii) one additional poster must be displayed for any additional gaming machines less than 15 in number.\n\n(6) Player information posters must be displayed in such a manner that the information contained in them is clearly visible to a person sitting or standing in front of a gaming machine in the area.\n\n(7) Nothing in this regulation prevents the display of posters containing information in languages other than English.\n\n","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Talkers","content":"\t13 Talkers\n\n(1) At all times when a gaming machine is available for gaming in an approved venue, the venue operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that a player information talker is displayed on the gaming machine so that it is clearly visible from the front of the machine.\n\n(2) Without limiting subregulation (1), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 16 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (1).\n\n(3) At all times when a gaming machine is available for gaming in a casino, the casino operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that a player information talker is displayed on the gaming machine so that it is clearly visible from the front of the machine.\n\n(4) Without limiting subregulation (3), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 15 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (3).\n\n(5) If the player information standards set out  \n2 or more player information talkers that differ from each other in form or information or both, the different player information talkers must, as far as practicable, be distributed so that—\n\n(a) there is an even number of talkers of each type; and\n\n(b) the different types of talkers are located evenly throughout the approved venue or casino.\n\n(6) Nothing in this regulation prevents the display of talkers containing information in languages other than English.\n\n","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Brochures","content":"\t14 Brochures\n\n(1) At all times when gaming machines are available for gaming in an approved venue, the venue operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that—\n\n(a) player information brochures are available at each cashier area in the approved venue; and\n\n(b) the total number of player information brochures available is at least equal to the number of gaming machines in the approved venue.\n\n(2) Without limiting subregulation (1), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 16 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (1).\n\n(3) At all times when a gaming machine is available for gaming in a casino, the casino operator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that—\n\n(a) player information brochures are available at each cashier area in the gaming machine area of the casino; and\n\n(b) the total number of player information brochures available in the casino is at least equal to the number of gaming machines in the gaming area of the casino.\n\n(4) Without limiting subregulation (3), the making of any necessary request to the Commission under regulation 15 is a reasonable step for the purposes of subregulation (3).\n\n(5) Nothing in this regulation prevents the provision or display of brochures containing information in languages other than English.\n\n","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commission to provide player information to casino operator on request","content":"\t15 Commission to provide player information to casino operator on request\n\nOn request by a casino operator, the Commission must provide a player information poster, a player information talker or a player information brochure to each casino operator in a form allowing them to be copied.\n\n","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commission to provide player information to venue operator on request","content":"\t16 Commission to provide player information to venue operator on request\n\nOn written request by a venue operator, the Commission must, within 14 days of the request, provide the venue operator with player information posters, player information talkers and player information brochures that the venue operator needs to enable the venue operator to comply with regulations 12, 13 and 14.\n\n","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Offence to alter information set out in player information standards","content":"\t17 Offence to alter information set out in player information standards\n\nA venue operator or casino operator must not alter the form of or information contained on or in a player information poster, player information talker or player information brochure unless the alteration is made to comply with an amendment to the player information standards.\n\n","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Change in player information standards","content":"\t18 Change in player information standards\n\n(1) Within 14 days after an amendment is made to the player information standards, the Commission must—\n\n(a) notify each venue operator and casino operator of the amendment; and\n\n(b) if the amendment requires the amendment of any player information poster, player information talker or player information brochure, provide a copy of the amended poster, talker or brochure to the casino operator in a form allowing it to be copied.\n\n(2) Within 3 months after an amendment is made to the player information standards, the Commission must provide to each venue operator copies of the amended poster, talker or brochure in sufficient numbers to enable the venue operator to comply with regulation 12, 13 or 14 (as the case requires).\n\n(3) If the player information standards are amended in relation to the form of, or information to be contained in, a player information poster, player information talker or player information brochure, it is sufficient compliance with regulation 12(1) or (3), 13(1) or (3) or 14(1) or (3) (as the case requires) for a period of 4 months immediately following the amendment, if the poster, talker or brochure complies with the player information standards as in force immediately before the amendment.\n\n","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"Div 4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Display of information by gaming machines","content":"Division 4—Display of information by gaming machines\n\n","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Gaming machines to display time of day","content":"\t19 Gaming machines to display time of day\n\n(1) A venue operator or casino operator who knows or who could reasonably be expected to know that a gaming machine is not able to display the time of day in accordance with this regulation must not permit gaming on the gaming machine.\n\n(2) The time of day is displayed on a gaming machine in accordance with this regulation if the time of day—\n\n(a) is displayed—\n\n(i) on the video screen; or\n\n(ii) on a device attached to the gaming machine in a position that is acceptable under subregulation (3); and\n\n(b) is clearly visible to a person playing the gaming machine; and\n\n(c) is accurate to within 5 minutes; and\n\n(d) indicates whether the hour is before or after noon; and\n\n(e) is displayed continuously; and\n\n(f) does not obscure any other information relevant to gaming on gaming machines.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subregulation (2)(a), a position on a gaming machine is acceptable if it is—\n\n(a) either—\n\n(i) in front of the machine cabinet; or\n\n(ii) within 10 centimetres of the left or right edge of the machine cabinet; and\n\n(b) not higher than—\n\n(i) if the gaming machine has a top box—5 centimetres above the bottom of the top box; or\n\n(ii) if the gaming machine does not have a top box—the top of the machine cabinet; and\n\n(c) not lower than the bottom of the button panel.\n\n(4) In this regulation, a reference to a ***button panel***, ***top box*** or ***video screen*** of a gaming machine is a reference to the part of the gaming machine that corresponds to the similarly labelled part of a gaming machine represented in Schedule 2.\n\n","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Gaming machine must generate and display electronic information","content":"\t20 Gaming machine must generate and display electronic information\n\n(1) A venue operator or casino operator who knows, or who could reasonably be expected to know, that a gaming machine is not able to display electronic game information at the instruction of a player must not permit gaming on the gaming machine.\n\n(2) A venue operator or casino operator who knows, or who could reasonably be expected to know, that a gaming machine is not able to display electronic player information in accordance with subregulation (3) must not permit gaming on that gaming machine.\n\n(3) A gaming machine is able to display electronic player information in accordance with this subregulation if a player of the gaming machine is able to—\n\n(a) instruct the machine to begin generating electronic player information; and\n\n(b) instruct the machine to display the electronic player information that relates to the period beginning with the instruction referred to in paragraph (a) and ending at the earlier of—\n\n(i) the time when the player gives the instruction referred to in this paragraph; or\n\n(ii) the end of a period of 60 seconds during which no games are displayed on the machine.\n\nReg. 20A inserted by S.R. No. 12/2017 reg. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"20A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Gaming machines must not be playable by certain cards","content":"\t20A Gaming machines must not be playable by certain cards\n\nA venue operator must not permit gaming on a gaming machine that accepts or registers a bet or a gaming machine credit by use of a card that is not a player card.\n\nPt 3 Div. 5 (Heading and regs 21, 22) revoked by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"Div 6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Prescribed connection and prescribed profit","content":"Division 6—Prescribed connection and prescribed profit\n\n","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed connection","content":"\t23 Prescribed connection\n\nFor the purposes of paragraphs (a), (b) and (e) of the definition of ***prescribed connection*** in section 1.3(1) of the Act, the prescribed interests (legal or equitable) in or in relation to an entitlement holder, the prescribed rights or powers in relation to an entitlement holder, and the prescribed relationships between a person employed or engaged by an entitlement holder and another person are the following—\n\n(a) a relevant financial interest held by an entitlement holder in the gambling business of another entitlement holder that enables or would enable the entitlement holder to exercise a significant influence over or with respect to the management or operation of the gambling business of that other entitlement holder;\n\n(b) a relevant power that may be exercised by an entitlement holder (whether in right of the entitlement holder or on behalf of any other entitlement holder) in the gambling business of another entitlement holder that would allow the entitlement holder to exercise a significant influence over or with respect to the management or operation of the gambling businesses of that other entitlement holder;\n\n(c) a relevant financial interest held by a person in the gambling businesses of two or more entitlement holders that would allow the person to exercise a significant influence over or with respect to the management or operation of the gambling businesses of those entitlement holders;\n\n(d) a relevant power that may be exercised by a person (whether in right of the person or on behalf of any other person) in the gambling businesses of two or more entitlement holders that would allow the person to exercise a significant influence over or with respect to the management or operation of the gambling businesses of those entitlement holders;\n\n(e) where two or more entitlement holders are private companies—\n\n(i) the position of executive officer held by a person in two or more entitlement holders; or\n\n(ii) the relationship of family member between a person who holds the position of executive officer in two or more entitlement holders and another person; or\n\n(iii) a majority shareholding held by a person in two or more entitlement holders; or\n\n(iv) a majority interest held by a person in two or more entitlement holders; or\n\n(v) shareholdings held by two or more persons in two or more entitlement holders, the sum of which amounts to the majority interest in each entitlement holder;\n\n(f) an interest held by an entitlement holder in another entitlement holder that would make the entitlement holders related bodies corporate;\n\n(g) an interest held by any other person that would make two or more entitlement holders related bodies corporate;\n\n(h) a beneficial interest held by an executive officer under two or more trusts in respect of which two or more entitlement holders are the trustees;\n\n(i) a beneficial interest held by a family member of an executive officer under two or more trusts in respect of which two or more entitlement holders are the trustees;\n\n(j) where an entitlement holder is a trustee of a trust—\n\n(i) a beneficial interest held under that trust by an entitlement holder that is a private company; or\n\n(ii) a beneficial interest held under that trust by a person who is the majority shareholder of another entitlement holder that is a private company; or\n\n(iii) a beneficial interest held under that trust by a person who is an executive officer of another entitlement holder that is a private company;\n\n(k) where an entitlement holder is a corporation that has issued share capital—\n\n(i) a direct interest held by another entitlement holder in that share capital the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(ii) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds a direct interest in that share capital the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(iii) an indirect interest held by another entitlement holder in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(iv) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds an indirect interest in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(v) an aggregate interest held by another entitlement holder in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(vi) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds an aggregate interest in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%;\n\n(l) where an entitlement holder is a trustee of a trust under which trust capital has been issued—\n\n(i) a direct interest held by another entitlement holder in that trust the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(ii) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds a direct interest in that trust the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(iii) an indirect interest held by another entitlement holder in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(iv) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds an indirect interest in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(v) an aggregate interest held by another entitlement holder in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%; or\n\n(vi) an interest in that entitlement holder held by a person who holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in paragraphs (a) to (j) in relation to another entitlement holder who holds an aggregate interest in the entitlement holder the value of which exceeds 10%.\n\nThis regulation applies to determining a prescribed connection for the purposes of section 3.2A.7(2)(b) of the Act.\n\n","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Direct interests","content":"\t24 Direct interests\n\n(1) For the purposes of regulation 23(k), the value of the direct interest is the proportion (expressed as a percentage) of the voting power of all voting shares issued by the corporation that the person can exercise, or significantly influence the exercise of, the voting power attached to the voting shares.\n\n(2) For the purposes of regulation 23(l), the value of the direct interest is the proportion (expressed as a percentage) of the voting power of all interests in a trust that the person can exercise, or significantly influence the exercise of, the voting power attached to that interest in the trust.\n\n","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Indirect interests","content":"\t25 Indirect interests\n\n(1) For the purposes of regulation 23(k) and (l), an entitlement holder (the ***first entitlement holder***) holds an indirect interest in another entitlement holder if the other entitlement holder is linked to another corporation or trust (the ***directly linked corporation or trust***) in which the first entitlement holder has a direct interest.\n\n(2) An entitlement holder is linked to a directly linked corporation or trust if the directly linked corporation or trust is part of a chain of corporation or trusts—\n\n(a) that starts with the directly linked corporation or trust; and\n\n(b) in which a link in the chain is formed if a corporation or trust has a direct interest in the next corporation or trust.\n\n(3) The value of the indirect interest held by the first entitlement holder in the entitlement holder (the ***indirectly linked corporation or trust***) that is linked to the directly linked corporation or trust is calculated by multiplying together the following—\n\n(a) the value of the direct interest of the first entitlement holder in the directly linked corporation or trust; and\n\n(b) the value of each direct interest that forms a link in the chain of corporations or trusts by which the indirectly linked corporation or trust is linked to the directly linked corporation or trust.\n\n","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Aggregate interests","content":"\t26 Aggregate interests\n\n(1) For the purposes of regulation 23(k) and (l), an entitlement holder (the ***first entitlement holder***) holds an aggregate interest in another entitlement holder if—\n\n(a) the first entitlement holder holds a direct interest and one or more indirect interests in the other entitlement holder; or\n\n(b) the first entitlement holder holds two or more indirect interests in the other entitlement holder; or\n\n(c) the first entitlement holder holds a direct interest and one or more indirect interests in the other entitlement holder, and another person holds an interest in the other entitlement holder and also holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in regulation 23(a) to (j) in relation to the first entitlement holder; or\n\n(d) the first entitlement holder holds two or more indirect interests in the other entitlement holder, and another person holds an interest in the other entitlement holder and also holds an interest, has a power or has a relationship referred to in regulation 23(a) to (j) in relation to the first entitlement holder.\n\n(2) The value of the aggregate interest held by the first entitlement holder in the other entitlement holder is calculated by adding together the following—\n\n(a) the value of the direct interest (if any) of the first entitlement holder in the other entitlement holder;\n\n(b) the value of each indirect interest of the first entitlement holder in the other entitlement holder;\n\n(c) for the purpose of subregulation (1)(c) and (d), the value of each interest (if any) of a person (other than the first entitlement holder) in the other entitlement holder.\n\n","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed profit","content":"\t27 Prescribed profit\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4A.18(2) of the Act, the prescribed profit is the amount calculated in accordance with the following formula—\n\nwhere—\n\nA is the financial benefit a person has received, or is entitled to receive, for a gaming machine entitlement transferred in accordance with the gaming machine entitlement allocation and transfer rules; and\n\nB is the money paid, or agreed to be paid, by a person for a gaming machine entitlement at the time the gaming machine entitlement was acquired in accordance with the gaming machine entitlement allocation and transfer rules.\n\n","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"Div 7","sectionType":"division","heading":"Signage and advertising","content":"Division 7—Signage and advertising\n\n","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—in gaming machine areas","content":"\t28 Excluded signs—in gaming machine areas\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if—\n\n(a) the sign is located in the gaming machine area of an approved venue and is displayed to be viewed primarily from inside the gaming machine area; or\n\n(b) the sign is located inside the boundaries of a casino and is displayed to be viewed primarily from inside the boundaries of the casino.\n\n","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—on approved venues","content":"\t29 Excluded signs—on approved venues\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if—\n\n(a) the sign is located on an approved venue; and\n\n(b) the sign (or each side of the sign) contains the word \"pokies\" (used once)—\n\n(i) in white text on a single colour background; and\n\n(ii) in Helvetica font, Arial font or other similar font; and\n\n(c) the area of the sign (or each side of the sign) does not exceed 2 square metres; and\n\n(d) except as provided under paragraph (b) and regulation 30(a) and (b), the sign (or each side of the sign) contains none of the following—\n\n(i) decorative ridges or illumination, embossing, bulges, or other irregularities;\n\n(ii) words, numbers, symbols or pictures that draw attention to the availability of gaming machines for gaming or that are frequently associated with gaming machines; and\n\n(e) subject to paragraph (f), only one sign under this regulation is displayed on the approved venue; and\n\n(f) if the approved venue has more than one street frontage, no more than 2 signs under this regulation are displayed, and—\n\n(i) one of those signs is displayed on each street frontage of the approved venue; or\n\n(ii) one of those signs is displayed across the corner of the approved venue and the other sign is displayed on a street frontage of the approved venue.\n\n","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—directional signs","content":"\t30 Excluded signs—directional signs\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if—\n\n(a) the sign contains text that draws attention to the availability of gaming machines for gaming or terms or expressions frequently associated with gaming machines but that text is limited to—\n\n(i) words; or\n\n(ii) numbers; or\n\n(iii) arrow symbols; or\n\n(iv) a combination of words, numbers and arrow symbols; and\n\n(b) the purpose of the sign is to give directions to the location of the gaming machine area of an approved venue or the area of the casino in which gaming machines are situated; and\n\n(c) any words on the sign or, in the case of a double sided sign, on each side of the sign, that refer to the availability of gaming machines for gaming or use a term or expression frequently associated with gaming machines, in compliance with paragraph (a), do not exceed 0⋅3 of a square metre in size (when measured from the lowest and highest and the leftmost and rightmost extremities of the words); and\n\n(d) the sign contains no other words, numbers, symbols or pictures that draw attention to the availability of gaming machines for gaming or that are frequently associated with gaming machines; and\n\n(e) in relation to an approved venue, the sign is located—\n\n(i) inside a building in which a gaming machine area of the approved venue is located; or\n\n(ii) at any entrance to a building in which a gaming machine area of the approved venue is located and the sign is the only sign giving those directions at that entrance; or\n\n(iii) at any entrance to a car park used primarily by patrons of the approved venue and the sign is the only sign giving those directions at that entrance; and\n\n(f) in relation to a casino, the sign is located—\n\n(i) inside a building in which the casino is located; or\n\n(ii) inside the area of land bounded by the Yarra River, Clarendon Street, City Road and Queensbridge Street.\n\n","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—signs for clubs not on freeways or arterial roads","content":"\t31 Excluded signs—signs for clubs not on freeways or arterial roads\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if—\n\n(a) the sign is displayed by an approved venue that—\n\n(i) has a club licence within the meaning of section 10 of the **Liquor Control Reform Act 1998**; and\n\n(ii) is not located on a freeway or arterial road within the meaning of the **Road Management Act 2004**; and\n\n(b) the sign contains text that complies with the requirements set out in regulation 30(a) and (b); and\n\n(c) the sign contains no other words, numbers, symbols or pictures that draw attention to the availability of gaming machines for gaming or that are frequently associated with gaming machines, except as provided under regulation 29(b); and\n\n(d) the area of the sign (or each side of the sign) does not exceed 2 square metres; and\n\n(e) the sign (or each side of the sign) contains no decorative ridges or illumination, embossing, bulges or other irregularities; and\n\n(f) only one sign under this regulation is displayed by the approved venue.\n\n","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—convention signs","content":"\t32 Excluded signs—convention signs\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if the sign is displayed at—\n\n(a) a trade promotion event for the gaming industry; or\n\n(b) a convention for the gaming machine industry.\n\n","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—corporate logo","content":"\t33 Excluded signs—corporate logo\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if the sign (or each side of the sign) contains only—\n\n(a) the symbol in Schedule 3; or\n\n(b) the symbol in Schedule 3 and the word \"CROWN\" (used once); or\n\n(c) the word \"CROWN\" (used once).\n\n","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Excluded signs—problem gambling","content":"\t34 Excluded signs—problem gambling\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***gaming machine related sign*** in section 3.5.35(5) of the Act, a sign is excluded from the operation of section 3.5.35 of the Act if the sign consists only of information about problem gambling or services relating to problem gambling.\n\n","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Responsible gambling sign","content":"\t35 Responsible gambling sign\n\n(1) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of ***responsible gambling sign*** in section 1.3(1) of the Act, a prescribed responsible gambling sign is a sign in the form and containing the information set out in the player information standards under regulation 11(1)(a)(ii).\n\n(2) Responsible gambling signs must be displayed as follows—\n\n(a) at least one sign outside each entrance to the gaming machine area of the approved venue; and\n\n(b) in such a manner that the information contained in them is clearly visible to a person entering the gaming machine area.\n\n(3) The Commission must provide to each venue operator responsible gambling signs in sufficient numbers to enable the venue operator to comply with this regulation.\n\nSection 3.5.35A(1) of the Act provides that it is an offence for a venue operator, other than a venue operator who is a casino operator, to fail to display a responsible gambling sign outside every entrance to a gaming machine area of an approved venue.\n\n(4) On written request by the venue operator the Commission must, within 14 days of the request, provide the venue operator with any further responsible gambling signs that the venue operator needs to enable the venue operator to comply with this regulation.\n\n(5) Within 3 months after an amendment is made to the player information standards, the Commission must provide to each venue operator copies of the amended responsible gambling sign in sufficient numbers to enable the venue operator to comply with this regulation.\n\n(6) If the player information standards are amended in relation to the form of, or information to be contained in, a responsible gambling sign it is sufficient compliance with this regulation for a period of 4 months immediately following the amendment, if the responsible gambling sign complies with the player information standards as in force immediately before the amendment.\n\n","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exceptions to gaming machine advertising prohibitions—casino operators","content":"\t36 Exceptions to gaming machine advertising prohibitions—casino operators\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 3.5.34AA(6)(c) of the Act, the prescribed term is \"CROWN\".\n\n(2) For the purposes of section 3.5.34AA(6)(c) of the Act, a symbol, or a symbol that is similar to or a reasonable likeness to a symbol, set out in Schedule 3 is a prescribed symbol.\n\n","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"Div 8","sectionType":"division","heading":"Restricted gaming components and monitoring gaming components","content":"Division 8—Restricted gaming components and monitoring gaming components\n\n","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Restricted gaming components","content":"\t37 Restricted gaming components\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***restricted gaming component*** in section 1.3(1) of the Act, the following components are prescribed to be restricted gaming components—\n\n(a) software, software modules, or memory modules designed specifically to enable game play on a gaming machine;\n\n(b) a software storage medium designed specifically for a gaming machine;\n\n(c) a memory module designed specifically for a gaming machine;\n\n(d) an electronic module (including, but not limited to, a circuit board, but not including a repeater, signal amplifier or line isolation device) designed specifically for a game or a gaming machine;\n\n(e) any component that participates in determination of the result of game play or downloading of software that participates in determination of the result of game play.\n\n","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Restricted monitoring component","content":"\t38 Restricted monitoring component\n\nFor the purposes of the definition of ***restricted monitoring component*** in section 1.3(1) of the Act, the following components are prescribed to be restricted monitoring components—\n\n(a) software designed specifically for an electronic monitoring system;\n\n(b) a software storage medium designed specifically for an electronic monitoring system;\n\n(c) a memory module designed specifically for an electronic monitoring system;\n\n(d) an electronic module (including, but not limited to, a circuit board, but not including a repeater, signal amplifier or line isolation device) designed specifically for an electronic monitoring system.\n\n","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"Div 9","sectionType":"division","heading":"Publication of notice","content":"Division 9—Publication of notice\n\n","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for venue operator's licence—publication of notice","content":"\t39 Application for venue operator's licence—publication of notice\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.8(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed information to be contained in the notice published by an applicant for a venue operator's licence is—\n\n(a) a statement that an application has been made; and\n\n(b) the applicant's name and business address; and\n\n(c) the name and address of the venue at which the applicant proposes to conduct gaming, if known; and\n\n(d) the number of gaming machines proposed to be installed at the venue, if known; and\n\n(e) the times at which it is proposed the venue will be open for gaming, if known; and\n\n(f) the address and telephone number of the Commission.\n\n","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for listing on the Roll—publication of notice","content":"\t40 Application for listing on the Roll—publication of notice\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.61(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed information to be contained in the notice published by an applicant for listing on the Roll of Manufacturers, Suppliers and Testers is—\n\n(a) a statement that an application has been made; and\n\n(b) the applicant's name and business address; and\n\n(c) the address and telephone number of the Commission.\n\n","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"Div 10","sectionType":"division","heading":"Determination of net cash balance and revenue","content":"Division 10—Determination of net cash balance and revenue\n\n","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Determining the sum of amounts for net cash balance and revenue","content":"\t41 Determining the sum of amounts for net cash balance and revenue\n\n(1) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of ***daily net cash balance*** in section 3.6.2 of the Act, the amount to be deducted from the total amount wagered in relation to a gaming machine for payment to a jackpot special prize pool is determined, in the case of a gaming machine of a venue operator of an approved venue, by multiplying the total amount wagered by not more than 0·04 as determined by the Commission from time to time.\n\n(2) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of ***revenue*** in sections 3.6.6A(8) and 3.6.6B(8) of the Act, the amount to be deducted from the total amount earned from bets in relation to a gaming machine for payment to a jackpot special prize pool is determined, in the case of a gaming machine of a venue operator of an approved venue, by multiplying the total amount bet by not more than 0·04 as determined by the Commission from time to time.\n\n","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notification of determination","content":"\t42 Notification of determination\n\n(1) The Commission, immediately after making a determination under regulation 41, must give written notice of the determination to the venue operator affected by the determination.\n\n(2) A determination under regulation 41 takes effect on the day specified in the notice.\n\nPt 3 Div. 11 (Heading and regs 42A–42E) inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"Div 11","sectionType":"division","heading":"Cashless gaming","content":"Division 11—Cashless gaming\n\nReg. 42A inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"42A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Maximum value of non-cash gaming tokens","content":"\t42A Maximum value of non-cash gaming tokens\n\n(1) A venue operator must not distribute or make available a non-cash gaming token with a value greater than $1000.\n\n(2) A venue operator must not allow a person to distribute or to make available a non-cash gaming token with a value greater than $1000.\n\n(3) For the purposes of this regulation, a person does not distribute or make available a non‑cash gaming token by paying out accumulated credits from a gaming machine as or by way of that token.\n\nSection 3.5.33 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** regulates the paying out of $2000 or more worth of accumulated credits on a gaming machine.\n\nReg. 42B inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"42B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Maximum value that can be registered from a non‑cash gaming token to the credit meter of a gaming machine","content":"\t42B Maximum value that can be registered from a non‑cash gaming token to the credit meter of a gaming machine\n\n(1) A venue operator must not permit gaming on a gaming machine that does not comply with subregulation (2).\n\n(2) For the purposes of subregulation (1), a gaming machine complies with this subregulation if it is not possible to use a non-cash gaming token to register gaming machine credits on the machine with the result that more than $1000 worth of accumulated credits are standing on the machine.\n\nReg. 42C inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"42C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Player must nominate value of credits transferred from a player card","content":"\t42C Player must nominate value of credits transferred from a player card\n\n(1) A venue operator must not permit gaming on a gaming machine—\n\n(a) on which gaming machine credits can be registered using a non-cash gaming token that is a player card; and\n\n(b) that does not comply with subregulation (2).\n\n(2) For the purposes of subregulation (1), a gaming machine complies with this subregulation if—\n\n(a) gaming machine credits are not registered on the gaming machine by a player card until a player selects the value of the credits to be registered; and\n\n(b) the selection referred to in paragraph (a) does not cause a bet to be made.\n\nReg. 42D inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"42D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cashless gaming terminals—distance from gaming machines","content":"\t42D Cashless gaming terminals—distance from gaming machines\n\n(1) A venue operator must ensure that each cashless gaming terminal at the approved venue is not located within 2 metres of a gaming machine that is available for gaming.\n\n(2) A venue operator must not, while a person is at a gaming machine, assist or allow another person to assist the person at the gaming machine—\n\n(a) to obtain a non-cash gaming token; or\n\n(b) to increase the value of a non-cash gaming token; or\n\n(c) to use a cashless gaming terminal.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subregulation (2)(a) and (b), a person does not obtain a non-cash gaming token or increase the value of a non-cash gaming token by having accumulated credits from a gaming machine paid out to them as or by way of that token.\n\nReg. 42E inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019 reg. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"42E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cashless gaming terminals—maximum value","content":"\t42E Cashless gaming terminals—maximum value\n\n(1) A venue operator must ensure that each cashless gaming terminal at the approved venue complies with subregulation (2).\n\n(2) For the purposes of subregulation (1), a cashless gaming terminal complies with this subregulation if it is not possible to use the cashless gaming terminal—\n\n(a) to obtain a non-cash gaming token with a value greater than $1000; or\n\n(b) to increase the value of a non-cash gaming token with the result that the non-cash gaming token has a value greater than $1000.\n\nPart 4—Wagering and betting\n\nDivision 1—Conduct of wagering and betting\n\n\t43 Definition\n\nIn this Division—\n\n***operator*** means each of the following—\n\n(a) the wagering and betting licensee;\n\n(b) the wagering and betting operator.\n\n","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Display of betting rules","content":"\t44 Display of betting rules\n\n(1) An operator must display the betting rules in each place that the operator, or agent of the operator, accepts bets in cash from investors.\n\n(2) Betting rules displayed under subregulation (1) must be displayed in a position that is readily accessible to the public.\n\n(3) An operator must make a copy of the betting rules available at its principal place of business on demand by any person.\n\n","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Management and control of betting offices","content":"\t45 Management and control of betting offices\n\nAn operator must ensure that each of the operator's betting offices is under the management and control of an officer, employee or agent of the operator who is appointed for that purpose.\n\n","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Numbering and bracketing of selections","content":"\t46 Numbering and bracketing of selections\n\n(1) Subject to this regulation, the operator must allot to each selection in a totalisator a list number corresponding with the number of the selection (if any) in the race fields published by the appropriate controlling body.\n\n(2) If there are more selections than there are list numbers available for allocation by the operator, the operator may create a sufficient number of brackets so that the highest list number allotted to any selection does not exceed the highest list number available.\n\n(3) The operator may create brackets for use in conjunction with any bet type offered by the operator.\n\n(4) Selections bracketed together under subregulation (2) or (3) must each be allotted the same list number with a distinguishing letter shown alongside that common list number.\n\n(5) If selections are bracketed together under subregulation (2) or (3), a bet accepted in respect of the bracket number for that bracket must be taken to be invested on each selection included in that bracket unless the bet on that bracket is a bet that—\n\n(a) one selection in that bracket will win one race at a race meeting; and\n\n(b) the other selection in that bracket will win a different race at the race meeting.\n\n","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information regarding selections, dividends and prizes","content":"\t47 Information regarding selections, dividends and prizes\n\n(1) An operator must obtain any information that is necessary to allow the operator to make selections and to declare dividends or prizes in respect of an event for which it operates a totalisator, including—\n\n(a) the identifying name and number for each runner in the event; and\n\n(b) the value of the total amount invested in all the pools for the event; and\n\n(c) the official outcome of the event.\n\n(2) An operator must display, in each of the operator's betting offices, the information that is obtained by it under subregulation (1).\n\n","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Display of results and determination of dividends or prizes","content":"\t48 Display of results and determination of dividends or prizes\n\n(1) An operator must display, in each of the operator's betting offices, the results of events on which the operator conducts totalisators.\n\n(2) An operator must display, in each of the operator's betting offices, the dividends that are payable by the operator in respect of events on which the operator conducts totalisators.\n\n","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Protests","content":"\t49 Protests\n\n(1) This regulation applies if—\n\n(a) an operator conducts a totalisator on a wagering event; and\n\n(b) after the conclusion of a wagering event, a person lodges a protest in accordance with the relevant rules of racing.\n\n(2) Subject to subregulation (3), the operator must—\n\n(a) until the protest has been decided by a steward of the appropriate controlling body, retain the money that is to be paid by way of dividends; and\n\n(b) once the protest has been decided by a steward of the appropriate controlling body, deal with the money in accordance with the decision.\n\n(3) The operator may pay money by way of a dividend before the protest has been decided if the operator is satisfied that the dividend will not be affected by the decision.\n\n(4) In this regulation—\n\n***relevant rules of racing*** means—\n\n(a) in relation to a wagering event that is a horse race, the Rules of Racing within the meaning of Division 2B of Part I of the **Racing Act 1958**; and\n\n(b) in relation to a wagering event that is a harness race, the rules made under section 49 of the **Racing Act 1958** by Harness Racing Victoria; and\n\n(c) in relation to a wagering event that is a greyhound race, the rules made under section 82 of the **Racing Act 1958** by Greyhound Racing Victoria;\n\n***steward*** has the same meaning as it has in the **Racing Act 1958**.\n\n","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Financial statements","content":"\t50 Financial statements\n\nWithin 14 days after the day on which a totalisator or an approved betting competition is conducted by the operator, the operator must provide to the Commission a notice in relation to that totalisator or approved betting competition in the form in Schedule 4 or in any other manner or form that is approved by the Commission.\n\n","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Payments into pools","content":"\t51 Payments into pools\n\nAn operator may, in respect of any event for which the operator conducts a totalisator or approved betting competition, either—\n\n(a) before accepting bets in respect of the event, allocate an amount of money to be used to increase the money available for dividends, guaranteed pool amount or prizes in respect of the totalisator or approved betting competition; or\n\n(b) after ceasing to accept bets in respect of the event, supplement the amount of money available for dividends, guaranteed pool amount or prizes in respect of the totalisator or approved betting competition so as to return a specified minimum dividend or prize.\n\n","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Particulars on ticket","content":"\t52 Particulars on ticket\n\nThe operator must ensure that every ticket issued by the operator in respect of a totalisator or an approved betting competition must identify—\n\n(a) the totalisator or approved betting competition concerned; and\n\n(b) the date and place of issue of the ticket; and\n\n(c) the selection or combination of selections chosen; and\n\n(d) the amount of the bet.\n\n","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Significant events","content":"\t53 Significant events\n\n(1) This regulation applies if an operator discovers a significant event in respect of a totalisator or an approved betting competition conducted by an operator.\n\n(2) The operator must, before the end of the next business day after the day on which the significant event was discovered, report the occurrence of the significant event to the Commission.\n\n(3) The Commission may request further information from the operator in relation to the significant event.\n\n(4) The operator must comply with a request made under subregulation (3).\n\n(5) For the purposes of this regulation, each of the following is a ***significant event***—\n\n(a) an error in the calculation of a dividend or prize;\n\n(b) an error in the calculation of the money available for dividends;\n\n(c) the acceptance by the operator of a bet—\n\n(i) in the case of a bet in a totalisator—after the start of the event on which the bet is accepted; or\n\n(ii) in the case of a bet in an approved betting competition—after the later of—\n\n(A) the start of the event in respect of which the bet is accepted; or\n\n(B) the time at which the operator indicates that it is not accepting, or has ceased to accept, bets in respect of the event;\n\n(d) the manipulation or attempted manipulation by a person employed by the operator of the equipment or software used in connection with a totalisator or an approved betting competition;\n\n(e) the misuse by a person employed by the operator of information obtained by that person as a result of his or her employment;\n\n(f) the forgery or attempted forgery of a ticket in respect of a totalisator or an approved betting competition;\n\n(g) the presentation of a forged ticket in respect of a totalisator or an approved betting competition;\n\n(h) the cancellation of a bet after the result of the event on which the bet was made has been decided;\n\n(i) a period of time in excess of 10 minutes during which the operator is unable to accept bets at a time when the operator's betting offices are open for business;\n\n(j) the activation of the operator's emergency procedures or disaster recovery procedures in connection with the operator's totalisator business.\n\n","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Termination of acceptance of bets","content":"\t54 Termination of acceptance of bets\n\nThe operator must establish and maintain procedures or systems approved by the Commission to terminate the acceptance of bets by the operator—\n\n(a) in the case of a bet in a totalisator—after the start of the event on which the bet is accepted; or\n\n(b) in the case of a bet in an approved betting competition—after the start of the event in respect of which the bet is accepted or after the operator has indicated that it is not accepting, or has ceased to accept, bets in respect of that event, whichever is the later.\n\nDivision 2—Race fields\n\n","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time in which wagering service provider may apply for publication and use approval","content":"\t55 Time in which wagering service provider may apply for publication and use approval\n\nReg. 55(1) amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 122.\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 4.2.3B(2)(a) of the Act, the prescribed time for making an application for publication and use approval is—\n\n(a) subject to subregulation (2), not less than 70 days before the day on which the approval is to expire, if the wagering service provider holds a current publication and use approval from the appropriate controlling body; or\n\n(b) not less than 70 days before the day on which the wagering service provider wishes the approval to be granted, if the wagering service provider does not hold a current publication and use approval from the appropriate controlling body.\n\n(2) The appropriate controlling body may extend the time under subregulation (1)(a) if satisfied that the wagering service provider has good reason for requiring that extension.\n\nReg. 56 amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 123.\n\n","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Form of application","content":"\t56 Form of application\n\nFor the purposes of section 4.2.3B(2)(b) of the Act, the prescribed form for an application for publication and use approval is the form in Schedule 5.\n\nReg. 57 amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 124.\n\n","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time in which appropriate controlling body must determine application","content":"\t57 Time in which appropriate controlling body must determine application\n\nFor the purposes of section 4.2.3C(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed time in which the appropriate controlling body must determine an application by either granting or refusing publication and use approval is—\n\n(a) not less than 10 days before the expiry of the approval, if the wagering service provider holds a current publication and use approval from the appropriate controlling body and makes the application not less than 70 days before that approval is to expire; or\n\n(b) not more than 60 days after receiving the application in any other case.\n\nReg. 58 amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 125.\n\n","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time in which appropriate controlling body must notify applicant of decision","content":"\t58 Time in which appropriate controlling body must notify applicant of decision\n\nFor the purposes of section 4.2.3C(3)(b) of the Act, the prescribed time in which the appropriate controlling body must notify an applicant in writing of its decision to grant or refuse publication and use approval is not more than 7 days after the day on which the decision is made.\n\n","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Trade promotion lotteries","content":"Part 5—Trade promotion lotteries\n\n","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"59","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions of a trade promotion lottery","content":"\t59 Conditions of a trade promotion lottery\n\nFor the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, the prescribed conditions are that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery—\n\n(a) obtains the prior written consent for the conduct of the lottery from the person whose trade or business is to be promoted by the lottery; and\n\n(b) conducts the lottery so as to benefit primarily the trade or business being promoted; and\n\n(c) ensures that all information designed to or likely to induce a person to enter the trade promotion lottery and any scratch and win card that is or forms part of the trade promotion lottery includes—\n\n(i) the closing date of the lottery; and\n\n(ii) if applicable, where and when the lottery will be drawn; and\n\n(iii) the name and date of the publication in which the names of the winners will be published; and\n\n(iv) the requirements, if any, that must be met to be eligible to enter the lottery; and\n\n(d) causes the names of winners of all prizes worth more than $1000 to be published—\n\n(i) in a newspaper circulating generally in Victoria; or\n\n(ii) on the Internet, for a minimum period of 28 days; or\n\n(iii) if the lottery was advertised solely through a trade journal, promotional magazine or similar publication, in that publication; and\n\n(e) causes the winners of prizes to be advised in writing of the prize; and\n\n(f) ensures that records are kept for a period of 3 years after finalisation of the lottery that provide—\n\n(i) an accurate financial accounting of the lottery; and\n\n(ii) an accurate accounting for all entries; and\n\n(iii) an accurate reporting of the distribution of the prizes; and\n\n(g) ensures that, if a trade promotion lottery is to be drawn, the method of the draw allows each ticket in the draw a random and equal chance of being drawn; and\n\n(h) ensures that a prize winner must not be required to incur a cost to accept a prize (other than a trivial cost); and\n\n(i) complies with any other condition specified in this Part as a prescribed condition.\n\n","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"60","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed condition—use of information","content":"\t60 Prescribed condition—use of information\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery who intends to use any information relating to an entrant in the trade promotion lottery for a purpose other than the conduct of the lottery states each purpose in the conditions of entry of the lottery.\n\n(2) A person who conducts a trade promotion must not use, or permit to be used, the information relating to an entrant in the lottery referred to in subregulation (1) except in accordance with the purposes stated in the condition of entry.\n\n(3) For the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery obtains the prior written agreement from the person whose trade or business is to be promoted by the lottery that the person will not use any information relating to an entrant in the lottery referred to in subregulation (1) except in accordance with the purposes stated in the conditions of entry.\n\n","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"61","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed condition—presence of entrants","content":"\t61 Prescribed condition—presence of entrants\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery does not require an entrant in the lottery to be present at the drawing of the lottery in order to be eligible to win a prize unless—\n\n(a) entry to the lottery is only available in the premises in which the draw is to take place; and\n\n(b) the draw is to take place within 24 hours after the commencement of the lottery.\n\n(2) For the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery pays or otherwise transfers the prize within 28 days after the draw to a winner who—\n\n(a) is present at the draw; and\n\n(b) is otherwise readily identifiable.\n\n","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"62","sectionType":"section","heading":"Substituted winners","content":"\t62 Substituted winners\n\n(1) A person who conducts a trade promotion lottery may substitute a winner of a prize if—\n\n(a) a winner of a prize is not readily identified; and\n\n(b) reasonable efforts have made to identify the winner of the prize and were unsuccessful; and\n\n(c) the conditions of entry provide that the person who conducts the trade promotion lottery may draw an additional entrant's name in such a situation; and\n\n(d) an additional entrant's name is drawn.\n\n(2) In the circumstances set out in subregulation (1), the additional entrant's name is substituted for the name of the winner of that prize.\n\n","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"63","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed condition—scratch and win cards","content":"\t63 Prescribed condition—scratch and win cards\n\nFor the purpose of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery with scratch and win cards ensures that the conditions of entry include—\n\n(a) disclosure of—\n\n(i) the maximum number of scratch and win cards to be distributed; and\n\n(ii) the total number and individual value of the prizes; and\n\n(b) a condition that printing errors and other quality control matters are not to be used as a reason for refusing payment of prizes.\n\n","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"64","sectionType":"section","heading":"Lottery must not be conducted in offensive manner or contrary to public interest","content":"\t64 Lottery must not be conducted in offensive manner or contrary to public interest\n\nFor the purposes of section 5.7.2(1)(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition that a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery under section 5.7.2 must ensure that the lottery is conducted in a manner that—\n\n(a) is not offensive; and\n\n(b) is not contrary to the public interest.\n\n","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"65","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prizes","content":"\t65 Prizes\n\n(1) A person who conducts a trade promotion lottery under section 5.7.2 may substitute a prize for another prize only if—\n\n(a) a person conducting the lottery and the prize winner agree in writing to the substitution of the original prize for the other prize; and\n\n(b) the substituted prize is of the same or greater value than the original prize.\n\n(2) Despite subregulation (1), a person who conducts a trade promotion lottery may substitute a prize for another prize without reaching an agreement with the prize winner if—\n\n(a) the circumstances in which the prize has become unavailable are beyond the reasonable control of the person who conducts the trade promotion lottery; and\n\n(b) reasonable attempts have been made to reach an agreement with the winner and were unsuccessful; and\n\n(c) the prize is of the same or greater value than the original prize.\n\nPart 6—Community and charitable gaming\n\nDivision 1—Sporting or recreational clubs or associations\n\n\t66 Sporting or recreational club or association\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.3.3(1)(b) of the Act, a sporting or recreational club or association is of a prescribed kind if—\n\n(a) it has a bona fide membership; and\n\n(b) it has been formed for recreational purposes or the promotion of any sport; and\n\n(c) if it is incorporated, it can show continuing compliance with the requirements of the law under which it is incorporated; and\n\n(d) if it is unincorporated—\n\n(i) it is managed by a committee, elected by the general body of members for a period of not less than 12 months, which meets regularly; and\n\n(ii) it consistently holds annual general meetings; and\n\n(iii) it records its decisions accurately in writing; and\n\n(e) it has a treasurer who maintains proper financial records and presents a statement of income and expenditure and a balance sheet at its annual general meeting; and\n\n(f) it operates a banking account in its name; and\n\n(g) when it issues cheques, the cheques are signed by no fewer than 2 authorised officers of the club or association; and\n\n(h) it has a constitution which provides that, in the event of the club or association being disbanded, its net assets are not to be distributed to members but are to be distributed to—\n\n(i) a fund with objectives similar to those of the club or association; or\n\n(ii) a fund which is appropriated exclusively for a purpose referred to in paragraph (b)(i) of the definition of ***community purpose*** in section 1.3(1) of the Act; or\n\n(iii) a community or charitable organisation.\n\nDivision 2—Conduct of bingo\n\n","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"67","sectionType":"section","heading":"Period of ceasing to conduct sessions of bingo for which the Commission must be notified","content":"\t67 Period of ceasing to conduct sessions of bingo for which the Commission must be notified\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.4.2A(5) of the Act, the prescribed period is 3 months.\n\n","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"68","sectionType":"section","heading":"Amount of large bingo prize for which the Commission must be notified","content":"\t68 Amount of large bingo prize for which the Commission must be notified\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.4.2C(1) of the Act, the prescribed amount is $20 000.\n\n","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"69","sectionType":"section","heading":"Return in respect of bingo","content":"\t69 Return in respect of bingo\n\n(1) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that a community or charitable organisation must, before 1 October in each year that bingo is conducted, give the Commission a return setting out, in respect of the year or part year ending on the preceding 30 June, for each month—\n\n(a) the gross receipts; and\n\n(b) the total expenses (including catering and the fees paid to the holder of a bingo centre operator's licence); and\n\n(c) the serial numbers of unsold tickets, if any; and\n\n(d) the prizes paid; and\n\n(e) the net proceeds of bingo; and\n\n(f) the balance of each jackpot pool, if any, at the end of that month.\n\n(2) A return under this regulation—\n\n(a) must be signed by—\n\n(i) the responsible person; and\n\n(ii) the president, secretary, treasurer or a director of the community or charitable organisation; and\n\n(b) subject to subregulation (4), must contain or be accompanied by a certificate addressed to the Commission from a person referred to in subregulation (3) setting out the person's opinion as to the truth and accuracy of the return.\n\n(3) A person may provide a certificate required by subregulation (2)(b) if the person—\n\n(a) not being a member of the governing body of the community or charitable organisation, has been appointed by the governing body with the same authority as the auditor of a public company; and\n\n(b) is—\n\n(i) a registered company auditor; or\n\n(ii) a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia, CPA Australia or the Institute of Public Accountants; or\n\n(iii) the manager of a branch of a financial institution.\n\n(4) Subregulation (2)(b) does not apply if—\n\n(a) the gross receipts for the year of the return do not exceed $50 000; and\n\n(b) the running sheets and all bank records for the conduct of bingo have been reviewed by—\n\n(i) the responsible person; and\n\n(ii) the president, secretary or treasurer or a director of the community or charitable organisation; and\n\n(c) the return contains or is accompanied by a certificate given by each person who has undertaken a review under paragraph (b) setting out the person's opinion as to the truth and accuracy of the running sheets and bank records.\n\n(5) A person must not give a certificate under subregulation (4)(c) that the person knows, or could reasonably be expected to know, is false.\n\n(6) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that if the authority to conduct sessions of bingo is suspended under section 8.4.18 of the Act, subject to subregulation (7), the community or charitable organisation must give to the Commission, within 3 months of that suspension, a return in respect of the period starting on the preceding 1 July and ending on the last day of the authorised conduct of bingo.\n\n(7) Subregulation (6) does not apply if the suspension referred to in subregulation (6) is lifted within 3 months, in which case the community or charitable organisation may provide a return for the past year before the suspension with its return for the period after the suspension.\n\n","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"70","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of responsible person","content":"\t70 Duties of responsible person\n\n(1) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that a session of bingo games must be personally supervised by the responsible person or a person aged at least 18 years authorised in writing by the responsible person in accordance with subregulation (2).\n\n(2) The responsible person or authorised person referred to in subregulation (1) must—\n\n(a) ensure that bingo games are played only by people aged at least 18 years; and\n\n(b) ensure that a running sheet is completed in accordance with regulation 79 in respect of every bingo game played; and\n\n(c) ensure that prizes are paid as required under regulation 73; and\n\n(d) perform any other duties of the supervisor of a session of bingo games required under the rules of bingo.\n\n","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"71","sectionType":"section","heading":"Banking","content":"\t71 Banking\n\nIt is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that the community or charitable organisation pay the gross proceeds from a session of bingo (less the amount of any jackpot pool retained for distribution as prize money in a later session of bingo in a jackpot sequence) into the account approved by the Commission under section 8.6.1 of the Act—\n\n(a) if the session was held in a bingo centre, within 3 days after the day on which the session was conducted; or\n\n(b) if the session was held in a place other than a bingo centre, within 5 days after the day on which the session was conducted; or\n\n(c) within any other period that the Commission notifies in writing to the community or charitable organisation.\n\n","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"72","sectionType":"section","heading":"Unsold tickets","content":"\t72 Unsold tickets\n\nIt is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that the community or charitable organisation must retain unsold bingo tickets for 6 months after the date of the return under regulation 69 in respect of those tickets.\n\n","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"73","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prizes","content":"\t73 Prizes\n\n(1) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that the amount of prizes distributed—\n\n(a) in a bingo game must be not less than 20% of the gross receipts for the game; and\n\n(b) in any period of 7 consecutive days must be not less than 50% and not more than 90% of the total of the gross receipts for all bingo games in all sessions conducted in that period.\n\n(2) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that if more than one jackpot pool is maintained concurrently, only one of the jackpot pools may be in operation in a session.\n\n(3) It is a condition of bingo conducted under Chapter 8 of the Act (except section 8.2.4A) that prize money won in a bingo game must be paid at the end of the game.\n\nDivision 3—Bingo centres and employees\n\n","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"74","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information to be published in application for bingo centre operator's licence","content":"\t74 Information to be published in application for bingo centre operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5.3(2)(b)(i) of the Act, the prescribed information is—\n\n(a) the name and address of the applicant; and\n\n(b) the address of the bingo centre or proposed bingo centre.\n\n","sortOrder":86},{"sectionNumber":"75","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions of bingo centre operator's licence","content":"\t75 Conditions of bingo centre operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5.7(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed conditions are—\n\n(a) a bingo centre operator must not conduct more than one session of bingo in the same room at the same time; and\n\n(b) a bingo centre operator who proposes to enter into an agreement under section 8.4.6 of the Act with a community or charitable organisation must declare to the governing body of the community or charitable organisation all conflicts between the interests of the operator of the bingo centre and the interests of the community or charitable organisation.\n\nDivision 4—Miscellaneous\n\n","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"76","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contract with bingo centre operator","content":"\t76 Contract with bingo centre operator\n\nIf a community or charitable organisation enters into an agreement with a bingo centre operator under section 8.4.6 of the Act, a reference in this Part to the responsible person under this Part includes the bingo centre operator with whom the agreement is made.\n\nSee also section 8.4.6(5) of the Act.\n\n","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"77","sectionType":"section","heading":"Expenses payable by a community or charitable organisation","content":"\t77 Expenses payable by a community or charitable organisation\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.4.7 of the Act, the prescribed maximum amount in relation to each session of bingo is—\n\n(a) if the session is in a rolling jackpot sequence—60% of the amount remaining after deducting from the gross proceeds for that session the amount paid into the jackpot pool for distribution as prize money in a later session in a rolling jackpot sequence; or\n\n(b) in all other cases—60% of the gross proceeds of the session.\n\n","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"78","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information in records","content":"\t78 Information in records\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.6.2(2) of the Act, the prescribed information in relation to a community or charitable organisation is—\n\n(a) for each bingo game—\n\n(i) except for braille tickets in the form approved under section 8.4.5 of the Act—\n\n(A) the serial numbers of the bingo tickets sold; and\n\n(B) the total number of bingo tickets available to be sold; and\n\n(C) the lowest book number and the highest book number of bingo tickets sold (start and finish selling numbers); and\n\n(ii) the number of bingo tickets sold, excluding braille tickets; and\n\n(iii) the number of charges made under section 8.4.5(3) of the Act for a visually-impaired person to enter the game; and\n\n(iv) the gross receipts; and\n\n(v) the value of prizes paid; and\n\n(vi) the gross profit; and\n\n(b) for each session of bingo games—\n\n(i) the expenses paid; and\n\n(ii) the opening balance of any jackpot pool and the date from which the jackpot pool was carried forward; and\n\n(iii) the closing balance of any jackpot pool and the date to which it will be carried forward; and\n\n(iv) the book number of any unsold book between the lowest book number for the session and the highest book number for the session (wasted book numbers).\n\n","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"79","sectionType":"section","heading":"Running sheets","content":"\t79 Running sheets\n\nThe supervisor of a session of bingo games must—\n\n(a) keep a running sheet containing the information required to be kept under regulation 78; and\n\n(b) ensure that a bingo game does not commence until the portion of the running sheet relating to the previous bingo game has been completed.\n\n","sortOrder":91},{"sectionNumber":"Div 5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Lucky envelopes","content":"Division 5—Lucky envelopes\n\n","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"80","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions of lucky envelope permit","content":"\t80 Conditions of lucky envelope permit\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 8.3.13(3)(a) of the Act, the following are prescribed conditions in respect of a lucky envelope permit for the sale of lucky envelopes—\n\n(a) lucky envelopes must not be sold to persons under the age of 18 years;\n\n(b) the name of the holder of the lucky envelope permit and the number of the permit must be—\n\n(i) clearly visible on a receptacle, other than a lucky envelope vending machine, from which lucky envelopes are dispensed; and\n\n(ii) a visible distinctive serial number; and\n\n(iii) clearly visible at the point of sale of lucky envelopes;\n\n(c) lucky envelopes in respect of which a cash prize may be payable may only be sold—\n\n(i) on premises licensed under section 8 of the **Liquor Control Reform Act 1998**; or\n\n(ii) on premises occupied by the executive or governing body of the permit holder; or\n\n(iii) at a bingo centre operated under a bingo centre operator's licence; or\n\n(iv) at a fete, fair, carnival or gymkhana;\n\n(d) the notional value of a series of lucky envelopes must not exceed $5000;\n\n(e) the value of prizes available to be won in a series of lucky envelopes must be not less than 50% and not more than 75% of the notional value of the series;\n\n(f) a lucky envelope may only be sold by lucky envelope vending machine if the machine complies with the requirements of subregulation (2).\n\n(2) For the purposes of subregulation (1)(f), a lucky envelope vending machine must—\n\n(a) have—\n\n(i) a separate lockable coin or token tray; and\n\n(ii) a visible distinctive serial number; and\n\n(iii) a coin or token reject or return mechanism which prevents it from accepting coins or tokens without dispensing a lucky envelope; and\n\n(b) be constructed to prevent the dispensing of a lucky envelope without the insertion of a coin or token; and\n\n(c) have clearly displayed on it—\n\n(i) the name of the permit holder; and\n\n(ii) the number of the permit; and\n\n(iii) the number of lucky envelopes in the series to which the lucky envelope belongs; and\n\n(iv) a list of prizes and winning numbers, symbols or letters; and\n\n(d) in the case of an electronic lucky envelope vending machine, in addition to any other requirement, be—\n\n(i) designed and constructed in such a way as to prevent physical or electronic access to a random number generator or a storage device (including memory) by a person other than a technician conducting necessary repairs or maintenance; and\n\n(ii) designed and constructed so that a purchaser of lucky envelopes cannot accumulate credits; and\n\n(iii) constructed so as to count and permanently record, by means of a tamper-proof device, each lucky envelope dispensed; and\n\n(e) be installed on premises—\n\n(i) licensed under section 8 of the **Liquor Control Reform Act 1998**; or\n\n(ii) occupied by the executive or governing body of the permit holder; or\n\n(iii) in a bingo centre operated under a bingo centre operator's licence.\n\n","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"81","sectionType":"section","heading":"Standards for lucky envelopes","content":"\t81 Standards for lucky envelopes\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 8.4.1 of the Act, the prescribed standards for lucky envelopes are the standards set out in this regulation.\n\n(2) A lucky envelope must be part of a series.\n\n(3) Each series of lucky envelopes, except a lucky envelope dispensed from an electronic lucky envelope vending machine, must include and have published with it by the supplier—\n\n(a) the same predetermined price for each lucky envelope which complies with regulation 80; and\n\n(b) a predetermined value of prizes and number of winning lucky envelopes which complies with regulation 80.\n\n(4) Each lucky envelope in a series, other than a lucky envelope in a punchboard, must have printed on the outside—\n\n(a) a serial number identifying the series; and\n\n(b) the name of the supplier; and\n\n(c) the name of the holder of the lucky envelope permit and the number of the permit, unless—\n\n(i) the name, ACN (if any), address and telephone number of the supplier are printed on each lucky envelope; and\n\n(ii) the supplier maintains on the supplier's premises for 3 years after the date on which the lucky envelopes were supplied a register of—\n\n(A) the serial number of the series; and\n\n(B) the name of the holder of the lucky envelope permit; and\n\n(C) the number of the lucky envelope permit; and\n\n(D) the date on which the lucky envelopes were supplied; and\n\n(E) the name of the person to whom the lucky envelopes were supplied.\n\n(5) A punchboard for lucky envelopes must have printed on it the name of the holder of the lucky envelope permit and the number of the permit, unless—\n\n(a) the name, ACN (if any), address and telephone number of the supplier are printed on the punchboard; and\n\n(b) the supplier maintains on the supplier's premises for 3 years after the date on which the punchboard was supplied a register of—\n\n(i) the name of the permit holder; and\n\n(ii) the number of the permit; and\n\n(iii) the date on which the punchboard was supplied; and\n\n(iv) the name of the person to whom the punchboard was supplied.\n\n(6) Each lucky envelope must have printed on it so as only to be visible once the lucky envelope has been dispensed—\n\n(a) symbols, numerals or letters or any combination of any of them; or\n\n(b) characters referred to in paragraph (a) and, in the case of a winning ticket, an indication that the ticket is a winning ticket; or\n\n(c) the description of a prize which the holder is entitled to claim; or\n\n(d) an indication that the lucky envelope is not a winning ticket; or\n\n(e) a combination of paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d).\n\n(7) If one or more lucky envelopes in a series comply with subregulation (6)(a) or (b), there must be displayed at the point of sale of the lucky envelopes (or, in the case of a lucky envelope in a punchboard, on the punchboard) a legend which indicates—\n\n(a) the combinations of characters that entitle the holder to claim a prize; and\n\n(b) if there are different prizes, the prize to which a particular combination relates.\n\n","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"82","sectionType":"section","heading":"Records—lucky envelope permits","content":"\t82 Records—lucky envelope permits\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.6.2 of the Act, in relation to the holder of a lucky envelope permit, the prescribed information is, in respect of each series of envelopes sold, the following—\n\n(a) the premises on which the lucky envelopes were sold;\n\n(b) the name of each person who sold them, except if the lucky envelopes were sold in—\n\n(i) premises licensed under section 8 of the **Liquor Control Reform Act 1998**; or\n\n(ii) premises occupied by the executive or governing body of the permit holder; or\n\n(iii) a bingo centre operated under a bingo centre operator's licence;\n\n(c) the notional value, gross receipts and value of prizes paid;\n\n(d) the amount and nature of expenses incurred and the persons to whom those expenses were paid;\n\n(e) the number of lucky envelopes not sold.\n\nDivision 6—Raffles\n\n","sortOrder":95},{"sectionNumber":"83","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prescribed conditions of raffle permits","content":"\t83 Prescribed conditions of raffle permits\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 8.3.13(3)(a) of the Act, the following are prescribed conditions of a raffle permit—\n\n(a) the number of raffle tickets printed must not exceed the number authorised by the raffle permit;\n\n(b) on the sale of a raffle ticket the responsible person must ensure that a permanent record is made of sufficient information to identify and locate the person to whom the ticket is sold;\n\n(c) raffle tickets may only be sold during the period authorised by the raffle permit;\n\n(d) a ticket in a raffle can only be used to enter a separate raffle if authorised by the raffle permit or permits;\n\n(e) the raffle ticket must be printed in accordance with subregulation (2);\n\n(f) the raffle must be drawn on the day authorised by the raffle  permit;\n\n(g) the method of the draw must allow each raffle ticket in the draw a random and equal chance of being drawn;\n\n(h) if there is more than one prize, the first raffle ticket drawn must win the first prize;\n\n(i) unless authorised by the raffle permit, a raffle ticket which has been drawn is not eligible to be drawn again;\n\n(j) the results of the draw must be published in accordance with the method of publication or notification printed on the raffle tickets;\n\n(k) if a winner is present at the draw or is otherwise readily identified, the holder of the raffle permit must pay or otherwise transfer the prize to the winner within 28 days after the draw;\n\n(l) a book-buyer's prize must not be offered or paid unless the raffle permit authorises a book-buyer's prize;\n\n(m) a person who sells tickets in the raffle—\n\n(i) must be expressly or by necessary implication authorised by the holder of the raffle permit or responsible person to do so; and\n\n(ii) may only be remunerated (whether by way of a ticket seller's prize or otherwise) in accordance with a condition imposed by the Commission under section 8.3.13(3)(b) of the Act.\n\n(2) For the purposes of subregulation (1)(e), each raffle ticket must have the following printed on it—\n\n(a) the name of the holder of the raffle permit;\n\n(b) the raffle permit number;\n\n(c) the raffle ticket price and the maximum number of tickets authorised by the raffle permit;\n\n(d) a description of each prize and its value;\n\n(e) when and where the raffle is to be drawn and the method of publication or notification of the results.\n\n(3) For the purposes of section 8.3.13(3)(a) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition of a raffle permit that—\n\n(a) if the responsible person is not an employee of the holder of the raffle permit and will receive payment other than reasonable out of pocket expenses; or\n\n(b) if the holder of the raffle permit or the responsible person has an agreement or arrangement with a person (other than an employee of the permit holder) to promote or conduct the raffle for reward—\n\nthat fact (including the name and, if applicable, the ACN of the responsible person or the person promoting or conducting the raffle for reward) must be printed—\n\n(c) on every ticket; or\n\n(d) on all material advertising the raffle.\n\n","sortOrder":96},{"sectionNumber":"84","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions for raffles where raffle permit not required—prize value of $5000 or less","content":"\t84 Conditions for raffles where raffle permit not required—prize value of $5000 or less\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 8.2.3(b) of the Act, the prescribed conditions are the following—\n\n(a) a person may only conduct a raffle referred to in section 8.2.3 of the Act with the written authority of the governing body of the community or charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle;\n\n(b) in relation to the raffle tickets in the raffle—\n\n(i) the period during which tickets are sold must not exceed 3 months; and\n\n(ii) the value of the total number of tickets available for sale must not be greater than 6 times and not less than twice the value of all of the prizes; and\n\n(iii) unless the raffle is a small raffle, on the sale of a ticket the person conducting the raffle must ensure that a permanent record is made of sufficient information to identify and locate the person to whom the ticket is sold; and\n\n(iv) a ticket in a raffle must not be a ticket in another raffle; and\n\n(v) unless the raffle is a small raffle, the following is printed on each ticket—\n\n(A) the name of the community or charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle;\n\n(B) the ticket price;\n\n(C) a description of each prize and its value;\n\n(D) the location, the date and the time at which the raffle will be drawn and the method of publication or notification of the results;\n\n(c) the raffle tickets for a small raffle may be—\n\n(i) a blank raffle book numbered on both the butt and the ticket; or\n\n(ii) in the case of a raffle where the method of the draw is to be a spinning wheel, buttless numbered tickets from a perforated ticket sheet having no more numbers than there are divisions on the wheel;\n\n(d) in relation to the drawing of the raffle—\n\n(i) unless the raffle is a small raffle, the raffle must be drawn on the day printed on the ticket, being a day not more than 14 days after the proposed last ticket sale; and\n\n(ii) the method of the draw must allow each ticket in the draw a random and equal chance of being drawn; and\n\n(iii) if there is more than one prize, the first ticket drawn must win the first prize; and\n\n(iv) unless the raffle is a small raffle, a ticket which has been drawn is not eligible to be drawn again;\n\n(e) unless the raffle is a small raffle, the results of the draw must be published or notified in accordance with the method of publication or notification printed on the tickets;\n\n(f) in addition to paragraph (e), in relation to the drawing of a small raffle—\n\n(i) if a ticket butt is drawn to win a prize, the raffle must be drawn again, without the ticket butt if—\n\n(A) the person to whom the ticket was sold cannot be identified from the butt; and\n\n(B) no person comes forward to claim the prize within a reasonable period after the draw is loudly proclaimed; and\n\n(ii) if the method of the draw is a spinning wheel, the wheel must be spun again if no person comes forward to claim the prize within a reasonable period after the draw is loudly proclaimed and—\n\n(A) there is no ticket butt; or\n\n(B) there is a ticket butt and the person to whom a ticket was sold cannot be identified from the butt; or\n\n(C) the wheel has to come to a rest on a number for which a ticket may not have been sold;\n\n(g) if a winner was present at the draw or is otherwise readily identified, the community or charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle must pay or otherwise transfer the prize to the winner within 28 days after the draw;\n\n(h) a book-buyer's prize must not be offered or paid;\n\n(i) a person who sells tickets must not be remunerated in respect of that activity;\n\n(j) the person conducting a raffle must ensure that accurate records are kept for a period of 3 years after finalisation of the raffle of—\n\n(i) the disposition of funds; and\n\n(ii) unless the raffle is a small raffle, all tickets which have been printed; and\n\n(iii) the distribution of prizes.\n\n(2) For the purposes of section 8.2.3(b) of the Act, it is a prescribed condition of a raffle permit that—\n\n(a) if the person who conducts a raffle is not an employee of the community or charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle and will receive payment other than reasonable out of pocket expenses; or\n\n(b) if the person who conducts the raffle or the community and charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle has an agreement or arrangement with another person (other than an employee of the community or charitable organisation) to conduct or promote the raffle for reward—\n\nthat fact (including the name and, if applicable, the ACN of the responsible person or the person promoting or conducting the raffle for reward) must be printed—\n\n(c) on every ticket; or\n\n(d) on all material advertising the raffle.\n\n","sortOrder":97},{"sectionNumber":"85","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure if raffle proceeds to be paid to or for a political party","content":"\t85 Disclosure if raffle proceeds to be paid to or for a political party\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.2.5(1) of the Act, every ticket in the raffle to which that section applies must—\n\n(a) state that all or part of the proceeds of the raffle are to be paid to or for the purposes of a political party; and\n\n(b) name that political party.\n\n","sortOrder":98},{"sectionNumber":"86","sectionType":"section","heading":"Records—raffle permits","content":"\t86 Records—raffle permits\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.6.2 of the Act, the prescribed information that must be kept by the holder of a raffle permit is the following—\n\n(a) the manner in which tickets in the raffle were sold and how ticket sales were publicised;\n\n(b) the names of the persons to whom tickets were issued for sale and, for each person, how many tickets were sold, how many tickets were returned and how much money was remitted;\n\n(c) when and how the raffle was drawn;\n\n(d) the names and addresses of the winners and a description (including the value) of their respective prizes.\n\n","sortOrder":99},{"sectionNumber":"87","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disposal of unclaimed prizes in a raffle","content":"\t87 Disposal of unclaimed prizes in a raffle\n\n(1) This regulation applies if—\n\n(a) a winner does not claim a prize in a raffle; and\n\n(b) the person who conducted the raffle cannot, after reasonable efforts to do so, find a winner of the prize.\n\n(2) The community or charitable organisation to benefit from the raffle to which this regulation applies—\n\n(a) must ensure that the prize is retained for 3 months after the draw; or\n\n(b) if the prize is livestock or property of a perishable nature, may sell the prize in a way that brings a reasonable price and retain the proceeds (after deducting the reasonable costs of the sale) for 12 months after the draw.\n\n(3) If a prize or proceeds of the sale of a prize retained under subregulation (2) remain unclaimed after a period of 12 months after the draw of the raffle, the community or charitable organisation must—\n\n(a) sell or otherwise dispose of the prize if this has not already been done; and\n\n(b) after deducting the reasonable costs of the sale or disposal, pay the proceeds to the Treasurer for payment into the Consolidated Fund.\n\nDivision 7—Commercial raffle organisers\n\n","sortOrder":100},{"sectionNumber":"88","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for commercial raffle organiser's licence—publication of notice","content":"\t88 Application for commercial raffle organiser's licence—publication of notice\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5A.5(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed information is the following—\n\n(a) a statement that the application has been made;\n\n(b) the name and business address of the applicant;\n\n(c) if applicable, the ACN of the applicant;\n\n(d) the address and telephone number of the Commission.\n\n","sortOrder":101},{"sectionNumber":"89","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions of commercial raffle organiser's licence","content":"\t89 Conditions of commercial raffle organiser's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5A.8(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed conditions are the following—\n\n(a) the licensee must not purchase raffle tickets in a commercial raffle run by the licensee;\n\n(b) the licensee must take all reasonable steps to ensure that the following persons do not purchase raffle tickets in a commercial raffle run by the licensee—\n\n(i) a relative of the licensee;\n\n(ii) a director or employee of the licensee;\n\n(iii) any person liable as licensee, in relation to the raffle, under section 8.5A.10(3) or 8.5A.10(4) of the Act;\n\n(iv) a relative of a person referred to in subparagraph (ii) or (iii);\n\n(c) if the licensee enters into an agreement with a community or charitable organisation under section 8.5A.23 of the Act for the conduct, in whole or in part, of a raffle on behalf of the organisation, the licensee must—\n\n(i) for each successive period of 7 days after the agreement is entered into, or within any other period or periods determined by the Commission and notified in writing to the licensee, deposit the portion of the raffle proceeds owing to the community or charitable organisation under the agreement into a bank account of the community or charitable organisation; and\n\n(ii) at the time any money is deposited by the licensee under subparagraph (i), provide the community or charitable organisation with a written statement detailing the number of tickets sold during the raffle and the amount of money deposited.\n\n","sortOrder":102},{"sectionNumber":"90","sectionType":"section","heading":"Maximum fee","content":"\t90 Maximum fee\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5A.23(2)(e) of the Act, the maximum fee to be paid to a licensee must be fair and reasonable, having regard to—\n\n(a) the activities and the objects of the community or charitable organisation; and\n\n(b) the services to be provided by the licensee.\n\n","sortOrder":103},{"sectionNumber":"91","sectionType":"section","heading":"Auditing of accounts and financial statements","content":"\t91 Auditing of accounts and financial statements\n\nAn audit conducted under section 8.5A.26(4) of the Act must be undertaken by an auditor who is—\n\n(a) a registered company auditor; or\n\n(b) a member of, and holds a current practicing certificate from the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia, CPA Australia or the Institute of Public Accountants; or\n\n(c) if the licensee is an incorporated association, a person approved by the Registrar as an auditor under section 96(4) or 99(5) of the **Associations Incorporation Reform Act 2012** for the purposes of section 96 or 99 of that Act, as the case requires.\n\n","sortOrder":104},{"sectionNumber":"Part 7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Duties of gaming industry employees","content":"Part 7—Duties of gaming industry employees\n\n","sortOrder":105},{"sectionNumber":"92","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of a gaming industry employee","content":"\t92 Duties of a gaming industry employee\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.2(1)(a) of the Act, the prescribed duties of a gaming industry employee employed by or working for a venue operator, the monitoring licensee or a gaming machine services provider are—\n\n(a) to perform any task that requires access to the logic area of a gaming machine at the premises of an approved venue; and\n\n(b) to possess keys that unlock the logic area of a gaming machine at an approved venue; and\n\n(c) to issue keys referred to in paragraph (b) to another person holding a gaming industry employee's licence; and\n\n(d) to perform any task that requires access to any of the following restricted monitoring components contained in a gaming machine at an approved venue—\n\n(i) a jackpot interface board;\n\n(ii) a slot machine interface board; and\n\n(e) to supervise persons carrying out any of the duties referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c) at an approved venue.\n\n","sortOrder":106},{"sectionNumber":"93","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions of a gaming industry employee in a bingo centre","content":"\t93 Functions of a gaming industry employee in a bingo centre\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.2(1)(b) of the Act, the prescribed functions of a gaming industry employee in a bingo centre are—\n\n(a) to perform, as a sole employee, any of the functions in relation to the operation or administration of a bingo game, including—\n\n(i) selling bingo tickets; and\n\n(ii) writing up running sheets; and\n\n(iii) checking back numbers on bingo tickets; and\n\n(iv) paying prizes; and\n\n(b) to supervise persons carrying out any of the functions referred to in paragraph (a)(i), (ii), (iii) and (iv).\n\n","sortOrder":107},{"sectionNumber":"94","sectionType":"section","heading":"Other duties of a gaming industry employee","content":"\t94 Other duties of a gaming industry employee\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.2(1)(g) of the Act, the prescribed duties of a gaming industry employee are—\n\n(a) to install gaming equipment at an approved venue; and\n\n(b) to connect gaming equipment to an electronic monitoring system at the premises of the monitoring licensee or an approved venue; and\n\n(c) to supervise persons carrying out a duty referred to in paragraph (a) or (b).\n\nPart 8—Fees\n\nDivision 1—Gaming machines\n\n\t95 Application for approval of premises\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.3.4(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 876·48 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":108},{"sectionNumber":"96","sectionType":"section","heading":"Modification of gaming machine areas","content":"\t96 Modification of gaming machine areas\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.3.16(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 8·48 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":109},{"sectionNumber":"97","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for venue operator's licence","content":"\t97 Application for venue operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.8(2)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 154·59 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":110},{"sectionNumber":"98","sectionType":"section","heading":"Nominee of licensee","content":"\t98 Nominee of licensee\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.14(3A)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 10·37 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":111},{"sectionNumber":"99","sectionType":"section","heading":"Renewal of venue operator's licence","content":"\t99 Renewal of venue operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.16(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 85·43 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":112},{"sectionNumber":"100","sectionType":"section","heading":"Proposal of amendment by venue operator","content":"\t100 Proposal of amendment by venue operator\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.18(1)(b)  of the Act, the prescribed fee is—\n\n(a) in the case of an amendment under section 3.4.17(1)(a) of the Act, being the addition of an approved venue, 20·13 fee units; and\n\n(b) in the case of an amendment under section 3.4.17(1)(b) of the Act, being an increase in the number of gaming machines permitted in an approved venue—\n\n(i) in the circumstances where a private inquiry is to be conducted under the **Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation Act 2011**, 88·14 fee units; or\n\n(ii) in all other circumstances, 876·48 fee units; and\n\n(c) in the case of an amendment under section 3.4.17(1)(c) of the Act, 8·48 fee units; and\n\n(d) in the case of an amendment under section 3.4.17(1)(d) of the Act, 876·48 fee units; and\n\n(e) in the case of an amendment under section 3.4.17(2) of the Act, 876·48 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":113},{"sectionNumber":"101","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to be listed on Roll","content":"\t101 Application to be listed on Roll\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4.61(2)(a) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 203·97 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":114},{"sectionNumber":"102","sectionType":"section","heading":"Approval of gaming machine types and games","content":"\t102 Approval of gaming machine types and games\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.5.4(1) of the Act, the prescribed fee is—\n\n(a) in the case of a gaming machine type, 26·93 fee units; or\n\n(b) in the case of a game, 12·05 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":115},{"sectionNumber":"103","sectionType":"section","heading":"Variation of gaming machine types and games","content":"\t103 Variation of gaming machine types and games\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.5.5(3B)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is—\n\n(a) in the case of a gaming machine type, 10·79 fee units; or\n\n(b) in the case of a game, 10·79 fee units.\n\nDivision 2—Gaming machine entitlements\n\n","sortOrder":116},{"sectionNumber":"104","sectionType":"section","heading":"Request for amendment of geographic area condition or venue condition","content":"\t104 Request for amendment of geographic area condition or venue condition\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4A.12(2)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 3·41 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":117},{"sectionNumber":"105","sectionType":"section","heading":"Fee payable for gaming machine entitlement transfers","content":"\t105 Fee payable for gaming machine entitlement transfers\n\nFor the purposes of section 3.4A.15(1) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 11·24 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":118},{"sectionNumber":"106","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs of sale of forfeited gaming machine entitlements that are allocated again","content":"\t106 Costs of sale of forfeited gaming machine entitlements that are allocated again\n\nFor the purposes of paragraph (a) of the definition of ***State-owned amounts*** in section 3.4A.33(2) of the Act, the prescribed costs of sale are the amount of 13·39 fee units.\n\nDivision 3—Community and charitable gaming\n\n","sortOrder":119},{"sectionNumber":"107","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for minor gaming permit","content":"\t107 Application for minor gaming permit\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.3.12(2)(e) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 1·74 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":120},{"sectionNumber":"108","sectionType":"section","heading":"Amendment of conditions of minor gaming permit","content":"\t108 Amendment of conditions of minor gaming permit\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.3.17(2)(a)(iii) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 1·06 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":121},{"sectionNumber":"109","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for bingo centre operator's licence","content":"\t109 Application for bingo centre operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5.3(1)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 154·59 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":122},{"sectionNumber":"110","sectionType":"section","heading":"Renewal of bingo centre operator's licence","content":"\t110 Renewal of bingo centre operator's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5.11(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 85·43 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":123},{"sectionNumber":"111","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for commercial raffle organiser's licence","content":"\t111 Application for commercial raffle organiser's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5A.5(2)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 154·59 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":124},{"sectionNumber":"112","sectionType":"section","heading":"Renewal of commercial raffle organiser's licence","content":"\t112 Renewal of commercial raffle organiser's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 8.5A.12(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 85·43 fee units.\n\nDivision 4—Sports betting fees\n\n","sortOrder":125},{"sectionNumber":"113","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for approval as sports controlling body","content":"\t113 Application for approval as sports controlling body\n\nFor the purposes of section 4.5.12(2)(c) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 211·78 fee units.\n\nDivision 5—Calcutta Sweepstakes\n\nReg. 114 amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 126.\n\n","sortOrder":126},{"sectionNumber":"114","sectionType":"section","heading":"Calcutta Sweepstakes","content":"\t114 Calcutta Sweepstakes\n\nFor the purposes of section 2.2.6(3) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 3·71 fee units.\n\nDivision 6—Gaming industry employees\n\n","sortOrder":127},{"sectionNumber":"115","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for gaming industry employee's licence","content":"\t115 Application for gaming industry employee's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.4(3)(a) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 5·16 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":128},{"sectionNumber":"116","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for replacement identification","content":"\t116 Application for replacement identification\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.8(4)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee is $10.72.\n\n","sortOrder":129},{"sectionNumber":"117","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for renewal of gaming industry employee's licence","content":"\t117 Application for renewal of gaming industry employee's licence\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.11(2) of the Act, the prescribed fee is 3·40 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":130},{"sectionNumber":"118","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for a gaming industry employee's licence by casino employees","content":"\t118 Application for a gaming industry employee's licence by casino employees\n\nFor the purposes of section 9A.1.21(2)(a) of the Act, the prescribed fee  is 3·39 fee units.\n\nDivision 7—Commission approval\n\n","sortOrder":131},{"sectionNumber":"119","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for approval of associates","content":"\t119 Application for approval of associates\n\nFor the purposes of section 10.4A.7(2A)(b) of the Act, the prescribed fee  is—\n\n(a) in the case of a natural person, 7·10 fee units; or\n\n(b) in any other case, 36·96 fee units.\n\n","sortOrder":132},{"sectionNumber":"Part 9","sectionType":"part","heading":"Infringement offences","content":"Part 9—Infringement offences\n\n","sortOrder":133},{"sectionNumber":"120","sectionType":"section","heading":"Infringement offences","content":"\t120 Infringement offences\n\n(1) For the purposes of section 10.5.20(1) of the Act, an offence specified in Column 2 of Schedule 6 is prescribed as an infringement offence.\n\n(2) For the purposes of section 10.5.21 of the Act, the prescribed infringement penalty for an infringement offence is the penalty set out in Column 3 of Schedule 6 in respect of that infringement offence.\n\nPt 10 (Heading and regs 121–128) expired by force of S.R. No. 55/2015 reg. 128, new Pt 10 (Heading and regs 121, 122) inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":134},{"sectionNumber":"Part 10","sectionType":"part","heading":"Training requirements","content":"Part 10—Training requirements\n\nNew reg. 121 inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 6, substituted by S.R. No. 111/2016 reg. 8, revoked by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 6.\n\nNew reg. 122 inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 6, substituted by S.R. No. 111/2016 reg. 8, revoked by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 6.\n\nNew reg. 123 inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 8.\n\n","sortOrder":135},{"sectionNumber":"123","sectionType":"section","heading":"Training requirements for person commencing employment after 1 January 2017","content":"\t123 Training requirements for person commencing employment after 1 January 2017\n\n(1) This regulation applies to a person who becomes a person to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies after 1 January 2017.\n\n(2) For the purpose of section 9A.1.18(2) of the Act, the training requirements are that—\n\n(a) the person completes the first training module within one month of becoming a person to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies; and\n\n(b) the person completes the second training module within 6 months of becoming a person to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies.\n\nReg. 123A inserted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":136},{"sectionNumber":"123A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Training requirements for person who has completed the first and second training modules","content":"\t123A Training requirements for person who has completed the first and second training modules\n\n(1) This regulation applies to a person—\n\n(a) to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies; and\n\n(b) who has completed the first training module and the second training module.\n\n(2) For the purpose of section 9A.1.18(2) of the Act, the training requirements are that—\n\n(a) the person completes the third training module and the fourth training module—\n\n(i) if the person is a person specified in subregulation (3)—before the later of the third anniversary of the date recorded on the person's RSG certificate  for the second training module or 1 September 2021; or\n\n(ii) in any other case—before the third anniversary of the date recorded on the person's RSG certificate for the second training module; and\n\n(b) the person completes the third training module and the fourth training module at intervals of not more than 3 years after the date recorded on the person's most recent RSG certificate for the fourth training module; and\n\n(c) on each occasion, the person must complete the third training module no later than 3 months prior to completing the fourth training module.\n\n(3) Subregulation (2)(a)(i) applies to a person—\n\n(a) who became a person to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies before 1 January 2017; and\n\n(b) who had completed the second training module before 31 December 2017.\n\nNew reg. 124 inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 8.\n\n","sortOrder":137},{"sectionNumber":"124","sectionType":"section","heading":"Minister may specify content of training requirements","content":"\t124 Minister may specify content of training requirements\n\nReg. 124(1) substituted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 8(1).\n\n(1) The Minister, by instrument, may specify the following—\n\n(a) the content of the first training module;\n\n(b) the content of the second training module;\n\n(c) the content of the third training module;\n\n(d) the content of the fourth training module.\n\nReg. 124(2) substituted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 8(2).\n\n(2)  Within 14 days after specifying the content under subregulation (1), the Minister must cause the instrument specifying that content to be published on the website of the Department.\n\n(3) An instrument made under subregulation (1) takes effect on the day it is published under subregulation (2).\n\nReg. 124(4) revoked by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 8(3).\n\nNew reg. 125 inserted by S.R. No.  \n111/2016 reg. 8, substituted by S.R. No. 90/2020 reg. 9.\n\n","sortOrder":138},{"sectionNumber":"125","sectionType":"section","heading":"Minister may specify entities to provide second training module and fourth training module","content":"\t125 Minister may specify entities to provide second training module and fourth training module\n\n(1) The Minister may specify an entity whose venue support workers may provide the second training module and the fourth training module.\n\n(2) The Minister must cause a list of the entities specified under subregulation (1) to be published on the website of the Department.\n\n(3) Within 14 days after specifying an entity under subregulation (1), the Minister must cause the list published under subregulation (2) to be updated.\n\n(4) The specification of an entity under subregulation (1) takes effect on the day that the list is updated under subregulation (3) to include that entity.\n\n","sortOrder":139},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 1","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Regulations revoked","content":"Schedule 1—Regulations revoked\n\nRegulation 4\n\n| *S.R. No.* | *Title* |\n| 60/2005 | Gambling Regulation (Signage) Regulations 2005 |\n| 61/2005 | Gambling Regulation Regulations 2005 |\n| 38/2006 | Gambling Regulation (Commercial Raffle Organisers) Regulations 2006 |\n| 100/2007 | Gambling Regulation (Sports Betting Fees) (Amendment) Regulations 2007 |\n| 103/2008 | Gambling Regulation (Race Fields) Regulations 2008 |\n| 108/2009 | Gambling Regulation Amendment (Fees) Regulations 2009 |\n| 114/2009 | Gambling Regulation (Prescribed Connection and Prescribed Profit) Regulations 2009 |\n| 141/2009 | Gambling Regulation Amendment (Bingo) Regulations 2009 |\n| 167/2009 | Gambling Regulation Amendment (Advertising) Regulations 2009 |\n| 121/2011 | Gambling Regulation Amendment Regulations 2011 |\n| 18/2012 | Gambling Regulation (Signage) Amendment Regulations 2012 |\n| 80/2012 | Gambling Regulation Amendment Regulations 2012 |\n| 93/2014 | Gambling Regulation (Prescribed Connection and Prescribed Profit) Amendment Regulations 2014 |\n\n","sortOrder":140},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 2","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Diagrams of gaming machines","content":"Schedule 2—Diagrams of gaming machines\n\nRegulation 19\n\nDIAGRAM 1\n\nGAMING MACHINE WITH TOP BOX\n\n![60-2001]()\n\n**Base**\n\n**Button panel**\n\n**Video screen**\n\n**Art work**\n\n**Top box**\n\nDIAGRAM 2\n\nGAMING MACHINE WITHOUT TOP BOX\n\n**Base**\n\n**Video screen**\n\n**Button panel**\n\n","sortOrder":141},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 3","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Corporate logo","content":"Schedule 3—Corporate logo\n\nRegulations 33 and 36\n\n![CROWN-blk]()\n\n","sortOrder":142},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 4","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Financial statement relating to totalisator or approved betting competition","content":"Schedule 4—Financial statement relating to totalisator or approved betting competition\n\nRegulation 50\n\nStatement of Money Paid into *TOTALISATOR OR  \nAPPROVED BETTING COMPETITION\n\nName of Race meeting or event Date of meeting or  \nevent\n\nI certify that the above is a true account of sums received through the totalisator or approved betting competition in relation to this meeting or event.\n\nChief Executive Officer\n\nDated\n\n* This form to be used for all totalisators and approved betting competitions.\n\nSch. 5 amended by S.R. No.  \n55/2015 reg. 127.\n\n","sortOrder":143},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 5","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Application to publish and use Victorian race fields","content":"Schedule 5—Application to publish and use Victorian race fields\n\nRegulation 56\n\nApplication to Publish AND Use Victorian  \nRace Fields\n\nI apply for approval to publish and use the following race fields information:\n\n🞎 Victorian horse racing race fields\n\n🞎 Victorian harness racing race fields\n\n🞎 Victorian greyhound racing race fields\n\nPlease tick\n\nDETAILS OF APPLICANT\n\nName of Applicant:\n\nAddress of Applicant:\n\nApplicant's contact details:\n\nState, Territory or Country where  \nApplicant is licensed to operate:\n\nTrading names used by Applicant:\n\nApplicant's ACN or ABN:\n\nADDITIONAL INFORMATION\n\n[*Insert any additional information required by the appropriate controlling body under section 4.2.3B(2)(c) of the* ***Gambling Regulation Act 2003***.]\n\nCERTIFICATION\n\nI certify that I am authorised to make the application on behalf of and that the information provided is true and correct.\n\nSignature of authorised representative:\n\nName of authorised representative:\n\nDate:\n\nSch. 6 amended by S.R. Nos 111/2016 reg. 9, 121/2023 reg. 18.\n\n","sortOrder":144},{"sectionNumber":"Sch 6","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Infringement offences","content":"Schedule 6—Infringement offences\n\nRegulation 120\n\n| *Column 1* | *Column 2* | *Column 3* |\n| --- | --- | --- |\n| *Item No.* | *Prescribed infringement offence* | *Prescribed infringement penalty* |\n|  | *Gambling Regulation Act 2003* | |\n| 1 | An offence against section 3.4.14(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 2 | An offence against section 3.4.14(2) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 3 | An offence against section 3.4.14(3) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 4 | An offence against section 3.5.8(3) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 5 | An offence against section 3.5.25(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 3 penalty units |\n| 6 | An offence against section 3.5.26 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 3 penalty units |\n| 9 | An offence against section 3.6.9(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 10 | An offence against section 3.7.5(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 11 | An offence against section 4.5.19(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 12 | An offence against section 4.5A.6(5) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 2 penalty units |\n| 14 | An offence against section 4.8.4(1A) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 16 | An offence against section 8.5.9(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 17 | An offence against section 8.5.9(2) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 18 | An offence against section 8.5.38 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 19 | An offence against section 8.5A.10(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 20 | An offence against section 8.5A.10(2) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 21 | An offence against section 8.5A.27 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 6 penalty units |\n| 22 | An offence against section 8.6.2(2) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 23 | An offence against section 8.6.3(2) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 3 penalty units |\n| 24 | An offence against section 9A.1.6(4) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 25 | An offence against section 9A.1.15 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 2 penalty units |\n| 26 | An offence against section 9A.1.18(3) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 4 penalty units |\n| 27 | An offence against section 9A.1.22(1) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 2 penalty units |\n| 28 | An offence against section 10.4A.4(1)(a) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 2 penalty units |\n| 29 | An offence against section 10.4A.4(1)(c) of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003** | 2 penalty units |\n|  | *Casino Control Act 1991* | |\n| 30 | An offence against section 54A of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 2 penalty units |\n| 31 | An offence against section 56(1) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 6 penalty units |\n| 32 | An offence against section 57(1) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 2 penalty units |\n| 33 | An offence against section 58A(2) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 4 penalty units |\n| 34 | An offence against section 66(1) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 3 penalty units |\n| 35 | An offence against section 77(1) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 2 penalty units |\n| 36 | An offence against section 77(2) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 2 penalty units |\n| 37 | An offence against section 77(3) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 2 penalty units |\n| 38 | An offence against section 79(2) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 4 penalty units |\n| 39 | An offence against section 126(1) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 6 penalty units |\n| 40 | An offence against section 127(2) of the **Casino Control Act 1991** | 6 penalty units |\n|  | *Gambling Regulation (Pre-commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014* | |\n| 41 | An offence against regulation 18(6) of the Gambling Regulation (Pre‑commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014 | 1 penalty unit |\n| 42 | An offence against regulation 24(2) of the Gambling Regulation (Pre‑commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014 | 1 penalty unit |\n| 43 | An offence against regulation 25(2) of the Gambling Regulation (Pre‑commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014 | 1 penalty unit |\n| 44 | An offence against regulation 27(2) of the Gambling Regulation (Pre‑commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014 | 1 penalty unit |\n| 45 | An offence against regulation 31(2) of the Gambling Regulation (Pre‑commitment and Loyalty Scheme) Regulations 2014 | 1 penalty unit |\n|  |  |  |\n|  |  |  |\n|  | *Gambling Regulations 2015* | |\n| 46 | An offence against regulation 12(1) of the Gambling Regulations 2015 | 3 penalty units |\n| 47 | An offence against regulation 12(3) of the Gambling Regulations 2015 | 3 penalty units |\n| 48 | An offence against regulation 14(1) of the Gambling Regulations 2015 | 3 penalty units |\n| 49 | An offence against regulation 14(3) of the Gambling Regulations 2015 | 3 penalty units |\n| 50 | An offence against regulation 17 of the Gambling Regulations 2015 | 3 penalty units |\n\n ═══════════════\n\nEndnotes\n\n1 General information\n\nSee [www.legislation.vic.gov.au](http://www.legislation.vic.gov.au) for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.\n\nThe Gambling Regulations 2015, S.R. No. 55/2015 were made on 16 June 2015 by the Administrator of the State of Victoria, as the Governor's deputy, with the advice of the Executive Council under section 11.2.1 of the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003**, No. 114/2003 and came into operation as follows:\n\nRegulations 1–120, Schedules 1–6 on 20 June 2015: regulation 3(1); regulations 121–128 on 1 July 2015: regulation 3(2).\n\nThe Gambling Regulations 2015 will sunset on 14 June 2026: see Subordinate Legislation (Gambling Regulations 2015) Extension Regulations 2025, S.R. No. 37/2025.\n\nINTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)\n\nStyle changes\n\nSection 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.\n\nReferences to ILA s. 39B\n\nSidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided regulation, rule or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subregulations, subrules or subclauses the original regulation, rule or clause becomes subregulation, subrule or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression \"(1)\" at the beginning of the original regulation, rule or clause.\n\nInterpretation\n\nAs from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:\n\n• Headings\n\nAll headings included in a Statutory Rule which is made on or after  \n1 January 2001 form part of that Statutory Rule. Any heading inserted in a Statutory Rule which was made before 1 January 2001, by a Statutory Rule made on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Statutory Rule.  \nThis includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; Orders; Parts into which an Order is divided; clauses; regulations; rules; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms.  \nSee section 36(1A)(2A)(2B).\n\n• Examples, diagrams or notes\n\nAll examples, diagrams or notes included in a Statutory Rule which is made on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Statutory Rule. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in a Statutory Rule which was made before 1 January 2001, by a Statutory Rule made on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Statutory Rule. See section 36(3A).\n\n• Punctuation\n\nAll punctuation included in a Statutory Rule which is made on or after  \n1 January 2001 forms part of that Statutory Rule. Any punctuation inserted in a Statutory Rule which was made before 1 January 2001, by a Statutory Rule made on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Statutory Rule.  \nSee section 36(3B).\n\n• Provision numbers\n\nAll provision numbers included in a Statutory Rule form part of that Statutory Rule, whether inserted in the Statutory Rule before, on or after  \n1 January 2001. Provision numbers include regulation numbers, rule numbers, subregulation numbers, subrule numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).\n\n• Location of \"legislative items\"\n\nA \"legislative item\" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of a Statutory Rule is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.\n\n• Other material\n\nAny explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of a Statutory Rule. See section 36(3)(3D)(3E).\n\n2 Table of Amendments\n\nThis publication incorporates amendments made to the Gambling Regulations 2015 by statutory rules, subordinate instruments and Acts.\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\nGambling Regulations 2015, S.R. No. 55/2015\n\n- Date of Making: 16.6.15\n- Date of Commencement: Reg. 128 on 1.7.15: reg. 3(2)\n- *Note:* Reg. 128 provided that Pt 10 (regs 121–128) expired on 1.7.16\n\nGambling Regulation (Pre-commitment and Loyalty Scheme) and Gambling Amendment Regulations 2015, S.R. No. 139/2015\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 24.11.15 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | Reg. 18 on 1.12.15: reg. 3 |\n\nGambling Amendment (Training Requirements) Regulations 2016, S.R. No. 111/2016\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 30.8.16 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | Regs 5, 6 on 1.9.16: reg. 3(1); regs 7–9 on 1.1.17: reg. 3(2) |\n\nGambling Regulation (Pre-commitment and Loyalty Scheme) and Gambling Amendment Regulations 2017, S.R. No. 12/2017\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 27.3.17 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | Reg. 6 on 29.3.17: reg. 3 |\n\nGambling Amendment (Cashless Gaming) Regulations 2019, S.R. No. 1/2019\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 30.1.19 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | 30.1.19: reg. 3 |\n\nGambling Amendment (Training Requirements) Regulations 2020, S.R. No. 90/2020\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 1.9.20 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | 8.9.20: reg. 3 |\n\nGambling Regulation (Pre-commitment and Loyalty Scheme) and Gambling Amendment Regulations 2023, S.R. No. 121/2023\n\n| *Date of Making:* | 28.11.23 |\n| *Date of Commencement:* | Regs 16–18 on 1.12.23: reg. 3 |\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n3 Explanatory details\n\n**Fee Units**\n\nThese Regulations provide for fees by reference to fee units within the meaning of the **Monetary Units Act 2004**.\n\nThe amount of the fee is to be calculated, in accordance with section 7 of that Act, by multiplying the number of fee units applicable by the value of a fee unit.\n\nThe value of a fee unit for the financial year commencing 1 July 2024 is $16.33 and for the financial year commencing 1 July 2025 is $16.81. The amount of the calculated fee may be rounded to the nearest 10 cents.\n\nThe value of a fee unit for future financial years is to be fixed by the Treasurer under section 5 of the **Monetary Units Act 2004**. The value of a fee unit for a financial year must be published in the Government Gazette and a Victorian newspaper before 1 June in the preceding financial year.\n\n**Penalty Units**\n\nThese Regulations provide for penalties by reference to penalty units within the meaning of section 110 of the **Sentencing Act 1991**. The amount of the penalty is to be calculated, in accordance with section 7 of the **Monetary Units Act 2004**, by multiplying the number of penalty units applicable by the value of a penalty unit.\n\nThe value of a penalty unit for the financial year commencing 1 July 2024 is $197.59 and for the financial year commencing 1 July 2025 is $203.51. The amount of the calculated penalty may be rounded to the nearest dollar.\n\nThe value of a penalty unit for future financial years is to be fixed by the Treasurer under section 5 of the **Monetary Units Act 2004**. The value of a penalty unit for a financial year must be published in the Government Gazette and a Victorian newspaper before 1 June in the preceding financial year.\n\n——\n\n**Table of Applied, Adopted or Incorporated Matter**\n\nThe following table of applied, adopted or incorporated matter is included in S.R. No. 55/2015 in accordance with the requirements of regulation 5 of the Subordinate Legislation Regulations 2014.\n\n| **Statutory rule provision** | **Title of applied, adopted or incorporated document** | **Matter in applied, adopted or incorporated document** |\n| --- | --- | --- |\n| Regulation 5 (definition of ***logic area***) | Australian/New Zealand Gaming Machine National Standard made by the Commission under section 3.5.3(1) of the Act and amended under that section from time to time | Sections 2.3.36 and 2.3.37, page 19 |","sortOrder":145}],"analysis":{"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"A positive credit balance is required for all requests, including BYOK, so fallback providers remain available. Add credits at https://vercel.com/d?to=%2F%5Bteam%5D%2F%7E%2Fai%3Fmodal%3Dtop-up to continue.","source":"analysis-cron"},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"Since initial enactment the Regulations have been extended and adjusted by later statutory rules to cover new operational areas and technologies. The instrument, as presented, incorporates amendments that add cashless gaming controls (regs 42A–42E inserted by S.R. No.1/2019 reg.5), staged and more detailed training requirements (regs 123, 123A and regs 124–125 inserted or amended by S.R. Nos 111/2016 and 90/2020), changes associated with pre‑commitment and loyalty schemes (see marginal notes referencing S.R. No.139/2015), and signage/advertising amendments (marginal notes and S.R. No.121/2023). These amendments broaden the operational scope (new machine behaviour rules, caps and staff training regimes) beyond the base technical and administrative rules first set out in 2015, while retaining the original structure of prescribing detailed implementation standards under the Gambling Regulation Act 2003 (see reg 1 and Endnotes Table of Amendments for amendment sources)."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross‑references to the Gambling Regulation Act 2003 and other statutes (Casino Control Act 1991, Racing Act 1958, Liquor Control Reform Act 1998, Monetary Units Act 2004) which require reading multiple instruments together (see regs 2, 5 definitions and many subject provisions).","Highly technical operational standards with numerical thresholds and measurement methods (lighting reg 8; machine time display reg 19; cashless caps regs 42A–42E).","Detailed ownership, direct/indirect/aggregate interest calculations and chain‑link arithmetic for prescribed connections (regs 23–26) producing complex legal/financial analysis for entitlement transfers.","Multiple amendment notes and staged insertions across years (S.R. insertions cited in margins), meaning the instrument is composite of several amendment layers and linked subordinate instruments (see marginal notes following many regs and Endnotes Table of Amendments).","Ministerial and Commission discretions to make standards, designate areas and provide materials generate administrative rules outside the Regulation text (regs 11, 9, 15–16, 41–42, 124–125).","Numerous distinct regulated populations (venue operators, casino operators, wagering operators, community organisations, commercial raffle organisers, entitlement holders, gaming industry employees) each subject to different parts of the rules (Parts 3–8).","Penalty/infringement scheme split between scheduled infringement offences (reg 120, Schedule 6) and standalone penalty units in multiple provisions creating layered enforcement options.","Interplay between technical standards (e.g. restricted components regs 37–38) and certification/approval processes for gaming machines (regs 102–103 and Schedule 2 diagrams) raises supplier/manufacturer compliance complexity."],"plain_english_summary":"# What these Regulations do\n\nThese Regulations (the Gambling Regulations 2015) set out detailed rules for how particular gambling activities are to be run in Victoria. They operate under the Gambling Regulation Act 2003 and cover practical requirements for gaming machines, wagering and betting, trade promotion lotteries, community and charitable gaming (raffles, bingo, lucky envelopes), fees, some infringement offences and training for gambling staff (see reg 1). The Regulations allocate duties and costs to venue operators, casino operators, wagering operators, licence applicants, trade promoters and community organisations, and give rule‑making or implementation powers to the Minister and the Commission (the Victorian regulator named in the Act). The following explains, in plain English, what the Regulations require, who pays or decides, and the main compliance and incentive effects.\n\n## Core mechanical changes and requirements\n\n- The Regulations prescribe detailed technical and operational standards that venues, machines and operators must follow (reg 1). They do not create licence types — they implement and detail requirements authorised by the Act (reg 2).\n\n- Lighting and visibility: venue operators and casino operators must meet quantified lighting levels in areas where gaming machines are available (reg 8). The Commission designates non‑gaming seating areas used to measure some of those standards (reg 9). Windows from gaming areas may not be removed or obscured except in limited circumstances and within time limits; penalties apply (reg 10).\n\n- Player information and responsible‑gambling materials: the Minister may make \"player information standards\" that define the form and content of posters, talkers (machine affixed signs), brochures and responsible gambling signs (reg 11). Venue operators and casino operators must display posters, talkers and make brochures available in specified numbers/locations (regs 12–14). The Commission supplies or must provide copies on request and must publish the standards on its website (regs 11, 15–16, 18). It is an offence to alter the required material (reg 17). These rules create an ongoing compliance obligation on venue operators and casinos (see penalties at regs 12–14 and reg 17).\n\n- Information displayed on machines: gaming machines must display the time of day continuously and accurately (reg 19) and must be able to generate/display certain electronic game and player information when a player requests it (reg 20). Venue operators/casino operators must not permit gaming on machines that cannot meet these requirements (regs 19–20).\n\n- Prescribed connections and ownership tests: the Regulations define what counts as a \"prescribed connection\" between entitlement holders for the purposes of the Act (detailed tests for direct, indirect and aggregate interests, and family/executive relationships) (regs 23–26). This affects who is treated as connected for allocation, transfer and approval processes for gaming‑machine entitlements. The Regulations also set a formula for calculating a \"prescribed profit\" on transfers of gaming machine entitlements (reg 27).\n\n- Signage and advertising controls: the Regulations narrow what signs count as \"gaming machine related signs\" by specifying excluded signs and setting tight design and placement limits (e.g. size, font, content and number) for venue signs, directional signs, club signs and corporate logos (regs 28–33). Problem‑gambling information signs are excluded from the advertising prohibition (reg 34). Responsible gambling signs must be placed outside entrances and in visible locations (reg 35).\n\n- Restricted components and monitoring components: a list of hardware and software parts that are \"restricted gaming components\" or \"restricted monitoring components\" is prescribed (regs 37–38). These designations affect who may access, supply, maintain or alter these parts under the licensing and monitoring regime of the Act.\n\n- Cashless gaming controls: the Regulations cap the value of non‑cash gaming tokens (e.g. player cards) and set caps on how much value can be registered on machines; they require players to nominate transfer values and set minimum distances for cashless terminals from machines (regs 42A–42E). Venue operators must meet these limits and may be penalised (penalty: 20 penalty units for many of these provisions).\n\n- Wagering/totalisator rules: operators must display betting rules and results, manage betting offices, maintain termination procedures for accepting bets, keep financial statements and report \"significant events\" to the Commission (regs 44–54). Timeframes and forms for race fields publication approvals are set (regs 55–58, Schedule 5).\n\n- Trade promotion lotteries and raffles: the Regulations specify conditions for trade promotion lotteries and the conduct of raffles, lucky envelopes and small raffles, including record‑keeping, prize payment timeframes and permitted sale locations (Part 5 and Divisions 5–6 of Part 6). There are explicit limits on values and prize‑to‑ticket ratios for lucky envelopes (regs 80–81).\n\n- Community and charitable gaming: the Regulations set governance, banking and reporting standards for community/charitable organisations that run bingo and raffles, including annual returns, audit/certificate requirements where receipts exceed thresholds, prize minimums and limits on expenses paid to organisers (regs 66, 69–73, 76–79, 83–87).\n\n- Fees and fee calculation: numerous application, licence and approval fees are prescribed in fee units (regs 95–119). The Regulations rely on the Monetary Units Act to convert fee units to dollar amounts and instruct how to round and publish fee‑unit values (Endnotes: \"Fee Units\"). Those who apply for approvals, licences or transfers pay the specified fees (see regs 95–119).\n\n- Infringement offences and penalties: certain contraventions are prescribed as infringement offences with set penalty amounts in Schedule 6 (reg 120 and Schedule 6). Individual operational offences (like failing to display posters or brochures correctly) also carry penalty units (see regs 12–14, 17, 19–20 and 42A–42E).\n\n- Training requirements for gambling industry employees: the Regulations require completion of staged training modules (first, second, third and fourth) within specified timeframes for persons to whom section 9A.1.18 of the Act applies, and give the Minister authority to specify module content and which entities may deliver in‑person modules (regs 123, 123A, 124–125).\n\n## Who pays and who decides (highlighting allocation of costs and discretion)\n\n- Applicants and licence holders pay prescribed fees for approvals and licences (regs 95–119). Fee amounts are expressed in \"fee units\" (Endnotes: Fee Units).\n\n- Venue operators and casino operators bear the operational compliance costs: lighting measurements and adjustments (reg 8), maintaining windows (reg 10), displaying posters/talkers/brochures and responsible gambling signs (regs 12–14, 35), ensuring machines display required information (regs 19–20) and meeting cashless gaming caps (regs 42A–42E). Many of these carry penalties if not met (e.g. regs 10, 12–14, 17, 19–20, 42A–42E specify penalty units).\n\n- The Minister has delegated rule‑making authority: the Minister may set the content of player information standards (reg 11) and the content and providers of training modules (regs 124–125). Those instruments take effect when published (reg 124(2)–(3); reg 11(4)).\n\n- The Commission implements and enforces many provisions: it must publish player information standards and supply materials to venues (regs 11(2)–(4), 15–16, 18), designate non‑gaming parts of casinos for lighting (reg 9), determine and notify jackpot‑pool deduction percentages (reg 41–42) and receive reports/returns (e.g. regs 41–42, 50, 69). The Commission also has discretion in providing forms and in approving machine types and games (regs 11, 15, 50, 102–103).\n\n- Appropriate controlling bodies (Racing Victoria, Harness Racing Victoria, Greyhound Racing Victoria) make and decide approvals for publication/use of race fields and steward decisions affect operators' obligations (regs 55–58; reg 49 and definition of appropriate controlling body under reg 5).\n\n## Incentives, compliance burdens and trade‑offs (concrete mechanisms)\n\n- Information and disclosure obligations (player materials, machine display data, records for raffles and bingo) increase administrative costs for venue operators and community organisations (regs 11–18, 19–20, 69–79, 83–87). Those obligations create an incentive to centralise compliance operations or rely on suppliers for compliant materials (the Commission supplies materials under regs 15–16, 35(3)).\n\n- Technical and measurement standards (lighting levels reg 8; machine display accuracy reg 19; restricted hardware/software regs 37–38) raise capital and maintenance costs for venue operators and suppliers and constrain which machines/components can be used or supplied.\n\n- Ownership and connection rules (regs 23–26) limit or control the structuring of entitlement holders. The multi‑step tests for direct/indirect/aggregate interests require legal and financial analysis when entitlements are allocated or transferred, increasing transaction costs and compliance work for parties seeking transfers or new allocations.\n\n- Cashless gaming caps and terminal placement rules (regs 42A–42E) limit product design and business models (e.g. loyalty/pre‑paid cards), and constrain how operators can market and facilitate larger cashless balances.\n\n- Advertising and signage restrictions (regs 28–36) restrict methods venues and operators may use to signal availability of gaming machines; allowable corporate logos are narrowly defined (reg 33, Schedule 3). That narrows promotional channels and may change how venues attract customers.\n\n- Penalties and infringement schedules (reg 120, Schedule 6) convert many breaches into payable fines or infringement notices, which may be administratively efficient for enforcement but distribute enforcement costs to regulated parties.\n\n## Implementation and enforcement risks\n\n- Many provisions require measurement, technical validation or third‑party certification (lighting, machine displays, electronic information, restricted components). Implementation depends on consistent measurement and approvals by the Commission and, in some cases, on standards adopted from other instruments (e.g. the Australian/New Zealand Gaming Machine National Standard referenced in reg 5 definition of logic area). That creates operational reliance on technical standards and Commission processes (reg 5 definition; reg 11; regs 37–38).\n\n- Calculating prescribed profits on entitlement transfers (reg 27) uses a formula referencing financial benefit and historical payment amounts (A and B). Valuation disputes or record gaps could create contested assessments.\n\n## Bottom line\n\n- These Regulations translate high‑level statutory gambling rules into concrete, enforceable technical, administrative and operational obligations. They shift many day‑to‑day compliance costs onto venue operators, casino operators, wagering operators, licence applicants and community organisations (see especially Parts 3–6 and regs 95–119 for fees). The Minister and the Commission retain rule‑making and implementation roles that shape how those obligations are applied (regs 11, 15–16, 35, 41–42, 124–125). Compliance requires technical, administrative and record‑keeping effort; several provisions create numerical caps and timeframes that are straightforward to enforce but may require systems or capital changes by regulated parties (e.g. lighting, machine displays, cashless caps, signage and documentary returns).\n\n(Referenced provisions: reg 1 (objectives); reg 2 (authorising provision); regs 8–10 (lighting and windows); regs 11–18 (player information); regs 19–20 (machine displays); regs 23–27 (prescribed connection/profit); regs 28–36 (signage); regs 37–38 (components); regs 42A–42E (cashless gaming); regs 44–54 (wagering); regs 59–65, 80–87 (trade promotion, lucky envelopes, raffles); regs 69–79 (bingo and community returns); regs 95–119 (fees); reg 120 and Schedule 6 (infringement offences); regs 123–125 (training).)"},"summary":{"complexity_score":2,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Scope cannot be meaningfully assessed as the document contains only structural metadata and version labels, with no substantive regulatory provisions visible. No comparison between original intent and current form is possible from the text supplied."},"complexity_factors":["Insufficient legislative content provided — only metadata and version history shell is present, preventing substantive analysis","Gambling law in Australia is inherently multi-layered, involving federal and state interaction, but that complexity cannot be assessed from this fragment","Consolidated version status suggests amendments exist, which would ordinarily add complexity, but amendment content is not visible","Score reflects complexity of what IS provided (near zero substantive content), not the likely complexity of the full instrument"],"plain_english_summary":"## Gambling Regulations 2015 (Victoria)\n\n**What is this?**\nThis appears to be a Victorian statutory rule (a type of secondary legislation made under the authority of a parent Act) relating to gambling regulation.\n\n**⚠️ Important Note for Readers**\nUnfortunately, the document provided contains only the **shell and metadata** of the Gambling Regulations 2015 — including version history labels and legislative status indicators — but **no actual regulatory content**. The substantive rules, obligations, penalties, and provisions that would tell us *what this law actually does* are absent from the text provided.\n\n**What we can tell you:**\n- It is a **statutory rule** (meaning it adds detail to a broader Gambling Act, filling in the practical nuts and bolts)\n- It carries the number **55/2015**, meaning it was the 55th statutory rule made in Victoria in 2015\n- It has a **consolidated version**, meaning it has been amended at least once since it was originally made\n- It covers **gambling** — which in Victoria typically encompasses pokies (electronic gaming machines), casinos, wagering, lotteries, and related activities\n\n**Who is likely affected?**\nTypically, gambling regulations affect venue operators (pubs, clubs, casinos), gambling licence holders, betting agencies, and to some extent, members of the public who gamble.\n\n*To understand your specific rights or obligations, you should access the full text via the Victorian legislation website (legislation.vic.gov.au).*"},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"provider":"moonshot","completionTokens":2836},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"While the Regulations remain within the framework of the Gambling Regulation Act 2003, they have expanded significantly beyond their 2015 commencement to cover modern gambling technologies and practices. Notably, Division 11 (Cashless Gaming) was inserted in 2019 to regulate card-based play and electronic fund transfers, and Part 10 has been repeatedly amended to create a multi-module training framework. This reflects an evolution from regulating traditional coin-based gaming machines and paper raffles to encompassing digital payment systems and sophisticated harm-minimisation training, without departing from the core purpose of gambling control."},"complexity_factors":["Over 60 defined terms in Regulation 5 alone, many with nested legislative histories (e.g., 'inserted by S.R. No. 1/2019') that show the amendment trail within the text itself.","Extensive cross-referencing to the Gambling Regulation Act 2003, Casino Control Act 1991, and Racing Act 1958, requiring readers to consult multiple statutes to understand obligations.","Highly technical operational standards, such as precise lux measurements for lighting (Regulation 8), specific font requirements for signage (Helvetica or Arial), and exact distances for cashless gaming terminals (2 metres from machines).","Complex conditional logic for determining 'prescribed connections' between corporate entities (Regulations 23–26), involving mathematical calculations of direct, indirect, and aggregate interests in shareholdings and trusts.","Multiple nested exceptions for signage and advertising (Regulations 28–36), creating a labyrinth of what is permitted versus prohibited depending on location, font, lighting, and venue type.","Ten Parts with numerous Divisions and six Schedules, including multiple fee tables, diagrams of gaming machines, and prescribed forms, resulting in a lengthy, fragmented structure."],"plain_english_summary":"These are the detailed operating rules for gambling in Victoria, made under the **Gambling Regulation Act 2003**. They set out specific requirements for businesses, community groups, and workers involved in gambling activities.\n\n**What the rules cover**\n\n*   **Gaming machines (\"pokies\") in pubs and clubs**: Strict rules on the venue environment—lighting must be bright enough (at least 50 lux) so players can see the time of day, windows cannot be blacked out (to keep players aware of time passing), and specific \"player information\" posters and brochures must be displayed explaining the odds of winning. There are also new rules for **cashless gaming** (using cards instead of cash), including a $1,000 limit on how much can be loaded onto a gaming token at once.\n*   **The Casino**: Similar lighting and information rules apply, but with specific exemptions allowing Crown to use its corporate logo on signs.\n*   **Sports betting and wagering**: Bookmakers and betting agencies must follow procedures for displaying odds, handling bets on horse and greyhound races, applying for approval to publish race fields, and managing \"totalisator\" (tote) betting pools.\n*   **Fundraising by community groups (raffles, bingo, lucky envelopes)**: Charities and sporting clubs must follow permit conditions, including limits on ticket prices, requirements that at least 50% of proceeds go to prizes in lucky envelope games, and record-keeping rules. Raffles with prizes over $5,000 need a specific permit.\n*   **Licensing and fees**: Sets out the fees (calculated in \"fee units\") for applying for venue operator licences, gaming machine approvals, and employee licences.\n*   **Staff training**: Anyone working in gaming must complete mandatory **Responsible Service of Gambling (RSG)** training, which involves four modules (some online, some in-person) that must be refreshed every three years.\n*   **Harm minimisation**: Requires venues to display \"responsible gambling signs\" at entrances and ensures gaming machines show the time and allow players to see their session losses on screen.\n\n**Why it matters**\nThese rules aim to reduce gambling harm by ensuring transparency (showing odds and time), preventing venues from creating environments that encourage excessive play (lighting and window rules), and ensuring fundraising activities are fair and properly supervised. Breaches can result in fines (\"infringement penalties\") or loss of licence."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015","history":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015/history","analysis":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/gambling-regulations-2015/documents"}}