Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Fourth-quarter gaming revenue slides for Peterborough, Cavan-Monaghan Township

RELAED: It has been about 18 months since the Ontario government announced it was opening up the online gaming market in the province, a move which has led to a massive uptick in legal gambling among its 15.6 million residents. Global News spoke with experts about how this could impact the province as well as people's mental health and addictions. – Nov 30, 2023

Fourth-quarter gaming revenue payments decreased from the third quarter for both the City of Peterborough and Cavan-Monaghan Township, the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation reports.

Story continues below advertisement

On Friday, the OLG announced a fourth-quarter (Jan. 1 to March 31) payment of $678,417 to Peterborough for hosting Shorelines Casino Peterborough.

That payment is down from the third-quarter (Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 2023) payment of over $704,000 and also the second-quarter (July 1 to Sept 30) payment of more than $800,000.

It’s also down from the $716,378 issued as a fourth-quarter payment a year ago.

During the OLG’s fiscal year ending March 31, 2024, the City of Peterborough received $2,973,019.

Since the casino opened in October 2018, the city has received $12,377,384 in non-tax gaming revenue, the OLG reports.

Cavan-Monaghan Township

Cavan-Monaghan Township received a fourth-quarter payment of $72,868 for hosting Shorelines Slots at Kawartha Downs in Fraserville.

Story continues below advertisement

It’s a dip from the $76,278 issued in the third-quarter.

The daily email you need for Peterborough's top news stories.

A year ago, the fourth-quarter payment in 2023 was over $85,000.

During OLG’s 2024 fiscal year, the township received $324,499 in gaming revenue.

Since Shoreline Slots opened in November 1999, the township has received $61,698,336, the OLG reports.

Great Canadian Gaming owns both gaming sites.

The OLG says payments to host communities are based on a formula applied across at all Ontario gaming sites using a graduated scale of gaming revenue at the hosted site.

Since 1994, host communities have received more than $21.1 billion in non-tax gaming revenue, the OLG reports.

The corporation also says that since 2017, casino service providers have invested more than $2 billion in private sector capital across Ontario.

Story continues below advertisement

“For decades, profits from gaming have been an important source of funding for Ontario communities, helping to deliver vital services and making a real difference for gaming host municipalities,” states Peter Bethlenfalvy, Minister of Finance.

“This is one of the many different ways Ontario continues to create good-paying, local jobs that play a critical role in supporting our economy, while ensuring a socially responsible gaming environment for people to enjoy.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article