Operators yet to file as 2020 rollout looms
The Ministry of the Interior and Sports for the German State of Hesse has chided sports betting operators serving Hessian citizens for failing, to date, to apply for licensing to provide those services in the state.
Just weeks before a planned January 1, 2020 regulatory rollout, not a single operator has filed a license application.
Bueth declared his concern to the Parliament over the lack of operator participation to date
Hesse’s Parliament received news of the situation on November 11 from Interior and Sports Minister Peter Bueth. Bueth declared his concern to the Parliament over the lack of operator participation to date. That body has been debating last-minute amendments to the already-approved Hessian Gambling Act, which goes live in January.
The unsettled situation underscores the continuing regulatory mess in Germany at both the federal and state level. New federal gambling laws have faced constitutional challenges while individual states, including Hesse, have struggled toward regulation as well.
Warning to operators
Bueth warned that the current grace period being extended to Hesse-facing operators will soon end.
Speaking before the Parliament, but to the operators, Bueth said: “As soon as the new year has started, the clock is ticking for every sportsbook provider in Hesse. Although the Regional Council of Darmstadt has been extensively informed and has been able to accept permits for months, no provider has yet submitted such a permit. I warn therefore urgently: Each sports betting offer is from January 2020 subject to authorization and there is no more toleration.”
the state will be “forced to act” and unlicensed operators will be liable to prosecution
Bueth also noted that Hesse’s authorities plan to “consistently prohibit” all illegal offers. He also made special point to note advertising from sportsbook providers, whether in media or live, such as at soccer venues. Bueth also declared that the state will be “forced to act” and unlicensed operators will be liable to prosecution.
Short-term measure
One complication hampering the situation is that the planned enactment of the Hessian Gambling Law is designed as a short-term solution. When Germany’s new national gambling law is finalized and survives legal challenge, it will supercede many of the state’s laws.
Hessian state officials have been among the most proactive in modernizing licensing rules at that level, while also urging Germany’s federal legislature to finish the process. Meanwhile, the European Commission recently expressed its doubts about Germany’s latest stopgap plans at a federal level.
Bueth declared that the ongoing federal gridlock was an “intolerable condition,” in that German citizens — including those in Hesse — were still left without consumer protections. Germany’s planned national framework includes programs for preventing addictive and underage gambling but remains in limbo pending legislative approval.