Ymca Youth Gambling Awareness Program

4/15/2022by admin

This November, Credit Canada hosted its 12th annual “Credit Education Week” aimed at helping Canadians focus on “Money Mindfulness.” Here at the Youth Gambling Awareness Program (YGAP) we would like to build on that and share information about how Canadian youth, specifically, can begin to achieve their financial goals.

Youth Gambling Awareness Program (YGAP) The YMCA Youth Gambling Awareness Program is a free service offering educational prevention programs designed to raise youth awareness with regards to gambling, healthy/active living and making informed decisions. Our educational prevention programs raise awareness about gambling. In addressing the needs of youth between the ages of 8 and 24, the YMCA Youth Gambling Awareness program offers a series of educational workshops/presentations. These workshops introduce students to the potential risks of gambling, provide information about gambling and the role probability plays in games of chance and helps students recognize. The YMCA Youth Gambling Awareness Program (YGAP) is a bilingual program dedicated to educating youth, teens and adults about the risks associated with gambling through a public health approach.

Ymca Youth Gambling Awareness Program Training

Our program aims to educate youth on safe gambling practices and understanding the value of money is vital to this task. Today’s youth are the first generation to grow up in a culture where gambling is actively promoted. As gambling becomes increasingly more accessible through technology, it’s important to encourage youth to think critically about their money and how they spend it. While this seems like an issue for the “grown ups,” statistics show that millennials are the ones struggling. It is reported that 29% of millennials experience relationship issues due to indulgent money spending and 28% hide their spending from others (Credit Canada 2017). Furthermore, when it comes to gambling, 10% of teens gamble online and 40% gamble in any form, betting on activities like dares or challenges, games of skills, and sports pools (OSDUHS 2015). This year, our youth outreach workers rolled out a variety of educational activities and engagement events across Ontario to support youth in gambling responsibly and making responsible financial decisions.

Over the month of November, YGAP ran 42 of our “Betting $en$e” workshops, which focus on financial literacy and gambling awareness. These presentations took place across the province in locations such as Saul Ste Marie, Simcoe/Muskoka, London, Sarnia, Windsor, and Guelph. These workshops, which are delivered in both French and English, aim to increase awareness of the risks involved in gambling and the importance of making informed decisions about financial issues. Participants are encouraged to explore personal finances, budgeting, spending, borrowing, saving, and gambling harm reduction strategies. Our outreach workers make the experience fun, engaging, and incredibly informative. This year, YGAP collaborated with community partners to offer this programming, with areas like Owen Sound inviting representatives from CAMH, the Owen Sound Police Department, and Telus Wise to present to youth on topics related to financial literacy, gambling, and gaming.

Ymca youth government program

Additionally, YGAP set up booths in YMCA locations, community centres, and schools handing out credit education material. Whether it was the McBain Community Centre in Niagara, the Durham Family YMCA, or Windsor’s Central Park Athletics, our outreach team worked tirelessly to engage youth on the relevance of responsibly gambling to money mindfulness.

Some YGAP locations even ran larger Youth Engagement (YE) and Community Involvement (CI) initiatives. In Kenora, YGAP partnered with Lake of the Woods and Beaver Brae to run a “Money Mindfulness Youth Engagement Photography Project”. Youth were encouraged to take pictures of every day expenses, such as coffee that can add up and make a big financial impact. When thinking about gambling, we encourage youth to decide how even small transactions can affect them.

In Timmins, Peterborough and the Hamilton/Burlington/Brantford area YGAP ran large community involvement financial literacy events. Community members had the opportunity to interact with organizations such as the Royal Bank of Canada, Ontario Works, St. Leonard’s Community Services, and The Family Counselling Centre, in an effort to promote education about how financial literacy is connected to overall wellness.

The final mural from the students at École élémentaire des Quatre-Rivières.

Lastly, in Toronto, youth from École élémentaire des Quatre-Rivières created a mural that represented how financial considerations change and develop from childhood to adulthood and how this can be affected by gambling and gaming. This concept is incredibly relevant to youth given that the average person begins gambling around the age of 8 (Pitt et al 2017). This takes the form of nontraditional gambling activities like risking money at a claw machine, buying raffle tickets at school or betting valuables through online gaming. While the legal age for buying a lottery/scratch ticket in Ontario is 18 and 19 for visiting a casino, youth brains are not considered fully developed until the age of 25. While it is only one part of the brain that is still developing, it is the part of the brain that controls impulses and higher-level thinking (Gogtay et al 2004). Encouraging youth to think about how their current gambling habits may influence their future choices acts as a tool to help youth make responsible financial decisions in the future.

It’s important to remember that at any age, we can all benefit from a little more information about gambling awareness and financial literacy. If you are looking for resources for yourself or for someone you know, head over to the Youth Gambling Awareness or Credit Canada Website.

Free, confidential, one-on-one substance use counselling at the Y.

If you’re looking for support with substance use and misuse problems or know someone who is, we can help. Our services are free and confidential and our counsellors are available to support youth with substance use issues, options to make healthier choices and practice safely.

A supportive environment and the support you need to get healthy.

Youth
  • Individual counselling for 14-24 year olds
  • Person centered and strength based approach
  • Practices from a Harm Reduction philosophy*
  • Assessment – GAIN Q3
  • Harm Reduction supply distribution (substance testing kits and equipment for safer use)
  • Educational workshops on substances, substance use and harm reduction

Harm Reduction

YSAP works from a harm reduction perspective which recognizes and values that everyone has the right to make their own decisions about their lives. It is about mutual respect and collaboration to reduce the risks and harms associated with substances, substance use and any other behaviours. YSAP supports, encourages, and empowers young people to develop their own substance use goals and to make informed decisions for themselves.
YSAP is a self-referral program. Please contact us if you think you would like to talk to someone. Sometimes it’s hard to ask for help – it’s okay to have someone you trust help you connect with us. Call us today at 416-473-7407.


Contact us at 416-473-7407 if you need support. We're here to help.

Ymca Youth Gambling Awareness Program California


Brampton/CaledonBrampton Central Park Dr. YMCA Child Care Centre
9996 Kennedy Road
Brampton, ON L6V 0A1
MississaugaMississauga YMCA Employment and Community Services
151 City Centre Drive, Suite 800
Mississauga, ON L5B 1M7
Toronto - ScarboroughScarborough Centre YMCA
230 Town Centre Court
Scarborough, ON M1P 4Y7
Toronto - CentralVanauley Street YMCA
7 Vanauley Street
Toronto, ON M5T 2V9
Toronto - North YorkNorth York YMCA Employment and Immigrant Services
4580 Dufferin Street, Suite 200
North York, ON M3H 5Y2

For more information on our YSAP download our guide(PDF).

Ymca Youth Gambling Awareness Program

Ymca Youth Gambling Awareness Program

To learn more about YMCA Youth programs call 416-928-9622 contact us at memberservices@ymcagta.org

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Ymca Youth Government Program

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