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MINNESOTA PROBLEM GAMBLING HELPLINE 1-800-333-4673 (HOPE) • TEXT "HOPE" TO 53342 • CHAT NOW ONLINE info@mnapg.org

Hilton Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport

Special Hotel Rate + tax

(limited availability!)

CEU Credits Available

MNAPG has spent 25 years building awareness, advancing advocacy and strengthening community support around problem gambling. Join us October 2, 2026, for the Minnesota Conference on Problem Gambling as we reflect on the past, examine today’s challenges and look ahead to the future of prevention, treatment and recovery.

This year’s theme — Past. Present. Future. A Progression In Hope. — highlights the progress made across Minnesota while recognizing the important work still ahead. Conference attendees will hear from leaders, professionals, advocates and individuals with lived experience on emerging trends, innovative approaches, harm reduction, family impacts and efforts to protect vulnerable communities.

Whether you work in prevention, treatment, healthcare, education, public policy or community outreach, this conference offers valuable insight, meaningful conversation and opportunities to connect with others committed to making a difference.

Who Should Attend?
The conference is appropriate for gambling, alcohol and drug addiction counselors and therapists, social workers, law enforcement officers, school and church leaders, other health care and social service workers, lawyers, financial professionals, and people in recovery and their families. CEU credits are available from various professional boards.

Agenda

7:30-8:15 am Breakfast
8:15 am Welcome Susan Sheridan Tucker
8:30-9:30 am Looking Ahead: Challenges and Opportunities in Problem Gambling Heather Maurer
Christina Cook, IGRS
9:30-11:00 am Women and Gambling: The Hidden Epidemic — Clinical Strategies and Lived Experience for Addressing Hidden Harms Jody Bechtold, LCSW, ICGC-II, BACC
11:00–11:15 am Break
11:15–12:30 am The Challenges for Diverse Cultures: a Panel Discussion Sandi Scott
Kong Van
Pastor Tope Dosum
12:30-1:30 pm Lunch and Award Presentation
1:30-3:30 pm What’s a Family To Do When They Discover Their Child Has a Gambling Issue? Kim Freudenberg
3:30-3:45 pm Break
3:45-4:45 pm More than a Gambling Problem: the Family Experience Nan Franks, LPCC, LICDC-CS, GAMB, AFC®
3:30-3:45 pm New Approaches to Harm Reduction Sam DeMello

Sessions

Heather L. Maurer

Looking Ahead: Challenges and Opportunities in Problem Gambling

Join Heather L. Maurer, executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG), for an overview of the current state of the problem gambling field and the challenges that lie ahead. Drawing on her national perspective, Maurer will examine emerging trends, policy developments and opportunities shaping prevention, treatment, research and recovery efforts across the country. She will also discuss NCPG's role in advancing awareness, advocacy and support for those affected by gambling-related harm. This session will provide valuable insights for professionals seeking to better understand the evolving landscape of problem gambling and prepare for future challenges.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this session, participants will be able to:

  • Describe key national trends, emerging technologies and policy developments shaping the evolving landscape of problem gambling prevention, treatment, research and recovery efforts.
  • Explain the importance of a public health approach to addressing gambling-related harm, including opportunities for prevention, early intervention, consumer protection and systems collaboration.
  • Identify current challenges and future opportunities facing the problem gambling field and strategies to strengthen awareness, advocacy, workforce development and support services nationwide.

Bio

Heather L. Maurer
Heather L. Maurer, MA, CAE, is the executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG), the nation's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing gambling-related harm through awareness, advocacy, education, and support. With more than 25 years of experience in nonprofit leadership, healthcare associations, and public health-focused initiatives, Heather is recognized for her collaborative leadership style and strategic approach to organizational growth, stakeholder engagement, and mission-driven advocacy. At NCPG, she is focused on advancing national conversations around problem gambling as a public health issue, strengthening and expanding partnerships across sectors, and supporting efforts to improve prevention, treatment, research, recovery and responsible gambling initiatives nationwide.

Jody Bechtold, LCSW, ICGC-II, BACC

Christina Cook, IGRS


Women and Gambling: The Hidden Epidemic — Clinical Strategies and Lived Experience for Addressing Hidden Harms

While gambling disorder has historically been framed as a “male issue,” women are one of the fastest-growing groups experiencing gambling harms. Yet their pathways, risk factors and barriers to treatment often remain hidden due to stigma and under-identification. In this 90-minute workshop, Jody Bechtold, LCSW, ICGC-II, BACC, clinical leader and trainer, and Christina Cook, IGRS, peer recovery advocate and host of The Broke Girl Society Podcast, bring a powerful combination of clinical expertise and lived experience. Together, they will explore gender-specific risk factors, stigma and treatment barriers. Attendees will leave with assessment prompts, intervention approaches and engagement strategies designed to better serve women impacted by gambling disorder.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Describe gender-specific risk factors, stigma and hormone pathways to harm for women who gamble.
  • Apply cycle-syncing knowledge when screening, assessing and treating women with gambling-related problems.
  • Develop engagement and retention strategies that reduce stigma and enhance treatment outcomes for women.
Bio

Jody Bechtold, LCSW, ICGC-II, BACC
Jody is a licensed clinical social worker, internationally certified gambling counselor-II, board-approved clinical consultant and CEO of The Better Institute. With over 20 years of experience in gambling disorder treatment, training and program development, she is a nationally recognized speaker, educator and clinician specializing in assessment, intervention and clinical supervision.

Christina Cook, IGRS
Christina is a certified international gambling recovery specialist (IGRS) and the creator and host of The Broke Girl Society Podcast and Support Group, a leading platform for women in gambling recovery. Drawing on her lived experience, she advocates for awareness, connection and peer support, giving voice to women’s often hidden struggles with gambling harm. Christina works to bridge the gap between lived experience and professional practice, helping to reduce stigma and expand pathways to recovery.

Sandi Scott

Kong Vang, PharmD

Pastor Tope Dosumu

The Challenges for Diverse Cultures: a Panel Discussion

Minnesota Department of Human Services grantees describe their work in raising awareness about problem gambling to Minnesota’s diverse cultures. Recipients include Tunheim, a strategic communications and public relations agency, Kaleidoscope, a minority-owned social enterprise and community-driven dissemination clearinghouse, LifeGate Services, a provider of monthly food supplementation, health and wellness education programs, and immigrant support.

Learning Objectives

Tunheim
By the end of this session, participants will understand:

  • The strategy, insights and framework behind Tunheim’s Minnesota Department of Human Services problem gambling prevention campaign
  • How specific campaign elements successfully raise awareness and connect struggling individuals, families and loved ones with vital support resources..
  • How empathy-driven marketing can help to destigmatize a hidden public health issue to foster a more supportive and informed general public.

Kaleidoscope
By the end of this session, participants will be able to:

  • Increase awareness and understanding of problem gambling and its impact on individuals, families and the broader Hmong community.
  • Share key insights and themes gathered from community surveys, focus groups and stakeholder engagement related to gambling behaviors, perceptions and barriers to support.
  • Highlight culturally responsive outreach strategies and resource development efforts aimed at reducing stigma and improving access to prevention and support services.
Bio

Sandi Scott
A communications and media relations veteran at Tunheim, Sandi Scott has spent more than three decades helping clients tell their stories, build awareness and strengthen their reputation with the audiences that matter most. Her work spans strategic communications, content development, media relations, thought leadership and campaign development. Sandi currently supports Minnesota Department of Human Services’ problem gambling prevention campaign, helping develop content strategy, storytelling and digital outreach efforts in collaboration with partners to raise awareness and connect priority audiences with resources. She helps organizations navigate an evolving media and communications landscape while responding to the challenges and opportunities of the day.

Kong Vang, PharmD
Kong Vang, PharmD, is co-founder of Kaleidoscope-Kawm Thiab Siv, LLC, and is a clinically trained pharmacist with a diverse background spanning healthcare, community engagement, research and education. His work has included advancing culturally responsive healthcare initiatives, mentoring youth in STEM and robotics, and developing health profession pipeline programs for high school students. As co-founder of Kaleidoscope-Kawm Thiab Siv, Kong has spent the past four years leading community-centered initiatives focused on COVID-19 response, healthy aging, nutrition and physical activity, stroke awareness and problem gambling prevention within the Hmong community.

Pastor Tope Dosumu
Pastor Tope Dosumu is the executive director of LifeGate Services. He holds a Master’s degree in Social Work (MSW) from Augsburg University in Minneapolis. In addition to his leadership at LifeGate Services, Pastor Dosumu serves as the pastor of The Redeemed Christian Church of God, Chosen Generation Parish in Rochester, MN.

Kim Freudenberg

What’s a Family To Do When They Discover Their Child Has a Gambling Issue?

When gambling harm affects a young person, families are often left navigating confusion, financial stress and fractured relationships with little guidance or support. In this session, Kim will share the lived parent experience: the warning signs missed, the emotional and financial toll on the family system, and the difficult balance between supporting a child and protecting one's own well-being. She will also discuss Parents Standing Together, a peer community built to fill critical gaps in family support and community awareness. This session offers an honest look at what families experience, what support truly helps and where gaps in care still remain

Learning Objectives

By the end of this session, participants will be able to:

  • Identify how youth and young adults are accessing and engaging with gambling in today’s digital environment.
  • Recognize the emotional, relational and systemic impact gambling harm has on parents, caregivers and the broader family system.
  • Understand common barriers families face when seeking support, involvement and guidance during a loved one’s gambling crisis and recovery process.
    Explore family-centered approaches, supports and recovery pathways that promote healing, connection and long-term recovery outcomes.

Bios

Kim Freudenberg
Kim Freudenberg is president of Parents Standing Together. After discovering that her 19-year-old son was struggling with gambling, Kim committed to learning about gambling disorder and its impact on families. In early 2025, she organized a peer support group for parents, which grew into Parents Standing Together, a nonprofit dedicated to raising awareness about youth gambling and supporting families affected by gambling harm. Kim holds an international gambling recovery specialist certification and is deeply committed to education, connection and prevention to protect young people and support parents.

Nan Franks, LPCC, LICDC-CS, GAMB, AFC®

More than a Gambling Problem: the Family Experience

Gambling disorder affects far more than the individual who gambles. Families often experience profound emotional, relational and financial consequences long before the gambling behavior is disclosed or understood. Unlike many substance-related disorders, gambling harm is frequently hidden beneath secrecy, debt, broken trust and repeated cycles of hope and disappointment. Attendees will examine themes of financial betrayal, chronic uncertainty, role shifts, grief and resilience while learning practical interventions that support family stabilization, healthy boundaries and parallel recovery. This session integrates family systems concepts, gambling-specific treatment considerations and compassionate engagement strategies to better support healing for the entire family system.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Describe three emotional and relational impacts commonly experienced by family members affected by gambling disorder.
  • Recognize gambling-related family trauma indicators including secrecy, financial betrayal, chronic stress and emotional hypervigilance.
  • Apply at least two gambling-specific family interventions that support stabilization, communication and boundary-setting.
  • Integrate family recovery and grief considerations into treatment planning for individuals and families impacted by gambling disorder.

Bio

Nan Franks, LPCC, LICDC-CS, GAMB, AFC®
Nan Franks is a behavioral health clinician, trainer and community leader with more than 40 years of experience supporting individuals and families through addiction, grief, trauma and financial recovery. Her work brings together deep clinical expertise in problem gambling, substance use, family systems and affected others, along with the grounded compassion that comes from lived experience. She has served on the Warm Transfer Initiative with the Ohio Problem Gambling Helpline since 2020 and is a board member of the Problem Gambling Coalition of Southwest Ohio, where she helps strengthen community responses to gambling-related harm.

Sam DeMello

New Approaches to Harm Reduction

The gambling landscape has fundamentally changed — but the treatment system hasn't kept up. Sports betting, iGaming and prediction markets have used technology to expand access to gambling and created a widening gap between those experiencing gambling-related harm and the systems designed to support them.

This session examines how digital tools can close that gap, not by replacing clinical care, but by removing the structural barriers that prevent most people from ever reaching it. Drawing on real-world implementation data from state partnerships across the U.S., Sam DeMello, founder and CEO of Evive, and person in recovery from gambling addiction, presents a three-pathway harm reduction model that meets people at their actual level of readiness. Attendees will leave with concrete strategies for integrating digital tools into existing practice to extend their clinical reach, engage ambivalent clients and serve populations that traditional services were never designed to reach. 

Learning Objectives

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Identify the structural barriers and name at least three barriers that prevent individuals experiencing gambling-related harm from accessing traditional treatment, and explain how digital interventions specifically address each.
  • Describe the three-pathway harm reduction model and articulate how pathway fluidity supports client autonomy and increases engagement across the full spectrum of gambling behavior change.
  • Apply digital tools in clinical practice and identify at least two concrete strategies for incorporating digital interventions into an existing treatment framework to extend impact.

Bio

Sam DeMello
Sam DeMello is the founder and CEO of Evive, and is a digital health innovator and a community advocate. He is a technology leader and digital health entrepreneur transforming gambling harm reduction through innovative, user-centric solutions. Sam brings a unique combination of personal lived experience through his own recovery from gambling addiction and a technology-first approach to addressing one of the most overlooked public health challenges facing the U.S. today.

2025 Speakers

Dr. Serena King, PhD

The Origins and Development of Gambling from Adolescence to Young Adulthood: Insights from the Minnesota Student Survey

This presentation highlights key findings from the 2022 and 2025 Minnesota Student Surveys, one of the largest national sources on youth gambling. It examines trends across grades 8, 9, and 11, explores pathways from adolescence into young adult gambling, and offers practical strategies to prevent and address problem gambling in emerging adulthood.

View Video Here

 

Michelle L. Malkin, JD, PhD

College Student Gambling: Pre and Post Legality
This session explored how gambling legality affects college student behaviors and risks. Data from multiple universities and national sources showed students engage in both traditional and emerging forms of gambling. While legality raised prevalence, risk levels remained stable. Few students received education or screening, despite gambling often co-occurring with substance use.

The Betting Blueprint: A New Wellness-Oriented Curriculum to Reduce Gambling-Related Harms among College Students
Dr. Malkin reviewed The Betting Blueprint, a flexible curriculum teaching safer gambling strategies, recognizing early harm, and starting conversations about gambling concerns.

Screening and Counseling for Gambling among Emerging Adults, including College Students
This session introduced a screening tool for emerging adults and the Collegiate Counselor Gambling Certificate, equipping campus counselors to identify and address gambling-related concerns.

 

​Jeff Wasserman
Saul Malek

The Frontlines of Gambling Addiction: a Conversation

This session features a conversation with individuals on the front lines of gambling disorder. Jeff, a person in long-term recovery, leads many online recovery sessions that are regularly attended by young adults. Saul, in more recent recovery, shares his personal experiences and the harms gambling has had on his life. Robby, a treatment provider, discusses the growing number of young people in his practice who have been harmed by various forms of gambling, particularly sports betting.

View Video Here