Tasmanians lost $2.6 million through electronic gaming machines over five days last month after their use was permitted again.
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Gaming venues were required to close on March 23 due to coronavirus public health restrictions.
Gaming activities were allowed to start again on June 5.
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Before venues shut in March, more than $9 million had been spent on poker machines.
Over the five-day period in June, $189,990 was lost on gaming machines in Launceston, $121,874 on machines in Devonport, and $96,234 on machines in Burnie.
Nelson independent MLC Meg Webb said the statistics released by Treasury showed people on average spent $525,000 a day on poker machines.
"With even with fewer machines operating due to social distancing, this was a spike of more than 25 per cent per day compared to March this year," Ms Webb said.
"I condemn the Premier's decision to turn the machines back on at a time of high stress and economic vulnerability."
Ms Webb said gaming rooms should be closed until the state's health, social and economic conditions stabilised.
She said a public education campaign on poker machine gambling during the era of coronavirus was needed as well as a new outreach gambling support program.
A government spokesperson said the relaxation on restrictions which allowed gaming to return was based on public health advice.
They said the state's harm minimisation framework was regarded as nation leading.
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