Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Sac Bee: Vote No on Proposition 48, enough gambling expansion. We Concur

The Sacramento Bee gets it right on this editorial on Prop. 48, which would give the North Fork Rancheria off reservation gaming.  Californians got it WRONG to expand gaming for tribes like Pechanga, who have done nothing but harm their own people, and were rewarded for it.  Now, as much as we'd like to see the despicable Chukchansi Tribe be hurt by a casino closer to their customer base, going outside the intent of the voters is NOT the correct path.  

If North Fork wants a casino, figure out how to get it on their own reservation land.  The better path for California, is to allow gaming regulated by the state.   Tribes have had almost 20 years to benefit and get their customer base in order.  That's a terrific head start.

California voters are being thrust into the middle of yet another fight over gambling and ought to collectively say: “Enough.”
It happened in 2000 when Indian tribes spent $24 million to win monopoly rights to operate casinos on their land, and in 2008 when four tribes spent $82 million to gain more lucrative gambling deals, and several other times.
This year, voters should take a stand against yet another gambling expansion by voting no on Proposition 48, although a “no” vote would mean siding with hedge-fund operators whose motives are hardly pure.
The North Fork Rancheria band of Mono Indiansseeks to open a 2,000-slot-machine casino on 305 acres west of Highway 99 at the north end of the San Joaquin Valley city of Madera. The 1,987-member tribe teamed with Station Casinos, a Las Vegas corporation that would operate the gambling hall.
In 2011, President Barack Obama’s Interior Department approved North Fork’s request to build the casino, which would be 38 miles from its reservation land in the foothills east of Madera. Gov. Jerry Brown negotiated the compact, and the Legislature approved it in 2013.
The compact would require North Fork to make one-time payments of at least $16 million to Madera County governments and annual payments of about $8.5 million, the Legislative Analyst’s Office says.
North Fork would make annual payments of $6 million to the Wiyot tribe in exchange for Wiyot’s agreement not to build a casino on its land in Humboldt County, and $15 million to non-gambling tribes.
A “yes” vote on 48 would affirm the compact and open the way for the North Fork casino. A “no” vote would unravel the deal.
A New York hedge fund, Brigade Capital Management, is challenging the compact by funding a referendum that is Proposition 48. Brigade is aligned with a few tribes and Cheryl Schmit, founder of the nonprofit Stand Up for California and a critic of most Indian gambling.
Brigade wants to protect its investment in the nearby Chukchansi Gold Indian casino, saying in a letter last year that a North Fork casino would “cannibalize Chukchansi Gold’s revenue, forcing worker layoffs.”
Brigade has put $1.6 million into the No-on-48 campaign. Other New York investors have given $354,000. The Table Mountain Indian casino in Fresno County, worried about the competition, has donated $2 million to the No-on-48 campaign.
Brown seeks a “yes” vote, as do North Fork, Wiyot, Station Casinos, unions whose members would help build and operate the casino, and some local politicians.
We care little that a casino in Madera would take patrons from other casinos. We do care, however, about social and environmental impacts of casinos.
California has 109 tribes, more than any other state, and they operate 60-plus casinos, more than enough. An Interior official said in an email last week that 71 groups are seeking to establish tribes in California, and 80 petitions are pending seeking more reservation land in the state. Whether any are real or developers’ dreams is not known.
But Californians should be told how many more casinos state and federal authorities might approve. Will new casinos be located on existing reservations? Or will developers and tribes persuade Interior bureaucrats to approve petitions authorizing the purchase of land in choice locations?
The Brown administration would not say how many compacts are pending. The U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs process is opaque.
There are risks to rejecting Proposition 48. North Fork could open a casino with card tables and so-called Class II machines, which operate slightly slower than Nevada-style slots. The tribe would be under no obligation to make payments to local governments.
There are no angels in this fight. A Las Vegas casino corporation wants to expand, while a New York hedge fund wants to protect its investment. Some tribes would benefit, and others might lose.
Because of recent court rulings decisions, California cannot compel tribes to pay into the general fund, so taxpayers would get little if any benefit.
Worse, the North Fork precedent could open the way for more casinos, in a state that lacks a clear policy about gambling expansion. That is reason enough to vote no on Proposition 48.




Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/09/07/6683079/endorsements-vote-no-on-proposition.html#storylink=cpy

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

At least you are honest in your strong Native stance against Indian Gaming.

Anonymous said...

I support the North Fork Mono Rancheria, YES on prop 48! The land is already in trust and has the approval of the legislature. It will provide many needed jobs in this region and will bring much needed revenue to the county of Madera and the State of California. It does not open gaming to all tribes, that is what the opponents would like wanting people to believe. The opponents are two existing local gaming tribes that are intimidated and unwilling to support this neighboring tribe. It's funny how the NFR is willing to support a smaller tribe and share their revenues with the Humbolt tribe and yet the large lucrative opposing tribes are unwilling to take a small tribe under their wing. It just boils down to greed. Share the wealth, there's enough to go around. YES on Prop 48!

Anonymous said...

what year was the land put in trust

Anonymous said...

In 1814

david barron said...

I'm voting NO on Prop 48, The decision is about whether or not to allow Indian Casinos to be built outside the Indian Reservation or Indian Territory designated lands. This is a fight between two Indian Tribes who are in competition with one another for customer’s money. If one Indian Casino wins the other loses customers and would force employee layoffs. They’re not worry about the average Indian resident. This proposition also includes big business East Coast hedge-fund investors, dealing with big money who don’t necessarily have pure intentions, and an Indian Casino backed by a Las Vegas Casino corporation who would operate the gambling hall. If you vote “YES” you will be giving these hedge-fund investors and wealthy corporation’s permission to build Casinos outside Indian territories, anywhere in the State, county, city or any neighborhood. And, they would be able to avoid the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). You would also be playing into the hands of the State and City’s plans to attack our “Zoning laws” with their many new ordinances coming down the pipe line, like re:codeLA and Senate Bill 1 and Sustainable Communities Investment Authority. This would set the precedent to build anything. However, if you’re blessed with an ethical elected official who will not be bought by Casino big campaign contributions, chances are your ethical elected official will oppose a Casino in your neighborhood or any other business.
I’m not getting in the middle of their fight. I’m voting “NO” so Casinos stay within Indian land territory and Casino workers can remain employed. I don’t trust my current elected officials who favor special interest groups instead of the over-taxed taxpayer.