Thursday, September 6, 2012

Governor Brown allows North Fork Rancheria to Reservation Shop

Governor approves Highway 99 Mono casino Chukchansi tribal leaders say Brown chose Las Vegas developers over California voters Brian Wilkinson (Updated: Thursday, September 06, 2012, 12:56 PM) Governor Jerry Brown approved the North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians' plans last Friday to build a multi-million dollar casino on Highway 99, north of Madera near Ave. 17.

Brown's Aug. 31 decision follows the Sept. 1, 2011 approval of the $350 million casino by the Department of Interior/Bureau of Indian Affairs to allow the tribe to proceed with the casino, about 40 miles from North Fork.

Brown concurred with the department's approval that stated the casino would be in the best interest of the tribe, would not be detrimental to the surrounding community, would be built on lands historically connected to the tribe and would enjoy local support.

In a letter to Secretary of the Interior Kenneth Salazar, Brown said the federal administrative process was extremely thorough, lasting more than seven years, including numerous hearings and generated thousands of pages of administrative records.

Tribal Council Chairperson Elaine Bethel Fink said the governor's approval was a necessary step in the process and the 1,900 member tribe is looking forward to completing the process and making their dreams come true.

The project now awaits final approval by the U.S. Department of the Interior and the state legislature. "The casino is going to bring a big economical boost to the Central Valley," Bethel Fink said. Tribal spokesman Charles Banks-Altekruse said the project has been in the planning process for nearly a decade.

"The project has been poured over, scrutinized, subjected to numerous rule revisions by numerous state and federal administrations ... Democratic and Republican ... and still it has prevailed and moved forward," Banks-Altekruse said. "Although we have passed the largest hurdles in the rigorous approval process, several state and federal steps remain. And, so while a few narrow special interest groups may still try to oppose and obstruct us, we feel momentum and justice are on our side. Our tribe remains focused on one goal: working with our local partners and supporters to push this thing across the line and begin construction as soon as possible to generate jobs, economic opportunity and community funding for Madera County."

Along with Brown's approval came a new 110-page, 20-year compact between the state and the tribe, providing millions of dollars in shared gaming revenue with the state, Madera County and the cities of Madera and Chowchilla, other agencies and tribes. The new compact nullifies the compact signed in 2008 by then Gov. Schwarzenegger although the provisions of the compact are almost identical.

Even the Picayune Rancheria of the Chukchansi Indians, who operate Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino in Coarsegold and were the project's biggest opponents, will benefit from the new compact. In an effort to mitigate the expected loss of revenue to Chukchansi because of the new casino, the Mono tribe will pay Chukchansi up to $760,000 per quarter, from the time they receive their construction financing until the casino opens. When the casino opens, Chukchansi will receive 2.5% on the net win from slot machines through 2020. The compact calls for the revenue sharing to top out at 3.5% if annual slot revenue exceeds more than $200 million.

Still, Chukchansi officials said they will be exploring litigation options and urging the California legislature to be wary of approving any tribal-state gaming compact with the Mono tribe. If the compact is approved, the Mono tribe will also give 2.5% of slot winnings after opening for life to the Wiyot Tribe in Northern California to keep that tribe from building a casino on environmentally sensitive areas of Humboldt Bay.

Maryann McGovran, who has been on the Mono tribal council for eight years -- the past four as tribal council vice chairperson -- said the tribe is happy with the compact because it gives a lot of money to the local community and other tribes throughout California.

Pat Beihn, who has been on the Mono tribal council for 15 years, said he was very proud of Gov. Brown for his courage in making the right decision.

Regardless of the mitigation measures, Chukchansi officials were quick to criticize Brown's decision. In a statement released within hours of the governor's announcement, Reggie Lewis, Chukchansi tribal chairman, said "Today, Governor Brown chose Las Vegas developers over the California voters. We continue to strongly oppose the policy of 'reservation shopping' that has been pushed by non-Indian Las Vegas developers who encourage tribes to claim territorial rights far away from their current lands to achieve a better gaming market."

Bethel Fink has previously stated that the reservation shopping argument was not accurate because federal law allows tribes with no land, or land inadequate for development, to appeal to put new lands in trust, a rigorous process that the Department of Interior reviews on a case by case basis.

Lewis said in the statement that Brown failed to follow the California Environmental Quality Act that requires state agencies to identify environmental impacts of the project and to mitigate those impacts, and that he also failed to conduct an independent analysis of whether the North Fork tribe has a historical connection to the proposed casino site. With Brown's approval, the BIA is now in a position to issue a Record of Decision on the 6,500 page final Environmental Impact Study released in August, 2010, which would allow the land to be placed in trust.

"There have been plenty of opportunities over the years for people to weigh-in on the environmental study and we have mitigated every issue that was brought up," McGovran said. Lewis also said the governor's approval "has essentially opened the floodgates for off-reservation gaming in California ... communities throughout the state should be prepared to see casinos pop-up right in the middle of their neighborhoods and downtown."

http://www.sierrastar.com/2012/09/06/59282/governor-approves-highway-99-mono.html

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Lewis is paranoid and delusional if he really believes a casino can just appear in the downtown areas of California. There are many laws and regulations that must be considered prior to a casino establishment.

Anonymous said...

Nice to see you back OP. Well it looks like Gov. Brown is not getting what he wants from the Chuckchansi Indians and it looks like they do not have the power they thought they had. This is good and bad news. Hope it works out well.

for ALL nations...for ALL chukchansi people said...

THIS is what i think....

if the DOI/BIA, in allowing north fork approval for their casino, can REQUIRE mono to "mitigate" affects of their casino on picayune's casino ordering them to pay over $3,000,000 per year to picayune until north fork's casino opens and 2.5 per cent of their revenue thereafter until 2020 (REMEMBER-picayune went to the bia with their casino request with the promise to support 1,850 tribal members when their casino was approved--NOT the 400 or so tribal members that remain following dismemberment of over a thousand of those people and banishment/loss of benefits of many more) AND if the BIA/DOI can require north fork to share profits with the wiyot, then...

CERTAINLY, the CAN insist that the corrupt picayune tribal government reinstate ALL of our chukchansi people for which they PROMISED to provide for with their casino, AND require them to do so by supporting PROGRAMS...NOT by allowing huge per capita payments to individual chukchansi who happen to be left following the chukchansi tribal peoples genocide of three quarters of the tribe!!! same goes for EVERY corrupt tribal government who have participated in the horrific genocide of THOUSANDS of our people!!!

!!!bring the people--ALL the people--home to picayune!!!

smokeybear said...

And after the "Casino" is built, it will be only a matter of time till they start their own "Disenrollment" of "Legitimate Lineal Decendants?" Mark My Words!
..."Eagle Eyes."

P.S.: My wife is doing a little better, but she's not out of the woods yet. Keep "Prayers" coming, and I thank all of you so very much...."Eagle Eyes."

Anonymous said...

this site is so boring, give it up already game over never gonna get in, it's all a dead issue,

Anonymous said...

What do you mean?Some people got enrolled?

Anonymous said...

Tribal enrollment is not a requirement for one to be considered an Indian for purposes of
criminal prosecution. United States v. Antelope, 430 U.S. 641, 646 at note 7 and Stymiest,
581 F.3d at 766.


HMMMMMM

Anonymous said...

OMG do you know what this 2010 ruling means?


WELL WELL WELL

Anonymous said...

Did smokey or white buffalo say something about jurisdiction?

Are you a Indian?

Anonymous said...

Haha Dora jones and Dixie Jackson both went to north fork and tried to enroll just to be denied. What makes them think that north fork would want their lying, cheating, thieving, tribe hoping butts any where around their tribe?

Anonymous said...

If you type Temculapatch in your search box they have a story on disenrollment. Mark Macarro is the poster boy for corrupt Indian government.