indianz.com Native American Contractors Association
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines

printer friendly version
Michigan tribe finally acquires land base for casino
Monday, January 30, 2006

After more than six years of delays, a Michigan tribe finally claimed victory on Friday when the Bureau of Indian Affairs placed its land into trust.

Less than a month after winning a favorable court decision, the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians celebrated another milestone. "This is an historic moment," said chairman John Miller. "A new day has dawned for our tribe."

The tribe can now move forward with plans to open a casino on 675 acres of ancestral territory in New Buffalo Township in Berrien County. The $160 million Four Winds Casino Resort is expected to generate 1,000 construction jobs and 2,000 permanent jobs.

"The tribe is ecstatic," Miller said.

While the tribe's wait for trust land status is not the longest on record -- the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe of South Dakota has been locked in litigation for more than a decade -- the Pokagon case has become symbolic of the delays being encountered at the local, state and federal level due to controversy over the expansion of the $19 billion tribal casino industry.

Michigan is home to more than 20 tribal and non-tribal gaming facilities but opposition groups have delayed the Pokagon Band's casino and casinos sought by three other tribes. As a result, the Interior Department has imposed new requirements on tribes who seek to acquire land for gaming purposes.

Tribes must now submit costly and time-consuming environmental assessments and environmental impact reports. The process is taking years to complete, as decisions on gaming matters are now being made by career bureaucrats and political appointees in Washington, D.C.

The landscape could change significantly under reforms currently being considered in Congress. Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona), the chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, has held a series of hearings on gaming and has introduced a bill that would alter the land-into-trust process for tribes like the Pokagon Band.

As a restored tribe, the Pokagon Band qualifies for an exception under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act to conduct gaming on newly acquired lands. The tribe also has a separate act of Congress that directs the Interior Department to acquire land in trust.

But McCain's new bill would eliminate the section of IGRA that benefits restored, landless and newly recognized tribes. Instead, these tribes would have to demonstrate a "temporal, cultural, and geographic nexus" to the land they seek to have placed in trust.

The next hearing on the issue takes place on Wednesday, February 1, before the committee. McCain has scheduled yet another hearing on gaming on February 28, one of a handful expected this year as Congress considers amending IGRA, which became law in 1988.

"After 17 years, the gaming act needs to be updated," John Tahsuda, an aide to McCain on the committee, told tribal leaders at the Western Indian Gaming Conference earlier this month.

As for the Pokagon Band, the tribe expects to start construction on the casino in late spring or early summer. The facility could be open within 10 to 12 months.

D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Decision:
TOMAC v. Norton (January 6, 2006)

Relevant Links:
Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians - http://www.pokagon.com

Related Stories:
Senate panel delves into gaming again for 2006 (01/25)
Lobbying reform, gaming high on Congressional agenda (01/20)
Appeals court sides with tribe in trust land dispute (01/09)
Michigan tribe questions land-into-trust delay (01/05)
Appeals court hears Pokagon Potawatomi casino case (12/09)
Michigan tribe not worried about industry changes (10/04)
Tribal leader wants probe of Griles-Abramoff links (08/31)
Abramoff tried to hire Griles at lobbying firm (8/29)
Traffic, crime a concern for Nottawaseppi casino (08/25)
BIA holds public hearing on Nottawaseppi casino (08/24)
Michigan tribe wants to intervene in casino case (07/29)
Lawsuit planned over Michigan tribe's casino (06/13)
Michigan tribe ready to hire for disputed casino (06/02)
Pokagon Band predicts win on land-into-trust appeal (05/25)
Michigan group files appeal of land-into-trust case (05/24)
Michigan tribe pushes for compact negotiations (05/17)
GOP congressman introduces anti-Indian gaming bill (05/13)
Michigan governor ready to negotiate compact (04/22)
BIA takes land into trust for Michigan tribe's casino (04/20)
Michigan tribe scores victory in casino land case (03/29)
Editorial: Ruling for Michigan casino not good news (03/29)
Michigan tribes pleased with action over compacts (02/23)
Supreme Court turns down gaming compact case (02/22)
Michigan governor surprised by anti-compact vote (12/16)
Michigan court considers tribal compact dispute (12/14)
Michigan Supreme Court upholds gaming pacts (08/02)
Mich. tribe clears hurdle for $100M casino project (03/24)
Mich. tribe's casino plans scuttled by lawsuits (03/15)

Copyright © 2000-2006 Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Local Links:
In The Hoop | Indian Gaming | The Federal Register
Casino Stalker | Federal Recognition Database
Jobs and Notices:
Indian Law Resource Center Development Director
American Indian Alaska Native Tourism Association Financial Manager
Employment Opportunity Membership Coordinator
Native American Contractors Association Executive Director
Contact Blue Earth Marketing, lchen@blueearthmarketing.com, to place your ad here!
Latest News:
Native Sun News: Study shows high Indian infant death rate (2/9)
Witness list for SCIA hearing on Internet gaming and tribes (2/9)
Doug George-Kanentiio: Solving Canada's Indian 'problem' (2/9)
Billy Frank: Let's win salmon recovery battle in Washington (2/9)
Kim Teehee: Celebrate the anniversary of Lets Move! effort (2/9)
Charlie Galbraith: Land consolidation plan is a step forward (2/9)
Steven Newcomb: Allotment a massive grab of Indian lands (2/9)
Hualapai Tribe votes for takeover of Grand Canyon Skywalk (2/9)
OPB: Growing enrollment a big issue for tribes in Northwest (2/9)
Tribes meet with Oklahoma governor to discuss water case (2/9)
Campaign eyes $80M to finish Indian museum in Oklahoma (2/9)
KCAW: Tlingit 'dictionary' baffling speakers of the language (2/9)
Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation disputes suit over recognition (2/9)
Hundreds in Indian town struck by food poisoning after rally (2/9)
Oklahoma attorney general files suit to stop Kialegee casino (2/9)
Editorial: Lawsuit can help resolve fight over Kialegee casino (2/9)
Chickasaw Nation breaks ground on 18th casino in Oklahoma (2/9)
Gun Lake Tribe celebrates first anniversary of gaming facility (2/9)
UKB hopes to convince South Carolina governor on casino bid (2/9)
Native Sun News: Oglala Sioux Tribe to host Keystone XL rally (2/8)
Rick Santorum boosts campaign with victories in three states (2/8)
Rep. Markey calls for hearing on Alaska Native corporations (2/7)
Larry Echo Hawk: How being a Mormon helped me succeed (2/7)
Steve Russell: Talking Mitt Romney with cousin Ray Sixkiller (2/7)
Jeromy Sullivan: Protect Port Gamble from overdevelopment (2/7)
Julia Good Fox: A unified political platform for Indian Country (2/7)
DC Circuit set to hear first of challenges to Cobell settlement (2/7)
House approves bill to move Quileute Tribe to safer grounds (2/7)
Sen. McCain questions law firm that receives casino revenue (2/7)
Ms. Blog: Some things you need to know about Native women (2/7)
Opinion: False allegations against San Manuel Band chairman (2/7)
Opinion: IHS includes natural health discipline in loan program (2/7)
New Mexico Secretary of Indian Affairs hasn't been confirmed (2/7)
more headlines...

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.