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BIA takes stab at off-reservation gaming regulations
Wednesday, February 1, 2006
The Bureau of Indian Affairs is considering regulations to clarify how land is taken into trust for gaming but the proposal wouldn't go as far as a bill pending in the Senate.
George Skibine, the BIA official in charge of gaming, revived the proposal last year, nearly four years after the original regulations were pulled by the Bush administration. Since then, controversy over gaming and the land-into-trust process has grown while tribal casinos have become an $19 billion business.
As Skibine said during the Global Gaming Expo last September, the proposal establishes criteria for the two-part determination process for off-reservation casinos. In these cases, the Interior Department and the state governor where the casino would be located have to approve the tribe's land-into-trust application after consulting with local governments and nearby tribes.
The regulations being circulated also establish criteria for the four exceptions contained in Section 20 of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. The exceptions apply to newly recognized tribes, restored
tribes, tribes in Oklahoma with former reservations and tribes with a land claim settlement.
In both situations -- the two-part determination and the Section 20 exceptions -- the proposal seeks to clarify existing policy rather than break new ground or impose stricter requirements on tribes. The National Indian Gaming Association supports this regulatory approach, the group's executive director said earlier this month.
"We think that if these rules were laid out in a Department of Interior regulation, it could provide a clear framework and allay some of the concerns that have arisen about off-reservation gaming,"
Mark Van Norman said at the Western Indian Gaming Conference.
As such, the approach -- which is not final and could be changed in the future -- stands in contrast to a bill introduced by Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona), the chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.
McCain's bill would eliminate the two-part determination process and the exceptions for newly recognized tribes, restored tribes and tribes with a land claim settlement. The Oklahoma
exception would remain intact.
The issue will be debated today as McCain holds a hearing on off-reservation gaming. It is the sixth gaming or gaming-related hearing the committee has held since McCain took control in 2005 with a pledge to re-examine IGRA, the law he helped write 17 years ago.
"I have always been and continue to be a supporter of the rights of Indian tribes to conduct gaming," McCain said when he introduced his amendments, "but I also continue to believe that effective regulation of these enterprises are critical to tribes' continued success."
For two-part determinations, the notable parts of Skibine's proposal would:
require consultation of local governments within a 10-mile radius of the proposed off-reservation casino.
require consultation of nearby tribes within 50
miles of the proposed off-reservation casino.
require tribes to submit financial projections,
consulting agreements and
financial agreements, and require tribes to disclose
possible adverse impacts and plans to address those impacts.
create a 60-day comment period, with possible
extensions, to consult with local governments, state officials
and nearby tribes
For the exceptions, the notable parts of the proposal would:
define "contiguous" as "land(s) sharing a common
boundary, or adjoining with nothing intervening. However,
parcels of land are contiguous even if separated by roads,
railroads, other rights of way, or streams." This definition
applies mainly to the Oklahoma former reservation exception.
require tribes to obtain Congressional approval
for a land claim settlement and obtain state or
federal court approval of the settlement before
gaming on land acquired through the settlement.
require newly recognized
tribes to stay within their service area for an off-reservation casino.
If no service area is defined, the tribe must demonstrate
"significant historical and cultural ties" to the land being sought for an off-reservation casino.
require restored tribes to obtain an act of Congress
to acquire restored land, or demonstrate a "modern connection"
to the land being sought for an off-reservation casino. Several criteria are laid out to determine
the modern connection.
Skibine has previously stated there is no time frame for the consideration of the regulations.
It could take several months, or even more than a year, to develop and finalize them.
Meanwhile, regulations to establish criteria for non-gaming land-into-trust applications are still not
on the radar screen. The Bush administration shelved an earlier proposal in November 2001 despite complaints from tribal leaders.
Today's hearing starts at
9:30am and will be held in Senate Dirksen Room 106. It will be broadcast online
at http://indian.senate.gov.
Draft BIA Regulations:
Gaming on Lands Acquired After October 17, 1998
McCain IGRA Bill:
Indian
Gaming Regulatory Act Amendments of 2005 (S.2078)
Relevant Documents:
McCain Floor
Statement (November 18, 2005)
April 27, 2005, Hearing on Regulation of Indian Gaming:
Witness
List/Testimony | Video
May 18, 2005, Hearing on Taking Land into Trust:
Witness
List/Testimony | Video
June 28, 2005, Hearing on Regulation of Indian Gaming:
Witness
List/Testimony | Video
July 27, 2005, Hearing on IGRA exceptions and off-reservation
gaming:
Witness
List/Testimony | Video
September 21, 2005, Hearing on Regulation of Class III Gaming:
Witness
List/Testimony
Relevant Links:
Senate Indian Affairs Committee - http://indian.senate.gov
NIGC
Indian Land Determinations - http://www.nigc.gov/nigc/nigcControl?option=LAND_DETERMINATIONS
National Indian Gaming Association - http://www.indiangaming.org
Related Stories:
Witness list for hearing on
off-reservation gaming (1/31)
Senate panel delves into gaming again for
2006 (01/25)
Lobbying reform, gaming
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Appeals court sides with tribe in trust land
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IGRA amendments tough on many, especially
tribes (12/12)
Oklahoma tribe hires ex-BIA
official to lobby for land (12/01)
McCain proposes major amendments to IGRA
(11/30)
NIGC adopts new
approach for tribal gaming sites (11/14)
Tribes dispute local power over trust land
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DOJ releases proposed
changes to Indian gaming law (10/06)
DOJ gaming proposal shows changes to
Johnson Act (10/05)
BIA official revives
off-reservation land regulations (09/21)
DOJ proposes major change in Indian gaming law
(09/16)
Gaming clouds already lengthy
land-into-trust process (09/15)
Oklahoma
tribe plans state's largest gaming facility (08/02)
NIGC develops system to track Indian lands
(07/28)
Perception and realities in
land-into-trust debate (05/19)
Senate
panel supports NIGC on Class II rules (04/29)
Tribes cite strong regulation of gaming industry
(4/28)
Land-into-trust problems aired at
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