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Editorial: Pombo's RIGHT Act fails to live up to its name
Thursday, September 14, 2006
Rep. Richard Pombo (R-California) couldn't have picked
a worse title for his bill to restrict off-reservation gaming.
It just made his loss on the House floor yesterday
even more embarrassing.
Pombo, the chairman of the House Resources Committee, was
already out on a limb when he pushed forward his measure to
amend the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
Tribes nationwide were bound to have problems with any
attempts to restrict the growth of their $23 billion
casino industry.
But when he called it the
Restricting Indian Gaming to Homelands of Tribes (RIGHT) Act
and slapped a "bipartisan" label on it,
he was only asking for more trouble. After all, all of
the United States, at one point was considered Indian Country.
And no Democrat with close ties to tribes would
risk voting for it unless he or she were confident the
votes and campaign contributions would continue to pour in.
Sure enough, yesterday's roll call bore out those realities.
Only 39 Democrats voted in favor of H.R.4893, not enough
to gain the required two-thirds margin need to pass
the bill under "suspension."
More telling were the 16 Republicans who voted no. They included
Rep. Rick Renzi (R-Arizona), whose district includes
parts of the Navajo Nation, which opposed the bill.
Rep. J.D. Hayworth (R-Arizona), the co-chair of the Congressional
Native American Caucus, also voted no. So did Rep.
Charles Pickering (R-Mississippi), acting on opposition from
the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, whose off-reservation
casino would be imperiled by the bill.
Despite the defeat, Pombo was correct to note that a clear
majority in the Republican-controlled chamber thought the RIGHT
Act was all right. The vote underscores the reality that
Indian gaming, in the wake of the Abramoff scandal and other
controversies, isn't exactly welcome on Capitol Hill these days. Tribes
can't be celebrating right now.
The political winds may shift again but Pombo also
noted that proponents of Indian gaming have muddied the
record by repeatedly citing the approval of just three
off-reservation casinos since 1988.
That figure is technically correct but dozens more casinos
have been approved pursuant to other exceptions in
IGRA. Back in March 2005, Indianz.Com put the number around
38, a figure
Pombo has touted repeatedly.
At the same time, Pombo and Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona),
whose IGRA amendments face even more opposition, have continued
to ignore the Oklahoma exception that has been abused by at least
one tribe in the state.
Pombo barely touched the issue and McCain's bark turned
out to be no bite when he unveiled his measure.
As a result, neither proposal addresses the fact that the Chickasaw Nation
rapidly expanded its gaming empire in eastern Oklahoma
by exploiting and bypassing IGRA altogether. The Bureau of
Indian Affairs, in some cases, enabled the law-skirting
and, in other cases, simply looked the other way.
Success in Indian Country is not to be discouraged but when the BIA
can't produce the paperwork behind the land-into-trust
applications in question, it's definitely a problem.
That's why the tribe has hired Aurene Martin, a former BIA official,
to make the problem go away.
And when the BIA starts punishing other tribes -- mainly small tribes
in eastern Oklahoma and those in the western part of the state --
it becomes unfair for those who are struggling to become successful.
Pombo and McCain can start to make real reforms by imposing
firm deadlines on land-into-trust applications.
Right now, the BIA can take as long as its wants with absolutely
no accountability for inaction.
If it takes 19 years for someone to get an answer on an application,
it's up to Pombo and McCain to focus their proposals in areas
of great need. They might see more tribes lining up to support
their ideas if they do.
Pombo IGRA Bill:
H.R.4893
[As Passed by Committee] | H.R.4893
[As Introduced] | MP3: House
Resources Committee Debate | Substitute
| Explanation
McCain IGRA Bill:
S.2078
| Senate
Indian Affairs Committee Report
National Indian Gaming Association Resolutions:
Section
20 | IGRA
Amendments
Relevant Links:
National Indian Gaming Commission - http://www.nigc.gov
National
Indian Gaming Association - http://www.indiangaming.org
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