FROM THE ARCHIVE
N.M. compacts finally becoming legal
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2001 The Department of Interior has published nine out of 11 gaming compacts with New Mexico tribes, with the other two to be finalized soon, said a Bureau of Indian Affairs spokesperson. Publication in the Federal Register makes the agreements effective. Compacts for the Pueblos of Isleta, Laguna, Sandia, San Juan, Santa Ana, Santa Clara, Acoma, San Felipe and Tesuque went into effect on Friday. Compacts for Taos Pueblo and the Jicarilla Apache Nation are set to be published by the end of the week. The compacts cap the revenue sharing rate with the state at 8 percent. They were negotiated after Attorney General Patricia Madrid filed a lawsuit to force payment of fees under 1997 compacts that required a 16 percent sharing rate. The tribes agreed to pay $91 million to settle the issue. Pojoaque Pueblo and the Mescalero Apache Nation are refusing to sign off on the new compacts and say the old rate is still too high. Get the Story:
Compacts on Record, Clearing 14 Years of Gaming (The Albuquerque Journal 12/18) Related Stories:
N.M. gaming compacts almost legal (12/13)
Pueblo fighting gaming agreement (11/29)
N.M. compacts approved (11/26)
N.M. tribes want compact approved (11/16)
Mescalero Apache elect leaders (11/8)
N.M. has received $88M from tribes (10/29)
Acoma Pueblo makes gaming payment (10/16)
N.M. sends compacts to Interior (10/10)
N.M. casino settlement blocked (9/19)
Pueblo fights casino settlement (9/4)
Tribes, N.M. want $91M settlement cleared (8/28)
N.M. gaming compacts delayed (8/16)
N.M. tribes settle casino payments (8/10)
N.M. tribes make casino payment deal (8/9)
Pueblo reaches casino payment deal (8/8)
Pueblo casino operating on old compact (6/19)
Tribes, state can't agree on casino payments (5/30)
Pueblo spends all its profits (4/17)
N.M. tribes: $1B to state (3/15)
Gaming 'refund' bill moves along (3/14)
State wants casino back payments (2/23)
NM Tribes ordered to make casino payments (2/14)
NM Tribes may get new compacts (2/13)
Court: New Mexico tribes can be sued (12/8)
Gaming tribes ask for dismissal (8/15)
State sues tribes (6/14)
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