"A California band of Indians that runs a bustling casino won an important court ruling last week. If it holds up on appeal, California tribes could gain the power to expand their casinos without having to pay significant money into state coffers.
What seems like a sweet victory for tribes could be Pyrrhic.
California voters have approved ballot measures granting tribes monopoly rights to operate Nevada-style gambling halls on their land, transforming some of them into wealthy and sophisticated political players.
But the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' ruling favoring the Rincon Band of Luiseño Mission Indians could have the unintended effect of undermining support for tribes' monopoly, and opening the way for commercial gambling interests to expand their role.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has promoted expansion so long as tribes pay into state coffers. This year, tribes will pay the state about $350 million, far short of the billions the governor touted, but more than nothing.
Sacramento attorney Howard Dickstein, who represents several tribes and negotiated many of those deals, said that even with the payments, tribes profited. He fears the decision that the governor overreached could mean that Indians may "win the battle and lose the war."
"The decision undermines the entire basis for exclusivity in the compacts," Dickstein said. "Without a revenue share, the state has no financial incentive to limit gaming to tribes.""
Get the Story:
Dan Morain: Ruling may backfire on tribal casinos
(The Sacramento Bee 4/29)
9th Circuit Decision:
Rincon
Band v. Schwarzenegger (April 20, 2010)
Earlier Story:
Editorial: California tribes can't get
free ride on casinos (4/26)
Editorial: California deserves a share
of tribal revenues (4/26)
Editorial:
Appeal decision on tribal compact negotiation (4/23)
Column: Tribal casino revenues no sure bet
in California (4/23)
Republican
nominees decided compact negotiation case (4/22)
California tribal casino sharing fund
slowly losing money (4/22)
Schwarzenegger to ask for rehearing in
compact lawsuit (4/21)
Rincon
Band wins case on Class III compact negotiation (4/20)
Pauma Band awaits final ruling in gaming
compact case (4/19)
Judge
indicates he might invalidate Pauma casino compact (4/6)
Another California tribe wins case over
slot machine cap (3/31)
California | Opinion
Column: Decision could erode support for Indian gaming
Thursday, April 29, 2010
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