"Perhaps it’s good that Fall River might some day host a casino. Maybe when city leaders can gamble with their own money, they won’t risk the whole city’s well-being.
When Mayor Will Flanagan announced his intentions last month to lure a casino to Fall River, identifying 300 North End acres as the most viable location, he insisted he wasn’t pushing aside the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, which already had a deal with the city to build a bioprocessing plant on the land that would become the SouthCoast BioPark. He presented the university with alternate parcels to build the BioPark and said he was working with UMass Dartmouth on a new location at the same time he was negotiating with the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe for a resort casino. It was assumed — and expected — that Flanagan would rework the existing deal with UMass Dartmouth before committing to a new one with the tribe.
Then the city pulled the rug out from under the university.
Flanagan has pushed all in, announcing a deal with the tribe last week for a casino, three hotels, a mall and a water park. Following his lead, the Redevelopment Authority voted 4-1 Wednesday to sell the 300 acres to the Wampanoags for $21 million, stripping away in a month a project that had been planned for a decade."
Get the Story:
OUR VIEW: Rolling the dice
(The Fall River Herald News 5/28)
Related Stories:
City approves sale of land for Mashpee
Wampanoag casino (5/27)
Tribal rights an
issue as Massachusetts weighs gaming bill (5/26)
Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe presents casino
project to city (5/25)
Aquinnah
Wampanoag Tribe to present another casino plan (5/24)
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe commissions poll on
new casino (5/21)
Town weighs
options on Mashpee Wampanoag gaming deal (5/20)
City council members against Mashpee
Wampanoag casino (5/19)
Mashpee
Wampanoag Tribe switches location for casino bid (5/18)
Mashpee Wampanaog Tribe announces new
casino location (5/17)
Mashpee
Wampanoag Tribe negotiates for a new casino site (5/14)
Town presses Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe about
casino bid (5/12)
Advertisement
Tags
Search
More Headlines
Catawba Nation continues work on controversial casino in North Carolina
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Indian Gaming Archive