"The Battle of Jamul, probably the fiercest fight ever involving an Indian casino proposed for rural San Diego County, is on again. Encouragingly, it began with what might be considered a peace offering. But it probably won’t bring peace.
Representatives of the Jamul Indian Village turned up at a meeting of the Jamul-Dulzura Community Planning Group last week, announcing that the tribe is resurrecting plans to build a casino on its 6-acre “so-called reservation” – as county Supervisor Dianne Jacob referred to it in an interview – just off state Route 94 in East County.
That announcement officially reignited a fight that dates to 1999, when the tribe proposed a 12-story, $350 million casino/hotel project, setting off a firestorm in the community of roughly 6,100 people, most of whom feared the casino would pose a threat to groundwater supplies, would produce more traffic on that narrow, winding and dangerous stretch of Route 94 and, most importantly, would mean the loss of their rural lifestyle."
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Editorial: THE CHARACTER OF A COMMUNITY AT STAKE
(UT San Diego 2/20)
Related Stories:
Jamul Band to scale back plans for
casino on the reservation (2/16)
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