The Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior
Chippewa Indians is seeking to expand its off-reservation gaming site in Duluth, Minnesota.
The tribe recently filed a land-into-trust application with the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
The tribe wants to add the adjacent Carter Hotel to the Fond-du-Luth Casino.
The tribe owns the hotel, which now sits vacant. The tribe paid $1,150 in property taxes last year, The Duluth News Tribune reported.
“The band has an interest in upgrading the property and making it more of a draw,” Chairwoman Karen Diver told the paper. “We’d be investing in more jobs.”
The city is opposing the application. Mayor Don Ness has already threatened to shut down the casino as part of a revenue-sharing lawsuit that the tribe won.
Get the Story:
City details objections to Fond du Lac Band's plans to expand downtown reservation
(The Duluth News Tribune 1/17)
Related Stories:
Mayor again threatens to shut down Fond
du Lac Band casino (1/6)
Land Acquisitions | Litigation
Fond du Lac Band seeks to grow off-reservation gaming site
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Stay Connected
Contact Us
indianz@indianz.com202 630 8439 (THEZ)
Search
Top Indian Gaming Stories
Trending in Gaming
1 Catawba Nation continues work on controversial casino in North Carolina
2 Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes move forward with casino expansion
3 Poarch Band of Creek Indians said to be on Trump's radar
4 Hopi Tribe officially joins Indian gaming industry with approved compact
5 Seminole Tribe paid just $50M for casino Donald Trump built for $1.2B
2 Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes move forward with casino expansion
3 Poarch Band of Creek Indians said to be on Trump's radar
4 Hopi Tribe officially joins Indian gaming industry with approved compact
5 Seminole Tribe paid just $50M for casino Donald Trump built for $1.2B
More Stories
Navajo Nation celebrates new gaming facility in New Mexico Connecticut tribes see best month for slot revenues in years
Indian Gaming Archive