Indianz.Com > Indian Gaming

Editorial: California communities left out of tribal gaming debate

Monday, July 16, 2012

"What does the Obama administration have against the residents of Amador County?

Tiny Amador, home to just 38,000 people, is fighting a pitched battle with the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs to prevent the construction of two giant new Indian casinos in its backyard. The locals have a legitimate beef and the feds need to listen.

In one lawsuit filed last month, the county seeks to prevent the Ione Band of Miwok Indians from building a gambling palace in Plymouth. The charming but far from completely spruced-up hamlet of just 1,000 inhabitants sits in northwest Amador. Plymouth lacks the road system, law enforcement presence, water, sewers and other vital infrastructure to support such a large development.

Despite persistent objections from the county's elected officials, the acting assistant secretary of Indian Affairs in May reversed a decision of his Bush administration predecessor and took 228 acres of land near Plymouth into trust on behalf of the Ione Band, so the tribe can build a casino. If it stands, the federal action means the tribe will not have to comply with a rule that requires it to show that gambling at that location would "not be detrimental to the surrounding community.""

Get the Story:
Editorial: Communities get the shaft as Indian casinos keep expanding (The Sacramento Bee 7/15) Related Stories:
Off-reservation casino fear mostly unrealized despite policy shift (7/6)