The Bureau of Indian Affairs could place a gaming site in trust for the Cowlitz Tribe of Washington as soon as next week, a local attorney said.
Last October, the BIA filed a notice in federal court that said the 152-acre would be placed in trust as soon as January. That date has passed but the attorney for the city of La Center believes action will occur soon, The Battle Ground Reflector reported.
The tribe has been pushing for the Cowlitz Casino Resort for
more than a decade. Opponents -- including the the Confederated Tribes of Grand
Ronde in Oregon -- hope to derail the casino by bringing up the U.S. Supreme Court decision
in Carcieri
v. Salazar.
The ruling restricts the land-into-trust process to tribes that were "under
federal jurisdiction" as of 1934. The Cowlitz didn't gain federal recognition until 2000 but the Bureau of Indian Affairs conducted a two-part test to determine whether the tribe qualified.
On December 12, Judge Barbara
Jacobs Rothstein issued a 57-page
decision that upheld the BIA's analysis.
Opponents, however, are taking the case to the D.C. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
Get the Story:
La Center amends comp plan, revamps language concerning Cowlitz Tribe
(The Battle Ground Reflector 3/4)
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