The Aquinnah
Wampanoag Tribe of Massachusetts might put an end to its controversial Class II gaming project.
Tribal members successfully petitioned for a referendum on the casino, The Vineyard Gazette reports. The vote takes place August 16, the paper said, and the outcome will determine whether work will continue.
“Our petition states that we want to repeal all resolutions, votes, et cetera, that have to do with turning the community center into a casino,” Beverly Wright, a former chairwoman of the tribe who opposes the casino, told the paper. “We want all those votes repealed.”
The tribe plans to convert an unfinished community center on the reservation into the casino. But local and state officials claim the tribe can't use the land for gaming due to in the Massachusetts
Indian Land Claims Settlement Act of 1987 that place the reservation under state law.
The Interior Department and the National Indian Gaming Commission, on
the other hand, have concluded that the tribe can follow the Indian
Gaming Regulatory Act, which became law a year after the settlement act. The
federal agencies are not involved in the state's lawsuit.
In 2004, the Massachusetts
Supreme Court ruled that the law subjects the tribe to state
jurisdiction. The case, however, did not involve gaming.
The reservation is located on the island of Martha's Vineyard.
Get the Story:
Tribe Will Take a New Vote on Aquinnah Casino Question
(The Vineyard Gazette 7/13)
Relevant Documents:
Solicitor
Letter to Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe (August 23, 2013)
NIGC
Letter to Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe (October 25, 2013)
Press
Release: GSB Client Aquinnah Wampanoag to be First to Game in Massachusetts
(November 12, 2013)
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