The Circle Bar at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California. Photo from Facebook
>
The Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians has reached an agreement to pay for more law enforcement services at its casino.
The tribe will fund one deputy sheriff and one community resource deputy sheriff at the Chumash Casino Resort, according to documents filed with Santa Barbara County.
The agreement also covers two patrol cars plus uniforms, equipment and annual maintenance.
The salaries and other benefits for the two officers will cost the tribe $408,275.32 a year, according to the documents. The new vehicles will incur an up-front cost of $130,000 while the annual maintenance is expected to run $8,231.
The agreement, which has been approved by the tribe and the county, runs for five years. It can be renewed for another five years.
The tribe negotiated the agreement to resolve two protests to its liquor license. The tribe is expanding the areas in which alcohol is served at the casino.
Read More on the Story:
Chumash agree to pay for more law enforcement
(The Santa Ynez Valley News 8/30)
Related Stories:
Chumash
Tribe celebrates $165M expansion at gaming facility (07/20)
House
committee approves land-into-trust bill for Chumash Tribe (7/14)
Chumash
Tribe unveils new sculptures as part of casino expansion (06/06)
Chumash
Tribe to unveil casino expansion as foes return to court (05/09)
Candidate
suggests building wall around Chumash Tribe casino (03/24)
Chumash
Tribe plans to hire more than 200 for gaming expansion (03/01)
Chumash
Tribe continues to face opposition to casino expansion (12/14)
Chumash
Tribe raises gambling age to 21 for new liquor permit (10/30)