Fresh from the defeat of an off-reservation casino bill, tribal leaders on Tuesday took aim at new regulations that would bring significant changes to the $23 billion Indian gaming industry.
At an all-day hearing before the National Indian Gaming Commission, tribal leaders, industry experts and legal advocates repeatedly criticized the proposal. They called it a major setback to the
benefits tribal casinos have brought to reservations and surrounding communities.
Many cited improvements in education, health care and social services, along with better relations with local governments. "[Gaming] has had a major impact," said Margie Mejia, the chairwoman
of the Lytton Band of Pomo Indians in northern California, whose tribe was terminated in the 1950s.
But the NIGC's proposal to redefine the game of bingo threatens all of the gains, she charged. The tribe's facility in the Bay Area exclusively offers electronic bingo-based machines that would be considered illegal if the regulations are adopted, she said.
"It's really termination for my people again," Mejia said.
Other Indian Country representatives came with similar stories. Tracie Stevens,
the governmental affairs director for the Tulalip Tribes of Washington,
said the tribe would have "no choice" but to remove hundreds of
machines and eliminate at least 40 jobs if the rules become law.
"We know the proposal will have adversely impact Tulalip," said Stevens,
who stood in for chairman Stan Jones.
Buford Rolin, the chairman of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama,
said his tribe would lose business because the NIGC's proposal
restricts the types of games that can be operated at casinos.
He projected an 80 percent decrease in gaming revenues at one facility and a loss of
500 jobs at another.
"We will no longer be able to keep pace with our competitors and
will be forced to close up," Rolin told NIGC chairman Phil Hogen
colleague Chuck Choney.
Others connected to the Indian gaming industry agreed with the assessments
even as they tried to offer neutral views on the controversy.
Nick Farley, the president of a testing lab in Ohio,
acknowledged that the NIGC's proposal can be followed if adopted.
But he said some of the proposed definitions and classification standards
"contradict" existing rules. He indicated that it would take more testing
time to determine whether casino machines adhere to the new regulations.
The only person who outright spoke in favor of the NIGC's proposal
was Sharon Tolten-Reese, the deputy director of the Washington
State Gaming Commission. She said the definitions and
standards would clear up "gray areas" of the law.
But she appeared to back track on some of her statements after
facing criticism from tribal representatives in the audience,
who questioned why she suggested that some tribes in Washington
were operating "illegal" machines.
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Despite the overwhelming opposition, Hogen said the NIGC hopes
to move forward with the changes. He said the rules would
bring stability to a contentious area of law.
The proposal has been in the works for more than two years.
At one point, the rules were tied up
due to an inter-agency dispute with the Department of Justice,
which has taken a tough stance against tribes who offer
electronic casino machines.
Tribes were able to lobby the administration to revise and hold back
a Justice initiative that would have imposed even stronger
restrictions on the industry than the ones being considered
by the NIGC.
At issue is whether the use of technology turns an electronic
bingo game into a slot machine or a slot equivalent. Tribal representatives
argue that the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 envisioned
that these types of games would remain legal.
NIGC, however, has issued opinions that have pushed some of
the games into the slot machine category. The distinction is
significant because slot machines and similar games can only
be operated with the consent of the state under a tribal-state
compact.
Bingo and pull-tabs, known as Class II games, can be offered
free of state control.
Class II represents a small portion of the $23 billion
tribal casino industry. Most of the money comes from Class III
games like slots and card games.
But tribes are facing increasing demands from states to
share more of their Class III revenues. So NIGC officials like
Hogen acknowledge that Class II remains crucial to the future
of the industry.
"Bingo is the bedrock of Indian gaming," said Hogen, who called IGRA "the single most effective economic development engine in the history of federal Indian policy."
The comment period on the rules is set to close at the end of
the month. Some have asked for an extension so that NIGC
can conduct a broader economic analysis of the impact of
the proposal.
Relevant Links:
National Indian Gaming Commission -
http://www.nigc.govNational
Indian Gaming Association -
http://www.indiangaming.org