The clock is ticking on the Bush administration and
one Wisconsin tribe is still worried its off-reservation
casino proposal will be rejected by outgoing Interior Secretary Dirk
Kempthorne.
The Menominee Nation, whose reservation was recently rated
the least healthy place in the state, wants to convert a dog track into a Class III facility. The tribe says
the project, which has the support of the local community, will improve its way of life.
"Menominee ranks last in the state in terms of mortality, general health
status, unemployment, children living in poverty and other factors that
have a devastating impact on the health of our community,"
Chair Lisa Waukau said. "In addition
to creating thousands of good jobs and providing major economic
benefits to Kenosha and the state of Wisconsin, the project will
generate the revenue our tribe needs to emerge from this dangerous
downward spiral and build a better future for the Menominee people."
Despite the potential benefits of the $808 million Kenosha casino,
it faces rejection under a "guidance memorandum" the Bush
administration issued in January. The policy
requires tribes who seek land away
from existing reservations to prove that the
acquisition won't hurt their home communities.
The new standard, which includes a "commutability" test
for driving back and forth from the reservation, was developed
without tribal consultation and without going through
the rule-making process. But so far, it has survived
one legal challenge in a lawsuit involving another Wisconsin
off-reservation casino.
The Menominees filed their own suit last month in hopes of
preventing the project from suffering the same fate
as 11 other tribes whose casinos were rejected in January
under the memorandum.
A motion for a temporary restraining order claimed
the denial from the Interior Department was imminent.
"The tribe would be irreparably harmed if DOI were allowed to proceed with the denial
it now threatens to issue," the November 24 brief stated.
But after a 10-minute telephone hearing two days later,
Judge William C. Griesbach, a Bush nominee, rejected
the tribe's request to block Interior from proceeding. He said the tribe "failed to establish a likelihood of success
on the merits" because there was no "final agency action"
to review.
"It is doubtful that the claim is ripe or that the tribe has standing at this stage of the proceeding," Griesbach wrote on November 26.
The tribe asked the Bureau of Indian Affairs back in October
to stop processing its application. George Skibine, a career employee who has been assigned the duties of the
assistant secretary for Indian affairs, said he wouldn't agree to the request.
Skibine, who normally serves as director of the Office of Indian
Gaming Management at the BIA, is likely to be the decision-maker
on the Menominee casino, if one is made at all before the end of
the Bush administration. He has not made similar rulings on off-reservation
casinos since former assistant secretary Carl Artman resigned in May.
Artman, before he stepped down, told Congress that Secretary
Kempthorne did not develop the January memorandum. But it is widely known that Kempthorne, the former
governor of Idaho, opposes off-reservation gaming.
Since Kempthorne came on board in May 2006, it has become increasingly
harder for tribes to acquire land away from existing reservations.
Officials have made critical changes to their review of
land-into-trust applications and gaming compacts without consulting tribes and without going through
the rule-making process.
The Bush administration recently finalized two rules affecting
land-into-trust applications and gaming
compacts. But neither of them address the guidance memorandum or
other changes that were made without consulting tribes.
Tribes and their advocates hope president-elect Barack Obama
will rescind the changes after he is inaugurated on January 20, 2009.
His transition team, which includes
three prominent Indian attorneys, has been busy reviewing
the Interior Department with an eye at putting his stamp
on Indian policies.
Court Decision:
Menominee Nation v. Kempthorne (November 26, 2008)
Related Stories:
Gaming compact rule finalized by Bush
administration (12/8)
Strong outlook for Indian Country under Obama
(11/21)
NIGC prepares for transition to
new administration (11/19)
Indian gaming
issues up for Obama's review (11/18)
BIA proposes new rule for tribal-state gaming
compacts (7/2)
Gaming regulations finalized by resigning Artman
(5/20)
Artman suggests mileage limit for
off-reservation land (02/28)
BIA starts
new year with off-reservation gaming policy (1/7)
Rejected tribes want casinos too far from
reservations (1/7)
Bush holding back off-reservation gaming
proposals (11/16)
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