"The dispute over the tax status of Great Wolf Lodge should be allowed to go to trial.
Owners of the destination resort at Grand Mound have asked a federal judge to short-circuit the process. In essence, the owner of the hotel and indoor water park has asked the judge to force Thurston County Assessor Patricia Costello to drop the lodge from the property tax rolls.
Costello believes the lodge should be taxed. But officials at the state Department of Revenue have determined that the hotel should be off the tax rolls because majority ownership in the hotel belongs to the Chehalis Indian tribe, and therefore qualifies for a federal exemption from taxation.
The ultimate outcome of this dispute is important to other taxpayers because if Great Wolf is off the rolls, the tax burden — approaching $1 million — shifts to other property owners. CTGW LLC. a partnership with the tribe owning 51 percent — is owner of the hotel.
The lodge itself is on Indian trust land and all parties agree that the 39 acres are not subject to taxes. The question is whether the improvements — the hotel and water slide complex — are taxable."
Get the Story:
Editorial: Tribal tax case deserves its day in court
(The Olympian 4/15)
Related Stories:
Chehalis Tribe back in court over tax dispute
(4/6)
County stops tax proceedings
against Chehalis Tribe (3/4)
Opinion:
Chehalis resort tax assessment dispute (11/17)
Judge rejects injunction in Chehalis tax case
(10/28)
Chehalis Tribe sues over county
property taxes (10/27)
Chehalis Tribe to
hire 500 for Great Wolf resort (1/11)
Chehalis Tribe signs $1.5M services deal with
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BIA approves Chehalis
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Resorts (06/30)
Chehalis Tribe in
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