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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 The state of New Mexico and ten tribes are urging Assistant Secretary Neal McCaleb to accept gaming compacts they finalized. The state and the tribes have each told McCaleb and his gaming staff that an 8 percent revenue sharing rate is not an illegal tax under federal law. They have also said a yearly $100,000 gaming fee is an acceptable way of paying for regulatory costs. The compacts were negotiated with Attorney General Patricia Madrid after she filed a lawsuit seeking to shut down the casinos. The tribes had been refusing to pay a 16 percent sharing fee but have now paid the state $91 million for what they owed. Get the Story:
Gov., Tribes Urge Gaming Deal OK (The Albuquerque Journal 11/16) Related Stories:
Mescalero Apache elect leaders (11/8)
N.M. has received $88M from tribes (10/29)
Acoma Pueblo makes gaming payment (10/16)
N.M. sends compacts to Interior (10/10)
N.M. casino settlement blocked (9/19)
Pueblo fights casino settlement (9/4)
Tribes, N.M. want $91M settlement cleared (8/28)
N.M. gaming compacts delayed (8/16)
N.M. tribes settle casino payments (8/10)
N.M. tribes make casino payment deal (8/9)
Pueblo reaches casino payment deal (8/8)
Pueblo casino operating on old compact (6/19)
Tribes, state can't agree on casino payments (5/30)
Pueblo spends all its profits (4/17)
N.M. tribes: $1B to state (3/15)
Gaming 'refund' bill moves along (3/14)
State wants casino back payments (2/23)
NM Tribes ordered to make casino payments (2/14)
NM Tribes may get new compacts (2/13)
Court: New Mexico tribes can be sued (12/8)
Gaming tribes ask for dismissal (8/15)
State sues tribes (6/14)
N.M. tribes want compact approved
Facebook TwitterFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2001 The state of New Mexico and ten tribes are urging Assistant Secretary Neal McCaleb to accept gaming compacts they finalized. The state and the tribes have each told McCaleb and his gaming staff that an 8 percent revenue sharing rate is not an illegal tax under federal law. They have also said a yearly $100,000 gaming fee is an acceptable way of paying for regulatory costs. The compacts were negotiated with Attorney General Patricia Madrid after she filed a lawsuit seeking to shut down the casinos. The tribes had been refusing to pay a 16 percent sharing fee but have now paid the state $91 million for what they owed. Get the Story:
Gov., Tribes Urge Gaming Deal OK (The Albuquerque Journal 11/16) Related Stories:
Mescalero Apache elect leaders (11/8)
N.M. has received $88M from tribes (10/29)
Acoma Pueblo makes gaming payment (10/16)
N.M. sends compacts to Interior (10/10)
N.M. casino settlement blocked (9/19)
Pueblo fights casino settlement (9/4)
Tribes, N.M. want $91M settlement cleared (8/28)
N.M. gaming compacts delayed (8/16)
N.M. tribes settle casino payments (8/10)
N.M. tribes make casino payment deal (8/9)
Pueblo reaches casino payment deal (8/8)
Pueblo casino operating on old compact (6/19)
Tribes, state can't agree on casino payments (5/30)
Pueblo spends all its profits (4/17)
N.M. tribes: $1B to state (3/15)
Gaming 'refund' bill moves along (3/14)
State wants casino back payments (2/23)
NM Tribes ordered to make casino payments (2/14)
NM Tribes may get new compacts (2/13)
Court: New Mexico tribes can be sued (12/8)
Gaming tribes ask for dismissal (8/15)
State sues tribes (6/14)
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