Monday, January 05, 2015

Editorial - Tribe’s Prop. 48 end run must be squelched

In November, California voters rejected Proposition 48 in a landslide. The measure would have allowed the North Fork Tribe of Mono Indians to build a large casino near Fresno on land it had only purchased in 2012 — a parcel 38 miles away from the tribe’s nearest homeland.

Indian gaming has fared well on the ballot. But voters were properly alarmed about setting a precedent under which giant gaming corporations could team with tribes on proposals to build casinos on just-acquired land near the state’s population centers.

Now we could see another unwanted precedent: an Indian tribe rejecting the idea that state voters can have any say over its project. John Myers of KQED News reports North Fork Tribe leaders have discussed asking U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell to invoke federal precedence on tribal matters and impose a gaming compact on the state. Myers reports Gov. Jerry Brown, who supported the casino project, believes the tribe may have a legal case for such a request.

Ultimately, North Fork Tribe leaders will do what they think is best for their members. But unless the Obama administration believes it has no wiggle room at all under the 1988 federal law legalizing Indian gaming — which seems dubious — it shouldn’t overrule California voters who don’t want their state to become West Nevada. 





Sorry, but this bunch ignores/overrules local citizens on almost a daily basis.  Besides, this is not an end run, its a straight beeline to the Executive Branch, which has become the most powerful of the three branches.

 

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