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Lower Brule Sioux Tribe touts benefits of off-reservation casino


Filed Under: Casino Stalker
More on: eis, igra, lower brule sioux, off-reservation, south dakota, two-part determination
   
The Lower Brule Sioux Tribe of South Dakota has completed a draft environmental impact statement and an economic impact study for its proposed off-reservation casino.

The tribe hired Kadrmas, Lee & Jackson to write the EIS. It will be sent to the Bureau of Indian Affairs as part of the review process for the $34 million casino.

The economic impact study was conducted by Casino Consolidated Systems. It states that the casino will attract 500,000 visitors a year by its third year of operation and will make a $55 million impact in its first year.

The tribe is pursuing the casino under the two-part determination provisions of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988. The state governor's approval will be required if the BIA approves.

The 90-acre site is already in trust but it wasn't acquired for gaming purposes so the tribe has to seek federal and state approval. The land is only a few miles from the reservation border.

Get the Story:
Proposed casino would draw 300,000 in first year, report says (The Mitchell Daily Republic 3/28)

Related Stories:
City opposes Lower Brule Sioux Tribe off-reservation casino (10/24)

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