"The new gambling deals Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has cut with powerful gambling tribes should alarm everyone. They give away too much to a handful of the richest, most powerful tribes in the state. The deals also expand gambling far beyond the "modest increase" voters were promised when they approved casino-style gambling in California in 1998.
The deals come as the tribes dump tens of thousand of dollars into the campaign coffers of key legislators who will be asked to ratify those compacts. One particularly unsavory example: Last week, the Pechanga tribe donated $50,000 to a campaign fund controlled by Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata.
Why is the governor doing this now? These tribes are not desperate. They already operate wildly profitable gambling monopolies, the most profitable enterprises in the state. The new compacts will give them billions more in profits.
One thing is clear: None of these compacts includes protection for workers that earlier Schwarzenegger compacts called for. The Assembly rightly refused to ratify a deal with the Agua Caliente tribe earlier this week, in part because it shortchanged labor. Legislators should reject these newest deals for that reason and because they come too late in the session and give too much away."
Get the Story:
Editorial: Too much, too late
(The Sacramento Bee 8/31)
pwlat
Advertisement
Search
More Headlines
Catawba Nation continues work on controversial casino in North Carolina
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Indian Gaming Archive