FROM THE ARCHIVE
Gaming seen as threat to sovereignty
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MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2001 Some tribal members of the Seneca Nation are organizing against a proposed gaming compact with the state of New York, citing threats to their sovereignty. Many feel signing an agreement with the state would be signing sovereign powers away. And once those power are given away, they are hard to get back, critics say. The tribe and the state are proposing a 14-year compact for three casinos. The Senate has given Governor George Pataki (R) the go-ahead to finalize the agreement but Democrats in the Assembly are holding it up. When the compact is finalized, Seneca tribal members are to vote to accept it or not. Get the Story:
Divided on Casino Plan: Senecas waver on backing (NewsDay 8/6) Related Stories:
Seneca Nation promises open casino talks (8/1)
Catskills casino not done deal (7/31)
Seneca Nation delays casino vote (7/27)
N.Y. confident on Seneca slots (7/25)
Seneca Nation members fight compact (7/13)
Seneca Nation may delay compact vote (7/11)
Cuomo wants unions at Seneca casinos (7/10)
Seneca leaders endorse gaming compact (6/26)
Hurdles left on Seneca gaming (6/25)
N.Y. Senate ratifies Seneca compact (6/22)
Seneca Nation, New York sign compact (6/21)
Seneca Tribe negotiating compact (5/18) Related Stories:
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You are enjoying stories from the Indianz.Com Archive, a collection dating back to 2000. Some outgoing links may no longer work due to age.
All stories are available for publishing via Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)