Siskiyou County Supervisor District 5,
Marcia Armstrong
Column 12/9/05KARUK CASINO
"(This) could have impacts on the Upper Basin. If
the Karuk have more resources, they will most
certainly use them and not in your favor."
Marcia
The Karuk tribe recently briefed the Board of
Supervisors about progress on their plans to build a
casino in Yreka on the ridge behind the fairgrounds.
The Indian Gaming Commission made a negative
determination that the land, which was taken into
federal trust for housing, qualified for reservation
gaming. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA)
requires that land proposed for gaming be taken into
trust prior to October 17,
1988. The area in question missed that mark by about
six months.
There are also questions about whether the land is
within original Karuk tribal territory. Currently,
the Karuk have no reservation, only land in trust
for housing. Their primary center of government is
in Orleans, way down the Klamath River. The Shasta
Nation claims most of Siskiyou County, including
Yreka, as tribal territory. The Karuk tribe has
commissioned an ethnographic study to show that
there was dominant Karuk presence in the Yreka area
at the Indian census in 1910. (The Shasta Nation
claims that tribal boundaries were ultimately set in
1852.) With this information, they will go forward
with an appeal to the Commission's prior eligibility
determination. They claim to have the backing of the
"Shasta tribe," which is another group separate from
the Shasta Nation. (Neither Shasta group has
received official federal recognition.)
To make things even more confusing, the Karuk tribal
attorney has indicated that he believes that the
individual allotment land being planned for casino
development by the Alturas tribe south of Yreka is
of a type ineligible for a casino.
On a separate track, the Karuk tribe has also
approached the Governor to secure his blessing for
an "off-reservation" casino under IGRA Section 20.
Governor Schwarzenegger 's policy for approval of
off-reservation casinos requires that they meet
three criteria: (1) The site will not be located in
any of the 200 urban areas he has listed (Yreka is
not on the list);
(2) That there is a "local expression," such as an
advisory vote of the local population, in favor of
the casino; and (3) That a certain percentage of the
casino proceeds be dedicated to one of several
"public policy objectives." The Yreka City Council
has indicated that they are opposed to any voting
process. The Governor has indicated that he will
accept a scientific poll instead. It is not clear at
this point who will be polled and within what
distance from the proposed casino.
The Karuk presentation to the Board of Supervisors
centered around their proposal to dedicate casino
proceeds to their own tribal Department of Natural
Resources to fulfill public policy objectives of
"the environment." The Karuk wish to substantially
fund a continuation of their work in restoring and
preserving the health of the Klamath River. The
proposal heralds their ongoing efforts to
aggressively combat the effects of hydropower dams,
pollutants from agriculture, logging and mining and
other water quality and flow issues. Further, the
Karuk propose to specifically dedicate a portion of
their casino revenue to a Dam Decommissioning Fund
to "assist local communities affected by future dam
decommissionings."
It should be noted that the Karuk tribe has an
extensive history of engaging in lawsuits to curtail
the use of natural resources by local farmers,
ranchers, loggers and miners. Their position on
issues has quite often been at odds with that of the
County Board of Supervisors. Personally, I have some
real concerns about whether the money will be used
in the "public interest." I do not feel that fueling
of further adversarial action against non-tribal
interests would be beneficial to the community and
the local economy.
At this point, the casino proposal by the Karuk is
very sketchy on details. There were only four short
paragraphs in the written document. They have
determined the proposed site, access through Sharps
Road, that they plan to start with 500-600 machines,
that the casino will be from
50-60,000 sq. ft large, that they plan for a 75-100
room hotel and that parking will be on the adjacent
lands (prior Thunderbird mill site) next to the
County Public Works facility. There is currently no
actual plan. That would be developed later when they
secure a partner or financial backer and develop the
plan with community input. Tribal attorney, Dennis
Whitlsee indicated that they would want to negotiate
the impacts "in principle" with the County, with an
understanding that the exact monetary scale of
compensation to the City and County for impacts
would be adjusted later.
The track with the Governor is apparently moving
rapidly and they anticipate a positive determination
by the end of the month. The Board of Supervisors
has not expressed a position in favor of the casino
or the proposed plan, nor has it approved any
agreement with any tribe.
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