Email Print   Text Size
Off-reservation Indian gambling raises concerns

Associated Press - November 24, 2009 7:25 PM ET

Across the country, a number of Indian tribes are seeking to build casinos well away from their reservations or other tribal lands. And the trend may be about to accelerate: The Obama administration is expected to decide soon whether to loosen the rules on some of these projects.

Gambling opponents deplore the trend and complain that Indian tribes are trying to game the system to expand their operations and get closer to lucrative big-city markets. They fear that more gambling will bring more crime and other social ills.

The vast majority of the hundreds of Indian casinos in the U.S. are on tribal land - often, well-removed from big cities. That's as envisioned under the 1988 federal law that created the $26 billion Indian gambling industry.

But the law has exceptions, including ones for tribes such as Guidiville that have regained federal recognition in recent decades and are looking to establish a reservation. Off-reservation casinos already exist in Milwaukee and Spokane, Wash., having been approved in the 1990s.

An Associated Press examination of federal records has found about a dozen tribes have filed applications to set up casinos on distant pieces of land, close to population centers. In six cases, including the Guidiville proposal, the resorts are slated for land more than 100 miles away.

Cities proposed for such casinos include El Paso, Texas, and Oklahoma City.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

All content © Copyright 2002 - 2010 WorldNow and KVIA. All Rights Reserved.
For more information on this site, please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.