Issue 160
October 6 - October 12, 2003
Volume 3
page 2
 

Schwarzenegger Faces California Indian Casino Dilemma

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Arnold Schwarzenegger boasts to voters that he will pull in up to $2 billion from California Indian casinos if he becomes governor but he faces the exact same problem encountered by embattled Gov. Gray Davis -- most tribes don't want to pay and by law they don't have to. And that is because they are sovereign entities and state laws don't apply to them. The rules for casinos are set by agreements between California and the tribes and cannot be changed without tribal consent.

Schwarzenegger, looking for new sources of revenue to ease the state's fiscal crisis, said this week he aims to bolster the budget by $1 billion to $2 billion by renegotiating the agreements with the tribes struck by Davis.

Davis, facing am unprecedented recall vote next Tuesday on whether he should keep his job, an event triggered by the fiscal crisis, has spent most of the year on a similar quest to extract more money from the tribes. In January he called for tribes to pay $1.5 billion into the budget. Since then he has reduced his target to $680 million and failed to raise a penny. The casinos give the state about $130 million a year, with part of that money going to social problems to aid people with gambling addiction.

"The tribes do not have to give any more than they have already given," said Deron Marquez, chairman of the San Manuel band in southern California, which has one of the biggest casinos in the state. He said that tribes provide jobs and pay for services from the state but have been demonized in advertisements by Schwarzenegger and seen Davis try to undermine their power.

"We've all seen how successful Davis was in achieving his $1.5 billion. He has not even been able to engage the tribes that are most likely to provide that kind of revenue stream. I would rather close my casino than give more money to the state of California," Marquez said.

California, like other states, is unable to tax federally recognized Indian tribes, which are sovereign governments roughly on par with the 50 U.S. states. The prime bargaining chip the state has is the power through negotiations to agree on the scope and regulations for casino gambling, and Davis has already signed 20-year deals, or compacts, with 64 tribes.

Three of those were struck recently and provide for some revenue sharing with the budget, but the casinos have not been built yet and will be relatively small to begin with.

More are in the works, including one outside San Francisco by a tribe, the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, which has proposed a compact in which it will pay the local government $200 million over 10 years.


A MONOPOLY

Tribes have a voter-approved monopoly on slot machine gambling in the state, and many that have built casinos into an industry with estimated revenue of $3 billion to $6 billion per year are wary of changing their deals. They have contributed millions of dollars in the recall campaign, mostly in support of Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, who is friendly with tribes. "The ones who have compacts say come back when the compacts expire," said Bob Stern, president of the Center for Governmental Studies which focuses on campaign finance and elections. "If the tribes want new slot machines and new casinos that is where they can enter into negotiations. That is the leverage (for the state)," he said.

Only about a dozen tribes have casinos big enough to consider expansion beyond the terms of their compacts. Davis is in talks with some tribes, but his spokeswoman, Amber Pasricha, declined to identify the tribes or comment on the talks. "The state cannot just say, 'give us X amount of money' without giving something in return," said Pasricha. "The governor is doing what he can and is required to do under law, which is negotiate."

 

 


Downtown Reno Property to Close - RENO, NV -- Citing mounting financial losses, owners of the Sundowner Hotel Casino in downtown Reno have announced plans to close Dec. 1st. It's only the latest in a string of casino closures in a city facing increased competition from Las Vegas mega-resorts and tribal casinos in California.

"I would suggest there will be several more (casino closures) in the next several years, and probably the market needs that, given the changes that are occurring," gambling analyst Dennis Conrad told the Reno Gazette-Journal.

The Sundowner closure affects 300 full-time and 75 part-time employees, who learned about it in a letter from co-owner George Karadanis. Employees, who also were notified that their health insurance will cease on Oct. 17, said they expected the closure.

Borgata Unleashes Marketing Campaign - ATLANTIC CITY, NJ -- With the busy summer season over and its opening buzz wearing down, Borgata has unleashed a broad-based marketing campaign to build its customer database and justify the $1.1 billion it spent to build the place.

The Borgata blitz includes:

The coupon book, mass-mailed apparently to area homeowners, good for 34 freebies and discounts. "Every single employee here got one," lamented Mark Brown, chief operating officer for Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts.

A multimillion-dollar television buy, with 30- and 60-second versions of a catchy scooter commercial airing on network affiliates and cable channels A&E, CNN, TBS, TNT, USA, VH1 and others in the Philadelphia and New York markets.

The TV commercial is the biggest chunk of a $10 million opening media buy from Schadler Kramer Group, a casino-savvy Las Vegas firm that created the scooter ad. The commercials, which first aired during the Sept. 21 Emmy Awards show, will continue through October.

Howie Mandel

Howie Mandel, a multi-talented actor and comedian, will perform his comedy special, November 20-26 at 9 p.m. in the Hollywood Theatre at the MGM Grand. Mandel's career has encompassed virtually every area of entertainment including television, film and stage. He starred in the award-wining NBC drama "St. Elsewhere" and produced and created the Emmy Award-nominated children's series "Bobby's World." Mandel hosted "The Howie Mandel Show," a daytime talk and variety show, and has performed in countless comedy specials both on cable and network television.Ticke

Price: $60.00

Price Note: May not include all taxes & fees.

Show Time: 9:00 p.m.

Reservations: Reservations Recommended

For more information please call: (800) 929-1111
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