Spokane Tribe’s proposed casino would right a wrong

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Spokane Tribe’s proposed casino would right a wrong

The state’s current policy allows distant tribes to open casinos without regard to the territorial integrity of resident tribes.

SINCE the Grand Coulee Dam flooded our reservation in the 1930s, the Spokane Tribe has sought economic development projects to help sustain our 3,000 members.

The dam destroyed our traditional salmon grounds, so we turned to natural resources. Uranium mines were opened on the reservation, and when the mines closed in the late 1980s, we were left with sick residents and a Superfund site.

The large wildfire on our reservation this summer destroyed millions of board feet of our reservation timber. And still, the needs of our community continue to grow.

Like other tribal governments, we augment our historic revenues with casinos. But in 1998, the federal government and then-Gov. Gary Locke approved a tribe headquartered in the northeast corner of the state, the Kalispels, to open a casino 10 minutes from downtown Spokane. We objected to allowing another tribe’s casino in the heart of our ancestral homelands, and we pointed out that our two remote casinos would never recover, which would prompt us to open a casino closer to metropolitan Spokane. That day may be almost here. In June, the Department of the Interior approved our privately funded $400 million project, and sent it to the governor’s office for his agreement. In the 10 years of process and countless studies, we have learned many facts, but the most important is this: By approving the Spokane Tribe Economic Project (STEP), Gov. Jay Inslee has the opportunity to bring fairness to the West Plains of Spokane County, and to set a new off-reservation gambling policy for the state that is anchored in a proper respect for tribal ancestral territory. The Kalispel casino represents the only instance in this state or nationally in which a distant tribe was allowed to conduct gambling in the heart of another tribes’ federally adjudicated, exclusive ancestral territory. As Interior’s Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Kevin Washburn noted when approving STEP, it would be “deeply ironic to allow the Kalispel Tribe to develop a casino within the Spokane Tribe’s aboriginal area, while denying the Spokane Tribe the opportunity to use its own aboriginal lands for the same purpose.” The prospect of setting sensible precedent in our state for off-reservation tribal gambling is real.” The prospect of setting sensible precedent in our state for off-reservation tribal gambling is real. The state’s current policy allows distant tribes to open casinos without regard to the territorial integrity of resident tribes. With STEP, Gov. Inslee has the unique opportunity to act fairly while reversing that precedent, based on an extraordinary circumstance that no other tribe will ever meet — all while creating thousands of much-needed jobs for Eastern Washington and bringing hope to the Spokane Reservation. It is an opportunity we urge him to embrace.

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