Monday, 5 September 2011

Gaming Fed Gives Green light to Yuba Co.Indian Casino


YUBA COUNTY, CA - A second Indian gaming casino off Highway 65 moved a step closer to reality Friday when the Assistant Secretary - Indian Affairs approved a review of the project.The Enterprise Rancheria of Maidu Indians in Butte County seeks to build an off-reservation casino with 1,700 slot machines and an eight-story/170 room hotel on 40 acres near the intersection of Highway 65 and Forty Mile Road in Yuba County. The plans also call for restaurants, a conference center, retail shops and a spa.Explore here more  Restaurants in BangaloreA casino on existing Enterprise Rancheria lands in trust was deemed unfeasible because of access and development issues as well as already being in use for tribal housing.Assistant Secretary Echo Hawk determined the project would be in the best interests of the tribe and not detrimental to the surrounding communities.The tribe has a Memorandum of Understanding with Yuba County for the latter to receive $83 million over 20 years for various services to mitigate the effects of the gaming facility. The closest large town, Marysville would received $4.8 million over 15 years.Hawk also concluded the facility would not have a negative impact on the operations of Thunder Valley Casino Resort about 21 miles southeast on Highway 65. United Auburn Indian community of Auburn owns Thunder Valley.Doug Elmets, spokesman for the United Auburn Indian tribe and Thunder Valley, had the following reaction:
"The tribes throughout the state of California, and for that matter, the nation, have abided by a federal policy that allows gambling on their reservations. What has happened now is that the federal government has changed courses and has told tribes that they can build a casino in a more economically viable location away from their reservation, which will undoubtably open up the floodgates to gambling and casinos in urban areas throughout California, if not the country.".Click here for Table Reservation in India.In 2005, Yuba county residents opposed the project by 52.1 percent in an advisory vote.Gov. Brown now has one year to submit his own decision on the project.
Source   "news10"

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