<DOC> [109 Senate Hearings] [From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access] [DOCID: f:22848.wais] S. Hrg. 109-50, Pt. 3 GAMING ======================================================================= HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON INDIAN AFFAIRS UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION ON OVERSIGHT HEARING ON LAND ELIGIBLE FOR GAMING PURSUANT TO THE INDIAN GAMING REGULATORY ACT __________ JULY 27, 2005 WASHINGTON, DC __________ PART 3 __________ U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 22-848 WASHINGTON : 2006 _____________________________________________________________________________ For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; (202) 512ÿ091800 Fax: (202) 512ÿ092250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402ÿ090001 COMMITTEE ON INDIAN AFFAIRS JOHN McCAIN, Arizona, Chairman BYRON L. DORGAN, North Dakota, Vice Chairman PETE V. DOMENICI, New Mexico DANIEL K. INOUYE, Hawaii CRAIG THOMAS, Wyoming KENT CONRAD, North Dakota GORDON SMITH, Oregon DANIEL K. AKAKA, Hawaii LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska TIM JOHNSON, South Dakota MICHAEL D. CRAPO, Idaho MARIA CANTWELL, Washington RICHARD BURR, North Carolina TOM COBURN, M.D., Oklahoma Jeanne Bumpus, Majority Staff Director Sara G. Garland, Minority Staff Director (ii) C O N T E N T S ---------- Page Statements: Barnett, John, chairman, Cowlitz Indian Tribe................ 28 Coleman, Penny, acting general counsel, National Indian Gaming Commission.......................................... 13 Dorgan, Hon. Byron L. U.S. Senator from North Dakota, Vice Chairman, Committee on Indian Affairs...................... 2 Enyart, Charles D., chief, Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. 30 Gray, Walter, tribal administrator, Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians.................................................... 24 McCain, Hon. John, U.S. Senator from Arizona, chairman, Committee on Indian Affairs................................ 1 Norris, Christine, principal chief, Jena Band of Choctaw Indians.................................................... 26 Skibine, George, acting deputy assistant secretary, Policy and Economic Development for Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior............................................... 9 Vitter, Hon. David, U.S. Senator from Louisiana.............. 3 Voinovich, Hon. George V., U.S. Senator from Ohio............ 6 Appendix Prepared statements: Barnett, John................................................ 44 Coleman, Penny............................................... 42 Enick, Jerry Kanim, tribal chief, Snoqualmie Tribe........... 50 Enyart, Charles D. (with attachment)......................... 53 Gray, Walter (with attachment)............................... 71 Hillaire, Darrell, chairman, Lummi Indian Nation (with attachment)................................................ 124 Inouye, Hon. Daniel K., U.S. Senator from Hawaii............. 41 McGowan, Mike, chairman, Indian Gaming Working Group, California State Association of Counties (with attachment). 187 Norris, Christine (with attachment).......................... 204 Skibine, George (with attachment)............................ 225 Vitter, Hon. David, U.S. Senator from Louisiana.............. 234 Voinovich, Hon. George V., U.S. Senator from Ohio (with attachment)................................................ 241 Additional material submitted for the record: Lindsay, Barbara M., national director and spokesperson, One Nation United, (letter).................................... 248 Schmit, Cheryl A., director, Stand Up For California (letter with attachment)........................................... 254 GAMING ---------- WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 2005 U.S. Senate, Committee on Indian Affairs, Washington, DC. The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 9:30 a.m. in room 216 Senate Hart Building, Hon. John McCain (chairman of the committee), presiding. Present: Senators McCain, Dorgan, and Smith. STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN McCAIN, U.S. SENATOR FROM ARIZONA, CHAIRMAN, COMMITTEE ON INDIAN AFFAIRS The Chairman. Good morning. This hearing is the third oversight hearing held by the committee into the implementation of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. That act has been very successful for many tribes, yet it has not been without controversy or challenge, as our hearings have shown. Among the issues that have been both controversial and challenging are the determinations of what Indian lands are eligible for gaming. Under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, trust lands outside of a reservation are generally not eligible for gaming if acquired after October 17, 1988, the date IGRA was enacted. However, IGRA provides exceptions to that ban if the Secretary and Governor agree after making certain findings; also for three specific situations: Settlement of land claims, tribes that are newly acknowledged by the Department of the Interior, and tribes that are registered to recognition. When IGRA was drafted, notions of fairness led to considerations for those tribes who, through no fault of their own, lost lands or were not recognized by the Federal Government prior to 1988. However, in recent years this committee has been made aware of attempts by some tribes and by some non-Indian developers to expand the use of these exceptions in ways not contemplated when IGRA was enacted. Recognition of tribes and the creation, restoration or recovery of reservation lands are significant events to Indian and non-Indian communities. When coupled with the establishment of a gaming facility, the impacts to the affected communities are even greater and the need for clarity in the law is especially important. It is time this committee reviewed the uses of these exceptions to determine if they are meeting their intended purpose. Senator Dorgan. STATEMENT OF HON. BYRON L. DORGAN, U.S. SENATOR FROM NORTH DAKOTA, VICE CHAIRMAN, COMMITTEE ON INDIAN AFFAIRS Senator Dorgan. Mr. Chairman, thank you very much. I think we all agree that Indian gaming has grown very substantially. It has become a very big success for many Indian tribes. They have generated over $18 billion of revenue from gaming, employed over 200,000 people. There are Indian reservations in this country that have substantially reduced their unemployment as a result of gaming activities. I will not go through the list, but I think there is no question but that there are substantial benefits. The opportunities for Indian tribes to locate gaming activities near large population centers is certainly something that tribe aspire to do to the extent they can. We know that the success in many cases of Indian gaming is primarily determined by location. We know that there are some very large, extraordinarily successful operations, Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun come to mind, and then many other smaller gaming facilities. In my State there are I believe five, all located in generally rural areas, but nonetheless still providing significant jobs for members of the tribes. The exceptions in IGRA, the three exceptions that we will primarily talk about today are expressly for tribes whose lands were illegally taken, whose governments were wrongfully terminated, or who are just establishing their government-to- government relationship with the our country. The exceptions are intended to correct some of the many injustices that have been bestowed upon Native people. I believe there is a need for these exceptions. I support these exceptions and the need to correct these injustices. But I do not believe that tribes should use the IGRA exceptions to place itself in a better position than had the injustices not occurred. By that, I mean a tribe historically located in the Adirondack Mountains, for example, should not now be able to use an exception to acquire land and open a casino in downtown Manhattan. I wonder about some of the stories you hear about some tribes willing to settle very large land claims for mere acres in a metropolitan acre or resort area. So that is the issue I raise with respect to the use of the exceptions. Once again, IGRA provides a mechanism for those tribes seeking to obtain more economically viable lands, but this mechanism is burdensome. It requires local input, gubernatorial support. It is still the proper mechanism to be used in certain cases, and I think this particular hearing will give us the opportunity to learn about the use of the IGRA exceptions and about whether any changes need to be made. I think this hearing is an important discussion about a significant piece of Indian gaming because we see these pressures all around the country now to find ways to locate gaming facilities in the middle of major population centers. Mr. Chairman, thank you very much. I am anxious to hear from the witnesses. The Chairman. Thank you very much. We are pleased to have with us Senator David Vitter, our colleague from Louisiana. Please proceed. STATEMENT OF HON. DAVID VITTER, U.S. SENATOR FROM LOUISIANA Senator Vitter. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Mr. Vice Chairman. Thank you for holding this hearing. I am really pleased to be here today to express my concerns about the proliferation of, in particular, off-reservation Indian casino gambling. It is an issue that directly affects my home State of Louisiana, but it is also clearly a national issue as well, as both of you have pointed out. Thank you for inviting me to testify. In 1988 when Congress passed IGRA, gambling on Indian reservations was a very small industry. At the time, virtually no one could foresee the future growth of class III casino- style gambling or that it would become an $18 billion a year industry, with 400 casinos in 30 States. Now, that in and of itself does not mean there are problems with the law, but I do think there are problems with the law that are being unfairly exploited, and you all have alluded to some of those possibilities. My testimony will mention several problems that my legislation addresses: But the biggest concern is the need to discourage the recent trend known as ``forum shopping'' or ``reservation shopping'' by Indian tribes. That is the troubling practice, on the part of a growing number of tribes, of selecting land to which the tribes have little or no connection for the sole purpose of building casinos at the most economically advantageous location. As widely reported in the press, various tribes are now attempting to claim rights that would allow them to engage in gambling operations in States where they have no reservation or trust land status. Tribes making such claims include landless tribes, as well as tribes with an existing reservation. Affected States include many, including California, Illinois, Ohio, Colorado, Oregon, New York, New Mexico, and Louisiana. Allow me to quickly summarize of some of these developments. In California, by one account as many as 40 tribes are pursuing off-reservation gambling proposals there alone. California is a State which is already home to approximately 55 Indian casinos. I commend the members of this committee for recently approving, by a bipartisan 10 to 3 vote, a measure authored by our colleague, Senator Dianne Feinstein, which would make it more difficult for one California tribe to proceed with an off-reservation casino. In Ohio, where there are no federally recognized Indian tribes, the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma is trying to open casinos in multiple Ohio locations. The tribe is pushing its casino proposals with help from non-Indian investors--against the wishes of many folks in Ohio. The tribe has sued the State to seek reparations for tribal lands in Ohio that were taken 170 years ago. New York offers another example of possible forum shopping. There, several out-of-State tribes and additional in-State tribes have attempted to negotiate for casinos in the Catskill area to settle land claims. And of course, Louisiana, my home State, provides yet another possible example of where a tribe has engaged in forum shopping, that is the Jena Band of Choctaws, who you will hear directly from later today. The Jena Band attempted to take land into trust for gambling purposes in an area of my State that is outside of its traditional service area. I think the history of the Jena Band's action is instructive. I just use it as an example. There are plenty of examples, but this is an example with which I am very familiar. The Jena Band has been rejected in its pursuit of land for casinos in two counties in Mississippi. It made a number of applications for land across Louisiana. It may have considered land in Texas as well, I understand. I am concerned about this forum shopping. The Jena Band first received Federal recognition in 1995; and after receiving that recognition, the tribe courted the Rapides Parish Police Jury which is basically the county government, in July 1996, with promises to pay them up to 6 percent of the net profits made off the proposed casino. However, then-Louisiana Governor Mike Foster opposed these attempts and refused to negotiate a compact. The Jena Band actually filed a lawsuit in an attempt to force the Governor to negotiate, but the judge threw out the lawsuit in December 1996. The Band then courted the Natchitoches Parish Police Jury in 1998, offering them 50 percent of its ``planned local monetary contributions.'' That was unsuccessful. Then they reached out to Mississippi, actually, and were rejected by two counties there in 2001, Greene and Tishomingo. Mississippi's Governor stated he would refuse another Indian casino in Mississippi. So the Jena looked back to Louisiana; and, in October 2001, on hearing that the Jena might be looking to their parish, the Sabine Parish Police Jury passed a resolution declaring their opposition to a casino. After that, the Jena Band and former Governor Foster then quietly negotiated a compact centered on the town of Vinton in Southwest Louisiana and sent it to the Bureau of Indian Affairs [BIA] for approval in January 2002. There was a real outcry about that, particularly in the local area. Several leaders joined in that outcry, including myself, Congressman Jim McCrery, Congressman Chris John, and Senator Mary Landrieu, as well as 30 other members of the U.S. Congress. The BIA rejected that proposed compact on March 7, 2002. The Jena Band has argued that it has the ability to force a State into agreeing to a gambling compact, circumventing the State process designed by Federal law and instead working directly with the U.S. Department of the Interior. The current Governor of Louisiana opposes the expansion of casino gambling in our State, and even the suggestion that the Federal Government would ever force States to accept casinos they oppose is very troubling. That is another distinct issue I address in my bill. In June, I joined my colleague, Senator George Voinovich, who is here as well, and other members of the Senate in offering a floor amendment to ensure that Governors of affected States will have input when decisions are being made to take land into trust on behalf of Indian tribes for gambling purposes. This amendment was endorsed by the National Governors Association, but we did not call for a vote on the Voinovich amendment due to jurisdictional concerns of this committee. That amendment actually complements a bill I introduced in June, and I want to spend just a few minutes outlining that bill. It is titled the Common Sense Indian Gambling Reform Act of 2005, S. 1260. It is a nearly identical companion to a House measure introduced by Congressman Mike Rogers of Michigan, H.R. 2353. Our legislation does not specifically target any particular tribes. Rather, it proposes seven reasonable reforms, which I have alluded to, to current Federal law related to Indian gambling. First, the bill we introduced would require that an economic impact study be conducted in an area within a 60-mile radius of a proposed new Indian casino. The rationale for requiring such a study is to ensure that we fully understand the effect of a proposed new casino on all surrounding communities. Second, the bill we introduced calls for more local input. The bill we introduced will eliminate several existing exceptions to the existing ban on Indian casino gambling under IGRA, thereby ensuring that Federal officials must consult with officials of all potentially affected State or local governments, or other Indian tribes, before making what is known as their two-part determination with respect to a proposed Indian casino. Striking these exceptions would simply ensure that State and local input is garnered and honored. Third, the bill we introduced would ensure an enhanced role for State legislatures. The measure requires State legislatures, as well as each Governor, to concur in the two- part determination. I mentioned just now. The bill would enhance the role of State lawmakers in conjunction with the Governor. Fourth, under this bill, off-reservation casinos would be virtually rendered impossible. Our bill effectively precludes Indian tribes from proposing new casinos on land to which the tribes have little or no connection. It does so by imposing these conditions. First, an Indian casino must be on a single contiguous parcel of Indian lands for a casino; and second, the casino must be within the State in which the tribe is primarily located and on land to which the tribe has its primary ``geographical, social and historical nexus.'' Fifth, the bill we introduced calls for additional background checks. The bill would clarify that any financial top-10 interest involved in opening an Indian casino operation will be subject to normal background checks and that the National Indian Gaming Commission would approve all top-10 financial arrangements and would perform the background checks. Sixth, the bill we introduced would require that tribes declare an intent to gamble when initially making an application for land, and that declaration would be binding in the future. Seventh, the bill would require that a tribe submit a new environmental impact statement to the Secretary of the Interior if the tribe changes the use of its land from non-gambling or general purpose to a gambling purpose. As I said, this I think is a widespread and growing set of concerns in the Nation and in the Congress. I thank so many others of my colleagues, including Senator Voinovich here, and Senator Feinstein for joining in this national effort. I look forward to working with you, Mr. Chairman, you, Mr. Vice Chairman and this entire committee in developing and refining legislation in this area. I would urge my colleagues to join us in enacting these sensible reforms. Thank you very much. [Prepared statement of Senator Vitter appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. Senator Voinovich, welcome. STATEMENT OF HON. GEORGE V. VOINOVICH, U.S. SENATOR FROM OHIO Senator Voinovich. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to thank you and Senator Dorgan for having this hearing. Mr. Chairman, I appreciate your keeping your word to me when I wanted to amend the Interior Appropriations bill that if I backed off from it that you would hold a hearing. You are a man of your word. Thank you very much. Senator Vitter has done a good job of defining the problem, and that it is not just a problem in Ohio or in Louisiana, but it is a problem that we have throughout the United States of America. I can tell you, it is becoming a real problem in my home State of Ohio. Currently, there are over 400 tribal casinos in 30 States. The tribes who run these casinos have seen a substantial financial benefit to their tribes. Last year, the annual revenue of Indian casinos had grown to almost $19.5 billion. With the continued expansion of Indian casinos, that annual revenue will continue to grow. To build on this financial success of tribal casinos, some Native American tribes are aggressively seeking to take gambling off reservations and into local communities all across the United States. In this practice, commonly referred to as reservation shopping, tribes are looking to acquire new non- contiguous land to open casinos near large communities or next to major roads with easy access. A loophole in the law that regulates Indian gaming, the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, allows the Department of the Interior to take land into trust for a tribal casino, even at great distances from their home reservation. While some casinos on tribal reservations have been very successful, many reservations are located in rural areas at great distances from population centers. These tribes are looking at lands hundreds of miles away from their reservations and near population centers like Cleveland, Chicago, Miami, and the Bay Area of California. In early 2003, a tribe secretly began courting communities in Ohio with the lure of financial gain from casinos. Since then, agreements have been reached between the tribe and four separate mayors in our State to site casinos in their communities under the pledge that a casino complex would bring new jobs and increase their tax base. All of this has been done without any land claims filed or any determination in terms that the claims would be successful. The Eastern Shawnee and the developers behind their casino plans are so confident that they can pull off their land claim that they are garnering political support for casinos. Last month, the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma filed a land claim in Federal court for the rights to 146 square miles of land and hunting rights to 4 million acres of land throughout the State. To put this in perspective, Mr. Chairman, 146 square miles is almost the size of Cleveland and Cincinnati combined. This claim is filed against the State of Ohio, 36 counties in the State and a number of cities and private landowners. As indicated in this article from the Columbus Dispatch, the Eastern Shawnee's lawyer has stated that the tribe will drop the land claim in exchange for the right to put casinos in these communities throughout the State. Mr. Chairman, I ask unanimous consent that this article be made part of the record. The Chairman. Without objection. [Article appears in appendix.] Senator Voinovich. The Eastern Shawnee and the groups financing their efforts in Ohio are clearly blackmailing the State and they are not even being subtle about it. The reality here is that they were looking at location and then looking at the legality of bringing a casino into my State after that. By filing this claim, the Eastern Shawnee Tribe is exploiting loopholes in existing Federal law. The Indian Claims Commission Act of 1946, which was created expressly to resolve land claims against the Federal Government, required that any claims be filed within 5 years of enactment. Because the tribe is now precluded from suing the Federal Government, they are now suing the State. The Eastern Shawnee was successful in pursuing a claim against the Federal Government in the Indian Claims Commission. In the 1970's, the commission concluded that claims against the Government were valid and Congress appropriated funds to pay these claims. Mr. Chairman, I respectfully request that as you develop legislation in your committee, you consider that tribes are now using land claims against State and local governments, as well as private landowners as leverage for casinos. The real goal behind this land claim is to site casinos, not to seek financial restitution. As you consider this, also consider the need to strengthen IGRA to specifically prohibit tribes from moving across State lines, hundreds of miles from their reservations. Clear language such as this would prevent frivolous lawsuits such as the one that we are experiencing now in the State of Ohio. Another loophole the Eastern Shawnee is taking advantage of is the ambiguity of how the provision in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act which determines which gambling activities are permitted. As you know, IGRA defines casino-style gambling as class III, which includes slot machines, blackjack, craps, roulette, some lotteries, and parimutuel racing. This class of gambling activity on Indian lands can only be ``located in a State that permits such gaming for any purpose by any person, organization or entity.'' It is unclear whether this means that the statutory language should be read and applied in a class- wide or categorical sense, or whether it should be read and applied on an activity-by-activity basis. District and Circuit Federal Courts have both considered this question. In 1991, a district court in Wisconsin ruled that if a State permits one type of class III gaming, then all other types of class III gaming can be conducted in that State under IGRA. On the other hand, in 1993 and 1994, the Eighth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeal construed the language of IGRA to mean that class III gaming in a particular State is limited under Federal law to the specific activities that are permitted under the State's laws. Earlier this month, the 10th circuit revealed that these uncertainties continue by finding in favor of the Northern Arapaho Tribe who want to build a casino in Wyoming. Gambling is illegal in the State of Wyoming except for social and charitable gambling. In this instance, the tribe contended that it is entitled to offer full casino-style gambling on its reservation because the State allows casino-style activities for social and nonprofit purposes. In Ohio, gambling for commercial purposes is prohibited by the State Constitution. However, parimutuel racing and lottery are both permitted, as well as charitable gambling on a very limited and controlled basis. The Eastern Shawnee and the developers they have partnered with recognize this ambiguity in existing Federal law. In order to address this loophole, I will be introducing legislation today that clarifies congressional intent that the provisions of IGRA which permit class III gambling only apply on an activity-by-activity basis and do not permit the full gamut of gaming. Mr. Chairman, I respectfully request that you hold a hearing on the questions that are raised by the ambiguity in the law and that you consider my bill as you develop legislation to address the unintended consequences of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. The Eastern Shawnee already operate a casino on the reservation at the border of Oklahoma and Missouri. Chief Enyart testified before the House Resources Committee earlier this year that their economic potential is limited by the rural character of where the casino and reservation are located. This tribe has been courted by investors with the attraction that they can find dollar signs out of State, dollar signs they will make at the detriment of my constituents. Ohio is a much larger and more populated State. In fact, the population of Ohio is more than three times the size of the population of Oklahoma. The Eastern Shawnee and the financial backers of their proposals are promising local communities in Ohio that casinos and gambling will address the economic problems Ohio is facing right now. Mr. Chairman, that is another issue that I encourage you to consider as your committee continues to investigate this issue. Who is actually funding the efforts to bring Indian casinos off-reservation and across State lines? Who are these people? In Ohio, it is well recognized that the Eastern Shawnee efforts are being paid for by a number of ``unnamed private investors.'' Think about that. Is this the tribe or are these unnamed private investors promoting casinos so that they can benefit substantially from the proceeds that the Indians would garner from locating one of these casinos in a State like Ohio? With private investors such as these, Indian gaming and its consequences have gone far beyond what was originally intended by Congress when IGRA was passed. This has become a gigantic shell game instead of righting earlier wrongs against tribes. We are no longer looking at giving tribes the self-sufficiency needed for economic gain, but rather lining the pockets of investors with large sums of money. Mr. Chairman, this issue is ultimately a public policy question. I oppose gambling in all forms, whether commercial or Indian. To me, this is ultimately a question of States rights, one that our founding fathers addressed in the 10th Amendment. I believe that States should have the authority over whether or not to allow for gambling within their borders. However, in Ohio we are facing blackmail by Indian tribes and the financial backers who are funding these efforts. I just want to thank you very much for doing this. I think that this proliferation of Indian casinos around the country is something that we all ought to be very, very concerned about. It goes far beyond anything that was anticipated in terms of rightfully reimbursing these tribes for what was done to them or to fulfill the treaties that they signed that the Federal Government did not fulfill. I thank you very much. [Prepared statement of Senator Voinovich appears in appendix.] The Chairman. I thank you both for being here. It has been very helpful. Obviously, there is some passion associated with this issue. I thank you for your input and we look forward to working with you. Byron. Senator Dorgan. Mr. Chairman, let me thank both of the witnesses. I do not have any questions because they have well and very clearly expressed their interest in this, and as you said, with great passion as well. Let me ask consent to have Senator Inouye's opening statement put in the record at this point. The Chairman. Without objection. [Prepared statement of Senator Inouye appears in appendix.] Senator Dorgan. Your comments are very helpful to this Committee and we appreciate very much your being here. The Chairman. I would just like to add again, as one of the authors of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, we never anticipated that gaming would turn into as large and widespread involvement as it has. As you mentioned, Senator Voinovich, one of the decisions of the courts that basically said that full-blown gaming can take place if there is charitable gaming taking place. In other words, one Las Vegas night a year then equates to a full-blown 24-7 gaming. It was a court decision and that certainly had a great affect on the proliferation of gaming throughout America. I thank you both very much. Senator Vitter. Thank you. Senator Voinovich. Thank you. The Chairman. Our other panel is George Skibine, who is the acting deputy assistant secretary for Policy and Economic Development for Indian Affairs; and Penny Coleman, who is the acting general counsel of the National Indian Gaming Commission. Welcome to both of you. George, we will begin with you. Welcome back. STATEMENT OF GEORGE SKIBINE, ACTING DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY, POLICY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FOR INDIAN AFFAIRS, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Mr. Skibine. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Mr. Vice Chairman. I am pleased to be here today to present testimony on the section 20 exceptions to the gaming prohibition on after- acquired land. My written testimony will be part of the record. The Chairman. Without objection. Mr. Skibine. What I want to discuss today is how we have implemented section 20 since 1988; what is currently pending before the department; and what we hope to accomplish, what we are facing in the future. For that purpose, we have produced in my testimony a number of charts. Here we have a visual aid that will help with showing what we have. We will start first to discuss briefly the approved gaming acquisition that are on-reservation or contiguous with the boundaries of a reservation. Since 1988, we have had essentially eight of these. You can point to what they are. That is the first chart. That is where they are. Of these, four were on-reservation and three were contiguous to the reservation, or sort of both on and off the boundaries of the reservation. So this exception has not really been used very much. And I think what that shows is that by far the majority of tribes are operating gaming establishments on their reservations on lands that have been part of the trust before October 17, 1988. Of course, our position is that the definition of Indian lands would authorize gaming by the tribe on the reservation if the land is not in trust as long as it is owned in fee by the tribe. But there are some advantages to taking the land into trust, and essentially that is what has happened for these. The next exception that I wanted to talk briefly about is the initial reservation of an Indian tribe acknowledged by the Secretary under the Federal acknowledgment process. Here, we have approved three of these acquisitions. The first one was for the Mohegan Tribe back in 1995, and the next two were for tribes in Michigan. I want to point out that under this exception, only one has actually gone in to trust. The other two are the subject of a lawsuit, so the land has not been taken into trust. The fact on our chart, we show that those that were approved does not mean that the land itself has been taken into trust because a number of them can be challenged for various purposes. For instance, even under number one, I think that for White Earth in Minnesota, that land has still not been taken in to trust because there are encumbrances of other issues. Now, with the initial reservation of Indian tribes acknowledged by the Secretary under the acknowledgment process our position has been that in order to qualify for this exception, the tribe has to show substantial historical, cultural and geographical ties to the land. What we do when we look at the application is we look at the record that is compiled by the Federal acknowledgment process, which are thousands and thousands of pages that essentially follow the history of the tribe and where it has been, and it essentially will tell us in a fairly objective way whether that tribe will qualify under that exception. The Chairman. How does that work if a tribe, as testified by the two previous witnesses, want to acquire lands in another State for purposes of a gaming operation? Mr. Skibine. They cannot take advantage of that exception. If they try to take advantage of that exception, it will be disapproved. I think that, for instance, for the Jena Band of Choctaws who will testify later, I know that as Senator Vitter mentioned, we disapproved the compact for that tribe for land that was off-reservation. I think the reason for the disapproval was that, well, the reason for the disapproval was not really because there was all this congressional objection. Hopefully, we followed the law, and essentially we found that the payment that the tribe was agreeing to make to the State was in exchange for the Governor's support of the tribe's initial reservation at that location. We felt that that designation is not the Governor's to make, but the Secretary's. Secretary Norton indicated in her letter of disapproval that she, although that was not an issue in the compact, that she would not be willing to approve an initial reservation under this exception, several hundred miles from the tribe's traditional area. That is why it is a fairly difficult process. We look at the historical record. I know there are tribes where there are pending initial reservations. That is what we do. I know that I have talked to some groups who have challenged whether the tribe actually is from the area where they claim to be. I think we will look very carefully at all the records, not only the one that is submitted by the tribe, but the one that is submitted by the local community or anyone who has an issue with that because I think the Secretary definitely does not want to place a tribe in a community for an initial reservation where they do not belong, in other words, where they are not from. So the test that we have, we have devised on a case-by-case basis. It has not been applied many times, but that is the one we have. And that is why, for this exception, to call that reservation shopping is misguided. These tribes are not shopping, the ones that will be approved are not shopping for a reservation far from their homeland. They are tribes that essentially have nothing. They have no land. A lot of them have no money. They have been denied recognition for years, and after a very arduous process, sometimes it takes 20 or 25 years, they are finally recognized. They are seeking to take advantage of that exception for gaming, but really what they want is land for economic development. Because we insist that they have strong geographical and cultural ties to the land, I am not sure that the reservation shopping tag can be applied to that exception. Let me move on to the next one. That is the approved gaming acquisition for the restoration of lands for an Indian tribe restored to Federal recognition. In that case, we have had 12. In the chart that we have, the chart only concerns those lands where the tribe needed to acquire land in trust, and then the way it works is if the land is not in trust, when the tribe applies and we have to make a determination on whether it fits within the exception. My colleague, general counsel of the NIGC, will delve into this issue in much more detail, so I think I am going to skip over it except to mention that if you look at the list that we have of the 12 tribes that have qualified under this exception, I think all of these have been qualified because they were restored by Federal statute. The land that was the subject of the exception was land that was specifically mentioned in that statute, the restoration statute, as being land that the Secretary could or had to take in trust for the tribe. Some of these that are listed in our chart are mandatory acquisitions and some of those were discretionary. For instance, I see here that at number eight, we have the Lytton Band that was the subject of the previous hearing before this committee. This was a mandatory acquisition for that tribe. When that happens, of course, we have no discretion at all to say yea or nay, but some of them are discretionary. Finally, let me briefly mention the approved gaming acquisition for settlement of a land claim. Here, we have had essentially since 1988, it has been applied once, and that is for the Seneca Nation of New York. It is listed four times in our charts, but they are all for the one tribe. Three of these acquisitions, in fact, are gaming related, but not for gaming. So this was under the 1990 Seneca Settlement Act. I do not think that it was enacted with IGRA in mind, but it just so happened that it would have qualified. So the bottomline is that if we look at past practices, we really do not see the problem that has been mentioned by the Senator in the previous panel. Essentially, we have had not that many applications. They have been carefully considered. As you can see from the record, it has not been a runaway problem of Indian tribes seeking lands off-reservation. Now, there may be a problem in the future. We are not discounting that. We share the committee's concern in this regard. For the department, for instance with the Eastern Shawnee Tribe that Senator Voinovich mentioned, we do not have an application. We have not talked to the tribe about that. We have had essentially no communication at all. We are aware of what is going on basically because of clips in the newspapers. That is true in some of these other instances. I have seen a list, for instance, that a group in California, Stand Up For California, puts together of pending and rumored acquisitions. It is true that, as the Senator mentioned, that there may be close to 40 in there, but in fact what we have pending, and that is the second chart we have. As to the pending Indian acquisitions, we only have about 11 pending right now, certainly not 40. The reason there are 40 is because there is a lot of money to be made in gaming and this is the land of free enterprise and people are looking for opportunities. So these deals are talked about and they are raised by the newspapers, but in fact we have not seen many coming to actual fruition. The reason is that it is a very difficult process. Briefly, let me mention the two-party termination is not part of this meeting. I have said on many instances, we have only approved three since 1988, and we have about eight pending right now. This is for the two-party termination exception. I think some call it the true reservation shopping exception because it allows a tribe to submit an application when none of these other exceptions apply, for land that could be potentially out of state, and where the tribe has no significant cultural and historical connection. But in effect, it is a very difficult process. It goes through a rigorous test and we have to make a determination that the gaming establishment is in the best interest of the tribe and its members; and it is not detrimental to the surrounding community. We have to consult with local and government officials, and finally the Governor of the State has essentially veto power over that acquisition. For practical purposes, in all three cases where we have approved these applications, the local community and the Governor have in fact supported it. Even though the local community's support is not mandated under the act, in fact I think that if you take that in connection with the land acquisition regulations that we have in section 25 CFR part 151, it is extremely unlikely that the Secretary here would ever make a positive two-part determination if the local community in fact is opposed to this. When I go around, I stress to tribes who are thinking about this that local community support is absolutely crucial to have this process go forward. Now this is what we have done, let me just mention briefly what we are doing. As you may know, we published regulations in 25 CFR part 292 back in 2000 or maybe a little earlier that would have implemented the two-part determination. I think the Bush administration when it came over was not really interested in pushing those regulations. We are now trying to revive them, and we are thinking about moving forward again on those. We would essentially put in the regulations not only the implementation of section 20(b)(1)(a), the two party determination, but also the definitions and a test that we have for these other exceptions, like initial reservation, settlement of a land claim, and other things of this nature. We will see essentially where that goes. We want to work with the committee on addressing the problems that have been identified for the future, to make sure that we understand what was the intent of Congress in 1988 in enacting these exceptions. We definitely would be interested in looking at some of these issues that we think can be nailed down. With that, I will end my comments and I will be available for questions. Thank you very much. [Prepared statement of Mr. Skibine appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. Ms. Coleman, welcome. STATEMENT OF PENNY COLEMAN, ACTING GENERAL COUNSEL, NATIONAL INDIAN GAMING COMMISSION Ms. Coleman. Thank you. Good morning. Chairman McCain, Vice Chairman Dorgan, Senator Smith, my name is Penny Coleman. I am the acting general counsel for the National Indian Gaming Commission. I really appreciate the chance to come and speak to you. A lot of people do not realize that the National Indian Gaming Commission has an important role in these Indian land decisions. So I wanted to come here to tell you that we do; that it is a very important process to us. These decisions are difficult and we struggle with them. So I wanted to tell you a little bit about that. Indian lands, that is the foundation on which you have Indian gaming. Indian gaming can only be conducted on Indian lands. IGRA defines Indian lands, requires gaming to be on the Indian lands, and limits the commission's authority to Indian lands. It establishes the general prohibition against gaming on lands after October 1988. And then of course we have all of the exceptions we have been talking about so far. Those Indian lands are central to our functions because we have to determine whether the gaming facility is on Indian lands and is central to our function because we can only regulate on Indian lands. So we have to know whether or not there are Indian lands there. If there aren't any Indian lands, for instance we took a position in Oklahoma, fee lands, no reservation, and we said, these are not Indian lands. We cannot regulate it. We sent that information to the State, and so now the State has moved to close down that particular facility based on the theory that it is within its jurisdiction. The Chairman. When you say ``Indian lands,'' that means Indian-owned lands as well as trust lands? Ms. Coleman. There is so much more to it, because first Indian lands is defined as reservation lands. So if it is within a reservation, no problem. The Chairman. That is trust status, yes. Ms. Coleman. But if it is off-reservation, then it has to be either held in trust or restricted status, and the tribe has to exercise governmental authority over it. And to exercise governmental authorities over it, they have to do both present- day exercise. So in other words, they have to have law enforcement, maybe have tribal offices. They have to do actual right-now exercise of governmental powers over it. But they also have to have that theoretical right to exercise that power. So for instance if you have fee lands off- reservation, as a general matter a tribe is not going to have that theoretical right. The Chairman. What about tribally owned lands, not fee, but they buy some land in downtown Denver. Ms. Coleman. Those are fee lands. The Chairman. Those are fee lands. Ms. Coleman. Right; those are still fee lands. The Chairman. So they set up a police force and a government entity; they own the land. They bought it. Now, is that under your jurisdiction? Ms. Coleman. No; generally not, because the tribe owns those lands in fee and cannot just by buying the lands take them outside of the jurisdiction of the State. Senator Dorgan. When you say ``generally not,'' are there conditions under which it is under your jurisdiction? Ms. Coleman. I am aware of in Alaska there are fee lands that are held as restricted against alienation. It is a very unusual situation. I have not actually run into it in any other place. It was a result of the unusual history of Alaska where the lands were fee lands that were restricted against alienation. The Chairman. So these lands, they have to not only acquire some way, but they have to have it be in trust status. Ms. Coleman. Yes. So we get into it. We, the commission, both trying to determine whether or not we can regulate this, but also because we have management contracts that are subject to our approval. The Chairman. Management contracts are subject to your approval, but consulting contracts are not. Ms. Coleman. That is correct, Senator. The Chairman. We have very few management contracts anymore, and we have lots of consulting contracts. Ms. Coleman. We do not have all that many consulting contracts anymore because we have taken a rather broad view as to what consulting contracts mean. So we have taken the view that just because they call it a consulting contract does not make it a consulting contract. It has to actually be one. Where they are providing just very specific deliverables for a specific sum of money, if it looks like a management contract, then we have concluded it is a management contract. The Chairman. So have you taken action that has reduced the amount of money that a so-called ``consulting'' contract, but is actually a management contract? Ms. Coleman. To do that, we issue advisory opinions. Tribes and contractors submit their contracts to us, to the Office of General Counsel. We review them and we look at them primarily for two reasons. One to see if they are management and the other to see if they violate the requirement that the tribe has the sole proprietary interest in the gaming. The Chairman. Do you know of any tribe that has had to void a contract because of your determination? Ms. Coleman. Yes. The Chairman. Go ahead, please. Ms. Coleman. So besides management contracts, on occasion we do have site-specific tribal ordinances that we have to approve or disapprove. So if the ordinance is site-specific, we will also have to make a decision on those. The Chairman. How large is your staff? Ms. Coleman. There are approximately 10 attorneys. The Chairman. And there are how many Indian gaming operations? Ms. Coleman. There are approximately 404. The Chairman. We have 10 attorneys monitoring the activities of 404? Ms. Coleman. Yes, sir. The Chairman. Please proceed. Ms. Coleman. Thank you. Now, we offer advisory opinions also on these Indian lands, the Office of General Counsel does. The reason why we do that is for a couple of reasons. One is that if the tribe wants to go ahead and game, it is in their best interest and everyone's best interest to find out beforehand whether or not they are going to be able to game on that particular piece of property. So we will review those for them. Also, though, we will review Indian lands when the tribe has already opened a facility and we have a reason to believe that the property may not be Indian lands. So we need to do that in order to make sure that they are gaming in accordance with IGRA. There have been occasions where they have not and we have had to tell tribes to shut down. That, of course, is not the way to go, to have a facility already in place before you have that kind of determination made. The Chairman. Have they fought you in the courts? Ms. Coleman. Pardon? The Chairman. When you tell them they have to shut down, have they fought you in court? Ms. Coleman. Absolutely. The Chairman. Have they won or lost? Ms. Coleman. Well, there is one that is still pending. In Miami, we won. What other ones have we had? The Chairman. Don't look at him. [Laughter.] Ms. Coleman. George is my memory. Senator Dorgan. You would remember your losses, wouldn't you? Wouldn't you remember your losses? Ms. Coleman. Yes; so we must not have had any. [Laughter.] The Chairman. Submit that for the record, would you please? Ms. Coleman. Absolutely. The Chairman. Thank you. Go ahead. Ms. Coleman. The reason why I am looking at George is because we share this responsibility with the department. Obviously, the department has a really important role in this. So we entered into a memorandum of understanding with the Office of the Solicitor to share our work and to work together on these issues. The Division of Indian Affairs has a few people who work on these issues. George, of course, does, and then our office. And we provide drafts and we share information. The Bureau of Indian Affairs obviously has the copies of the deeds and a lot of the relevant information we need to make these decisions. So we try to work very closely together. For many years, the department assumed the primary role for making these decisions, but a gaming has expanded, as there has gotten to be more and more facilities, as we have needed more and more to make these decisions, the Office of General Counsel started writing more of the opinions. It was rather a natural transition. I worked in the Office of the Solicitor before I worked in the Office of General Counsel. So we know and understand what the department's issues are. We try to work really closely with them. Nonetheless, we wanted to let you know that this is not a small undertaking; that this is difficult; that we have altogether in the last 10 years have probably only issued about 50 full-blown opinions, and that is with the department, too. We have about 50 pending right now, somebody counted them for me. And some of these are really simple. If it is trust land and it is on the reservation, no problem. It is Indian lands. We do not have to spend a lot of time looking into this issue. We do not have to write a full-blown opinion. All we have to do is determine it is. But there are other ones that are very complex and difficult. The one that was alluded to by George, the restored lands, that exception to the general prohibition for gaming on after October 1988 when lands are taken into trust as part of the restoration of a tribe when it has been restored to Federal recognition. To fall within the restored land exception, a tribe must establish that it is restored and then it must establish that the parcel has been restored. So to be restored to Federal recognition, you must have been recognized at one point; you must have been terminated; and then you must be re-recognized. Being recognized right now is usually pretty easy. We can look to the Secretary's list of recognized tribes or we can look to recent enactment of Congress where the tribe has been restored to recognition. But to determine whether somebody has been previously recognized is a lot more complex. There are tribes that are recognized through the BIA's BAR process that were not necessarily previously recognized, but they are now recognized. So we have to look at their relationship back in the 18th and 19th century. We have to look to their political history, their ethnographic history. We work with the tribe. We work with the department. We work with the State. We work with historians and archivists, and just pull all of that information together. And then we have to go even further when we are trying to determine whether lands are restored. Just because you reacquire lands does not mean that they are restored lands. Every time a tribe acquires land into trust does not mean that just because they are a restored tribe that the lands are restored. We have had several court cases on this, so we have some real guidance on what restored lands means now. What we do is we look to the factual circumstances of the acquisition. We look to the location of the acquisition. For instance, the location of the acquisition, if the tribe is located in California, are they seeking to acquire the land a mile away from where their population base is? Or are they looking to get it in Nevada? Well, we would say that if they are trying to acquire it in the next State, that is way too far afield. We are looking to where the population base is. And we are looking to whether or not this land is important to the tribe, whether they still have some relationship with that land; whether it was important to them throughout history; if that was the place where they had village settlements; where they did their hunting and fishing; whether they have burial grounds; whether they have this really important historical nexus besides the present day nexus to the land. And we look to the temporal relationship to the acquisition. So a tribe that was restored to recognition 40 years ago and acquired land 2 years later, that is going to be its restored lands. The fact that it has been restored to recognition and wants to acquire land now, that does not make it restored lands because that is just too far after the fact. So it has to be close in time. So for instance in the litigation that we are in in Wyandotte, Ok, the tribe had acquired land into trust in the State of Kansas. We said, population base is in the State of Oklahoma. This land was not important to the tribe as a general matter. They were only located on that property for 11 years. It was transitioning through, essentially, through Kansas. It was 18 years after their restoration that they actually acquired this land into trust, so we concluded that these were not restored lands. So we are looking very closely at all of this. To do that, the tribe has to provide voluminous historical documents, archaeological evidence. It takes tribes time and money to submit this information. It takes time for us to review it. Does it mean that we have a really broad exception to the general prohibition? Absolutely not. It is a very narrow exception and there have only been a few that have come within these guidelines. As George mentioned, most of the restored tribes are actually congressional actions. It is not an action based on looking at IGRA and trying to determine what the terms mean. It is statutory construction instead. Now, with respect to your notation that there is only 10 of us, we have been criticized by the Office of Inspector General because we are not making these decisions on Indian lands before a tribe opens the gaming facilities, and because we do not really have a systematic approach to making these decisions. We are making the decisions as we determine that they are important, and when we find out that there might be a big problem. That is not necessarily great government. So we have do share the Inspector General's concern on this. What we are moving to do is to fix that within our office. So just a couple of weeks ago, a team from the Office of General Counsel went down to Oklahoma. We started pulling deeds for the Oklahoma facilities. Our regional director in California hired a title search company to do some title searches. We are developing files with the goal that at some point we will have a file on all 404 and we will be able to pull a file at any point and be able to tell you whether or not it is on Indian lands. We will now whether or not we should be regulating and know whether we should be attempting to close it down. If we do not make these decisions before the tribe opens, well then we will have litigation. It is just going to be guaranteed. A tribe is going to have to fight us if they have already opened their facility and we say you cannot have a facility. And so consequently one of the things that we are looking at is developing regulations that ties the licensing of the facility to an Indian lands determination. So that we can ask tribes to notify us ahead of time that they are planning on opening. And I don't mean the day before. I mean enough time so we can actually determine this and get all of the information we need to make sure that they are gaming on Indian lands. So that is our involvement in Indian lands determinations. I thank you very much. If you have any questions, please ask. [Prepared statement of Ms. Coleman appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. Mr. Skibine and Ms. Coleman, I get the impression from your statements that you think that perhaps the danger here has been somewhat exaggerated, or the problems have been somewhat exaggerated. Is that accurate? Mr. Skibine. Well, I do not think that there has been the problems in the past. As my testimony indicates, we have followed IGRA very carefully and it has not resulted in that many casinos proliferating everywhere. I think potentially we are concerned about what is in the future because of the potential for abuse that is there under the Act currently, but we have not seen that. As I said, with some of these they are to us just rumors and we have no involvement so we do not know for a fact that that is an issue. The Chairman. Which means that perhaps some legislation may be necessary in order to prevent some of these things from happening. Do you agree with that? Mr. Skibine. It may be. As I stated, we would be willing to discuss with you what would be the appropriate mechanism and where it needs to change to tighten things up. The Chairman. We need to do that, but let me give you examples of why there seems to be concern. Stories about a member of the Bureau of Indian Affairs literally signing recognition papers on his way out the door in his car. I mean, that is a fact. Those were rescinded because of those circumstances of his last day in office. Rumors or stories that are carried that a tribe is willing to trade their claims for half of the State of Colorado, as Byron Dorgan mentioned, so they could establish a casino in downtown Denver. When these stories start circulating like that, people area asking, what is this all about? You see my point? Mr. Skibine. Yes; and that is an issue. I was in Colorado. The Governor of Colorado had a conference regarding that. I think it is a real issue. With respect to the Colorado issue, I think the department has determined that the claim that is asserted by the tribe is not genuine and lacks merit. So for purposes of the settlement of a land claim, the reason we have only had one so far is that our view is that the settlement of a land claim has to be a settlement that is ratified by Congress, as the Seneca claim was. As a result, there is a phenomenal check on an abuse of that exception. If it has to come before this body, it will be scrutinized to the nth degree so that the settlement legislation is not enacted willy-nilly here. The Chairman. So Senator Voinovich's concern about a casino in downtown Cleveland is not, his concern is not as compelling as perhaps we might think? Mr. Skibine. Perhaps. That is right. In our view, there would have to be settlement legislation introduced in Congress. That is our view, and we have a Solicitor's opinion that states that. Now, potentially some tribes may disagree with the view of the department on that and challenge it in court if they apply for settlement of a land claim, and we say you do not have congressional legislation, goodbye. And they may sue us because of that. So I do not know where that would go. Maybe the act could be tightened on that score to make sure that we are talking about settlement legislation that is ratified here. The Chairman. Let me go back with you to one of the fundamentals. When IGRA was passed, as we all know, it was as a result of the Cabazon decision, which said that if a State allows a certain level of gaming, then Indian tribes that reside within that State would certainly have the right to engage in gaming at that level. Isn't that a proper interpretation of the Cabazon decision in your view? Mr. Skibine. Yes; that is correct. The Chairman. But then there was a decision that was made that if a charitable organization has a Las Vegas night once a year where gaming is conducted, therefore you can have a 24-7, 12-month a year gaming operation on an Indian reservation. That changed things rather dramatically, didn't it? Mr. Skibine. Well, yes. The view of the department is really to follow the decision of the Ninth Circuit in the Rumsey decision that was appealed to the Supreme Court and the cert was denied, but I think the Solicitor General filed a brief in support of that decision. Under the Ninth Circuit reasoning, I think that the scope of gaming has to be by activity, so that for instance the issue there was, let's say the State of California authorizes horse racing, which is class III gaming activity. Well, that would mean that all class III gaming activities are open, like slot machines. The court said, no, that gaming activity has to be authorized, and that is our view right now. Senator Dorgan. But that is not responsive to the question that the Senator asked. He asked the question about a State that allows a Las Vegas night once a year. The Chairman. For charitable purposes. Senator Dorgan. For charitable purposes. Mr. Skibine. Right. Senator Dorgan. And the consequences of that of triggering an opportunity in a State for something broader. Mr. Skibine. That is correct, because charitable gaming nevertheless is gaming, and if that gaming activity is authorized by charities, then it will be authorized for Indian tribes under IGRA. I think that is our view and certainly would have been the view of the courts right now. The Chairman. Is it the department's view that the land claim exception authorizes a tribe to open a casino in geographic locations it has not been possibly more than 100 years? In other words, Ms. Coleman mentioned that one of the reasons why they did not approve of a Kansas acquisition is because they had passed through. In other words, what is the criteria here? Many of these tribes tragically moved all the way from our east coast out to the west, not of their own volition, by the way, but they had various stops along the way. Mr. Skibine. Right. The settlement of a land claim, which as I said we have applied once, I think the way that would work is that the settlement legislation that is introduced in Congress, and if it is eventually passed, will in all likelihood specifically say we settled this land claim, and as part of the claim the Secretary of the Interior is mandated to take land in trust, and it will probably say specifically where it is, by county or even by lot. So that in the Seneca Land Settlement Act, for instance, it was specifically stated in the Act where the land could be taken into trust. That is what we would be looking for. So what we think is really not important because we would be following what Congress tells us to do in the settlement legislation. With respect to the Eastern Shawnee, if there is legislation that says that Congress sells the claim, and in exchange for whatever reason, but the Secretary has to take land in trust in Ohio in a specific community, then we will have to do that. But we will look to you to tell us how to interpret that in the law. The Chairman. Ms. Coleman, it sounds to me like you could use some more help. Ms. Coleman. Absolutely. The Chairman. Thank you very much. Senator Dorgan. Senator Dorgan. Ms. Coleman, let me ask a question about licensing. If I am a tribe and there aren't any of these land issues and I just want to open a casino and our State has gaming, so I want to develop a compact. I have to get a license from whom? Ms. Coleman. From the tribe's regulatory authority. Senator Dorgan. So that license, based on your testimony, that license may be granted in other circumstances before land claims are settled? Ms. Coleman. Well, as Mr. Skibine testified, the settlement of a land claim exception is so rare, it has only happened once, that it really has not come up. The one time it did come up is the same Wyandotte, KS situation where the land was already acquired into trust and the tribe argued that that acquisition was a settlement of a land claim. We determined that it was not because there was an ICC case and we concluded that ICC cases are not settlement of land claims; that they are settlement of money damages against the Federal Government, but not actually for settlement of a land claim. Senator Dorgan. But with the size and the growth of Indian gaming, my expectation and I assume yours would be that these things will come up more and more often because the stakes are so high. Let me just mention, Mr. Chairman, last evening or yesterday late afternoon we finished in the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, I am the ranking member on that, we finished that piece of legislation. My colleagues from Oklahoma were trying to, and we were not able to do this, I wish we had been, but we were not able to put this in an appropriations bill, but there is an issue which you are probably familiar with in Oklahoma dealing with the Shawnee Tribe Status Act. That act was passed and somehow it gives the Shawnees, and this is according to the Senators from Oklahoma, it gives the Shawnees the ability to take land into trust so long as it does not interfere with other tribal jurisdictions, and requires the Secretary to approve the land in trust, ``shall'' versus ``may,'' and they say this loophole would allow the Shawnees to take land into trust within Oklahoma County, in the middle of a major city, and the Secretary would have to approve it. They say that circumvents existing law and regulation and normal land and trust application. And they feel that is a self-executing circumstance currently in law and they are trying very hard to change it. The Chairman. Which I might add was put in an appropriations bill. Senator Dorgan. Right. The Chairman. An omnibus appropriations bill. Senator Dorgan. Right. But my point about is, there is a powerful reason for tribes to try to find ways through these exceptions to locate a casino in the middle of a major population area. I understand that. If we were able to and our purpose was to be able to run a casino, we would want to be in the middle of a population center. That is a natural market. And yet we have certain guidelines and restrictions and we rely on our regulatory agencies to deal with them appropriately. We also rely on the Congress to make the right decisions on these things. Occasionally, we do not make the right decisions. I think one of the things that I have learned from your testimony, Ms. Coleman, is that this issue of the resources that are available to respond to the needs to effectively regulate a very growing industry is an important consideration for this Congress. I think we need to get additional information from you. You indicated that you have not really had a system by which you move things out the door, make judgments and move things, but you are now developing that system. I would say hurry because I think there are going to be enormous pressures from many different directions to find ways through the exceptions. Mr. Chairman, I have to leave at 11 o'clock, but I know that we have another panel coming and I will be able to hear part of that panel. I thank the two witnesses. Mr. Skibine, thank you again for being with us, and Ms. Coleman, thank you. Ms. Coleman. Thank you. The Chairman. Senator Smith. Senator Smith. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Senator Dorgan. Mr. Skibine, in May you testified that IGRA's two-part determination suggests that Congress sought to establish a unique balance in determining exceptions. Only three tribes, as I understand it, have acquired exceptions under that provision since 1988. But those are in-State, and yet a lot of concerns remain. My question is, would restricting the two-part determination exception only to in-State lands remedy most of the concerns that remain? Mr. Skibine. I think it will help remedy some of the concerns. I do not think it will certainly address the issue with the settlement of a land claim that was raised by Senator Voinovich here. That tribe would be taking exception of another exception, the land claim exception where there is no restriction on State boundaries under that exception either. The fact is, we of course have only approved three two-part determinations for tribes since 1988, all within the State where they are located. We currently have eight that are pending, and of those I think all are within the State where they are located except for one, which is the Stockbridge- Munsee community of Wisconsin. At this point, that application is for land in the Catskills and it is submitted as a two-part determination for land in New York, but in fact I think if this goes through, it probably would go through as a settlement of land claim rather. So in fact, if you discount this one, we really do not have any that are pending under the two-part determination for out- of-State tribes. Senator Smith. A question for both of you. I think one of the most unseemly things that has happened on Capitol Hill in a long, long time, frankly seems to grow out of IGRA and the number of developers apparently seeking Indian tribes to pursue gaming interests. Frankly, that has led to some very shameful things happening. These developers often are looking for a tribe. They pay for the lawyers. They pay for the up-front lobbyist costs. I wonder if this is just perceptional on my part, or are you seeing more applications that are driven by these kinds of non- Indian interests on behalf of tribes to pursue their gaming interests? Mr. Skibine. I am not sure if there is an increase in that. I think if you look back to some of the earliest applications, also the tribes were supported by outside developers. Let's take for instance the Mohegan Tribe of Connecticut was supported by a large gaming corporation out of South Africa. I think that part of the reason for that is that some of the tribes, new tribes especially, have very little means and they essentially are pretty much penniless on their own. I think it is not necessarily what they want to do to come into a partnership with an outside group, but it is certainly something that is, when it is offered, they can see it as an easy way to access capital and to essentially move their applications along and move their plans along. Whether there is an increase, it could be, based on the rumors that are out there, but we do not really have a handle on that specifically at the BIA. I am not sure, maybe the commission can address that. Ms. Coleman. I don't know as there is an increase. We do know that the harder we make it for tribes that are landless to get land into trust, the more dependent they have to be on the outside resources because tribes that do not have money and have to go through the process, who have to go through the department, go through the NIGC, to acquire land into trust, to get it to be designated Indian lands, that takes time and that takes money. And so they need to look to the outside interests. In some of these, as I said earlier, they are very difficult. They do take a lot of money. If you have to hire an ethno-historian, if you have to hire an environmentalist to do all of the NEPA work and prove it is restored lands, it is going to require somebody to put up the money. Senator Smith. I assume, though, that there is a concern in the Department of the Interior about it. Is there any effort made to identify the tribal interest from the developer's interest and to provide some level of direction that gets in the way of some abuse of tribes? Ms. Coleman. We definitely are aware of that issue all of the time. We want to make sure that tribes do not end up in a situation where it is not really the tribe's gaming anymore. It is one of the driving forces behind our sole proprietary interest advisory opinions, that we have kind of tried to draw a line, saying to a tribe if you give this much of your gaming to this company, well then you are no longer the sole proprietor of this. You have to retain the bulk of it. IGRA is intended for the tribes. They are to be the sole beneficiaries. So we have taken a pretty hard line on this sole proprietary interest issue. I think it has really helped. We have also been talking to Senator McCain about more background investigations for a larger number of people who are involved in gaming. I think that makes a lot of sense. You want to make sure you have good guys in gaming. A lot of tribes do really good background investigations. Not all tribes have access, though, to like the FBI criminal history checks and the fingerprint checks and all of those kinds of things that the Federal Government has access to. The Chairman. Thank you very much. We will look forward to continuing to work with you as we contemplate some legislation to address some of the issues that continue to come before the committee. Thank you both for coming. Mr. Skibine. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Ms. Coleman. Thank you. The Chairman. Our next panel is Walter Gray, who is the tribal administrator of the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians; Christine Norris, principal chief, Jena Band of Choctaw Indians; John Barnett, chairman, Cowlitz Indian Tribe; and Charles D. Enyart, chief, Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. As you take your seats, I would like to say, Chief Norris, I have read your testimony and let me make a couple of points for the record. First, this hearing is not about Jack Abramoff or the investigation this committee is conducting into his activities. Second, I am particularly concerned about the possibility that this hearing may be used to cast aspersions on the integrity of, in particular, the Senator from Louisiana. To assure that there will be no further discussion of this issue, I will say the following: Incidental to its reviews of matters within its jurisdiction, the Committee has seen absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Senator Vitter's opposition to the Jena Band's attempt to obtain a gaming facility in Louisiana had to do with anything other than his longstanding principled opposition to the expansion of gaming in that State. I would like to make that very clear. We will begin with you, Mr. Gray, and thank you and the witnesses for coming. All four of your written statements will be made part of the record. STATEMENT OF WALTER GRAY, TRIBAL ADMINISTRATOR, GUIDIVILLE BAND OF POMO INDIANS Mr. Gray. Good morning, Mr. Chairman. I am Walter Gray. I serve as the tribal administrator for the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians of California. I would like to thank you for the opportunity to testify this morning. The Guidiville Band was illegally terminated and is now seeking to restore its land base. We believe that the restored lands provisions of IGRA work and we are here to explain why. Historically, the Pomos used and occupied land that extends from the San Francisco Bay Area north to what is now Mendocino County. In 1851, the Pomos entered into a treaty with the United States ceding over two million acres of land in exchange for a reservation of 254,000 acres. Unfortunately, at the request of the State of California, these treaties were never ratified and the Pomos, as well as the majority of other California Indian tribes were left landless and without means of support. The California Indian population was decimated by the deliberate policies of the State of California. As a result, the California Indian population, estimated to be 200,000 at the time of statehood in 1850, was reduced to a mere 15,000 by the year 1900. In 1915, the Guidiville Rancheria was established by the Federal Government. However, in 1962, the Rancheria was illegally terminated. In 1987, before passage of the IGRA, the tribe filed its lawsuit challenging the Federal Government's actions. In 1991, a Federal court reversed the wrongful termination, but to date no significant funds have been appropriated for the tribe to reestablish the lands which were wrongfully taken. When Congress enacted IGRA in 1988, it understood that there were tribes like Guidiville who were terminated and landless at the time of its passage. We believe the exceptions in IGRA demonstrate Congress' commitment to treat tribes equally. As a restored tribe struggling to reestablish a land base and achieve economic self-sufficiency, we applaud Congress' concern about equity when enacting IGRA and we urge this committee not to lose sight of this concern. As the Federal courts have held, the exceptions in IGRA serve purposes of their own, ensuring that tribes lacking reservations when IGRA was enacted are not disadvantaged relative to more established ones. The tribe is now faced with the daunting task of restoring its land base. Guidiville has looked hard for nearly a decade to find lands in what may be the most expensive market to purchase lands in the continental United States. Recently, the tribe has found land which it can purchase, the now-closed naval fuel depot in Richmond, California. The site is several hundred acres and will allow for open spaces and parks, gaming, hotel, and retail facilities, and land for tribal administrative and cultural uses. Guidiville has worked with the city of Richmond in a transparent process. The city of Richmond held five public hearings with regard to our purchase of the land. This land acquisition will restore the tribe's terminated lands, remediate the environmental contamination on the land resulting from the Navy's use of the property, and produce over 6,000 jobs to help revitalize the local community. We think that the Congress may be interested in how we have structured our contractual agreement with the city of Richmond. This agreement affords other tribes, local governments, and California citizens the same level of legal protections as non- tribal developments in California. Most importantly, we have accomplished this without infringing upon the sovereignty of the tribe or the city of Richmond. Though there may be a number of gaming projects that have been proposed, few will meet the high standards required by the Federal agencies. We believe that the current regulatory process is rigorous and will safeguard against ill-conceived projects. Interior and the National Indian Gaming Commission require that a restored tribe show historic and contemporary ties to the land in order for the land to qualify as restored. To our knowledge, there are no gaming projects that have been built after restored lands approval that are causing any significant public policy problem. In short, the restored lands provisions of IGRA work. They are not broken, nor will they result in the proliferation of tribal gaming facilities. Illegally terminated tribes like Guidiville did not choose to be terminated, nor did they choose to lose their lands. Left to find a solution for ourselves, the Guidiville Tribe has decided to use tribal governmental gaming as a tool to acquire a land base. We are not here today to ask that the law be changed to benefit the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians. We are here to let you know that the current law can and does work and that the Guidiville Band should in all fairness be allowed to complete the restoration of its lands. It would simply be unfair to change the rules when the tribe is so close to correcting the wrong that was perpetrated 40 years ago when the tribe was illegally terminated. Thank you. [Prepared statement of Mr. Gray appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. Christine Norris. Welcome. STATEMENT OF CHRISTINE NORRIS, PRINCIPAL CHIEF, JENA BAND OF CHOCTAW INDIANS Ms. Norris. Mr. Chairman, thank you for giving me this opportunity to come before you. My name is Christine Norris. I am tribal chief of the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians. I have been privileged to serve for the past 30 years in the tribal government of my tribe. I thank you for letting me share with you briefly our experience with the fee-to-trust process and IGRA's section 20 process. The Jena Band was recognized through Interior's Federal acknowledgment process in 1995. Because we were a landless tribe, all of our lands that were sought were considered off-reservation. The majority of our tribal members live within the three parishes designated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs as the Jena Band Service Area. The Jena Band needs a reservation land base where we can provide health, housing, education benefits, social services, as well as land to develop a gaming facility for my tribe because my tribe has almost no other means to generate revenue to fund our government. After recognition, we began to work to identify lands within our service area that could be proclaimed our reservation. However, the three parishes that compose our service area lie within a very conservative, a very religious part of our State. All three of these parishes voted out gaming in a referendum. Because of this referendum, former Governor Mike Foster refused to negotiate a gaming compact for a facility located within this three parish service area. He threatened to actively oppose our efforts to acquire trust land for non- gaming purposes within our service area if we persisted in locating a gaming facility. He insisted that we find an alternative parcel in a parish that supported gaming. In order to cooperate with the government, with our Governor, we worked to identify an alternative site for our gaming facility outside the service area. This was not an effort to forum shop that we have been accused of. To even address Senator Vitter's comments about the Jena Band looking to Texas, looking to Mississippi, we did accept an invitation from Chief Philip Martin of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw to come to his State in a collaborative effort to look at gaming with his tribe. This did not work out. We did look at areas in Texas. We do say that this was a mistake on our part. We were beginning to worry that we would never find a place to establish a gaming facility. We are pleased that Interior is drafting regulations to govern section 20 exceptions. This will give newly recognized tribes much better guidance as to what is deemed acceptable. There was not a clear guidance 10 year ago when we started this process. To work with the Governor, we satisfied three criteria that he had. He said the land had to be not too distant from our service area; the land had to be within a parish that supported gaming; and in our project in particular, the land had to be within an area with which we could demonstrate a historical Choctaw connection. We did this in Logansport, LA. Logansport is located approximately 64 miles from our service area. Our land there was located in an area with strong Choctaw historical connections. The local municipal and parish government supported us with our facility there. We applied to the Department of the Interior asking that the Logansport land, along with several other non-gaming parcels located within our service area, be taken into trust and proclaimed to be our reservation. In addition, we submitted extensive documentation demonstrating that the Logansport parcel also met the requirements for the restored lands exception in IGRA. However, the department declined to accept the Logansport parcel into trust as part of our initial reservation. It also declined to issue an opinion as to whether the Logansport parcel qualified for the restored lands exception. Rather, Interior suggested that it would consider our Logansport request under IGRA's two-part determination exception. At great expense to the tribe, we submitted such an application to the department. Governor Foster repeatedly expressed his support for our two-part application to the tribe, to Interior, throughout the media in Louisiana. With that support, Interior issued a positive two-part determination in December 2003. To our disappointment and surprise, Governor Foster left office a few weeks later without concurring with the Secretary's determination. Immediately after Governor Kathleen Blanco took office, I asked to meet with her about the two-part determination and about a gaming compact; 15 months later, Governor Blanco sent the tribe a letter stating that she would not support the establishment of another gambling casino. A few weeks before we received the Governor's letter, Senator Vitter had come out in the media warning her not to sign a compact with the Jena Band, whether for Logansport or any other area, even located in our service area. It appears, or I feel like the Governor's response was influenced by Senator Vitter. He further urged the Governor not to negotiate with the tribe in good faith pursuant to IGRA. Senator Vitter has been a constant and vocal opponent of our efforts in establishing a gaming facility. He put language to be included in Interior's appropriation report that would have prevented Interior from acquiring land for us. He has introduced legislation designed to ensure that we will never have the opportunity to engage in the same economic endeavor that has been allowed the other three federally recognized tribes in Louisiana, and 16 non-Indian gaming facilities in Louisiana. His bill eliminates the initial reservation exception altogether. In its place, he inserts a provision that would require the Jena Band and other newly recognized Federal acknowledgment process tribes to satisfy a modified version of the two-part determination. It would require showing that the proposed gaming facility would have no impact whatsoever on the surrounding local, tribal or State government. This bill also requires the preparation of a costly environmental impact statement regardless of whether the impact of the proposed casino is expected to be significant or not. This requirement is contrary to NEPA's general approach of first preparing an environmental assessment to determine whether preparation of an EIS is necessary. Finally, Senator Vitter's proposed legislation attempts to rewrite State law for Louisiana and all the other States by mandating that the tribal State gaming compact be approved by both the Governor and the State legislature. Every existing tribal-State compact in Louisiana was executed by the Governor without approval of the State legislature. We respectfully ask that Congress reject these proposed amendments to section 20's initial reservation exception and instead please consider some small amendments that would make it more fair and efficient. First, Congress we ask impose hard deadlines on the Department of the Interior for taking land into trust for landless tribes. No tribe in the United States is more needy or is more worthy of the department's focus and prioritization than a landless tribe which has survived decades in the Federal acknowledgment process. Congressional direction requiring early designation of a service area and strict time deadlines for initial land acquisition would also go a long way to taking out some of the politics that is fostered by letting fee-to-trust and reservation proclamations linger for extended periods of time. My second request is that Congress amend the initial reservation exception to clarify that the first parcel or parcels of land taken into trust by the Secretary shall be automatically deemed the newly recognized FAP tribe's initial reservation. This would spare tribes like ours the great expense and the frustration of being made to jump through the hoops that serves no purpose other than to further delay the day when we are put on a level playing field with other tribes. With these constructive changes, Congress can help, not hinder, newly federally recognized tribes. Thank you so much for the opportunity to come before you this morning. [Prepared statement of Ms. Norris appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. John Barnett. Welcome. STATEMENT OF JOHN BARNETT, CHAIRMAN, COWLITZ INDIAN TRIBE Mr. Barnett. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chairman McCain, Vice Chairman Dorgan and respected members of this committee, I thank you for the opportunity to testify this morning. Mr. Chairman, as you have spent your whole life serving our country, I have spent my whole life serving my tribe. I devoted almost one-third of my life to the fight to regain recognition for the Cowlitz Tribe through Interior's Federal acknowledgment process. I traveled to Washington, DC more than 50 times over the last quarter-century to represent my people before the Federal Government. I have paid for those trips out of my own pocket. Now, I have one last goal, one last promise to my people, to regain a homeland so that we may live and prosper on our own lands as our ancestors did before our land was taken from us. Maybe then they will let me retire. For this reason, I greatly appreciate the opportunity to share our views about the crucial importance of IGRA's initial reservation exception. When Congress passed IGRA in 1988, it understood that newly recognized tribes would be unfairly disadvantaged and thus carved our a limited exception that allows these newly acknowledged tribes to conduct gaming on their initial reservations, just as if that reservation had been in existence in 1988. By doing so, Congress tried to put newly acknowledged tribes on a level playing field with previously recognized tribes. However, newly acknowledged tribes are significantly disadvantaged in the current fee-to-trust process. The Cowlitz emerged penniless from decades of struggling through the bureau's administrative recognition process only to find that they have no reservation from which to generate revenue to run social, health, and governmental services for our people, or on which to conduct the only form of economic development which almost universally has been proven to be successful, Indian gaming. As a result, the Cowlitz and other newly acknowledged tribes are immediately thrust into the political controversy surrounding off-reservation land acquisition and Indian gaming. Consider this: Interior's off-reservation fee-to-trust regulations simply were not drafted with landless newly recognized tribes in mind. Among other things, those off-reservation regulations specifically give greater weight to the views of the local jurisdictions in which the land is located. Consider further that either the community is generally opposed to gaming and so will fight the tribe's fee-to-trust acquisition, or the community may support gaming in which case there likely are established competing gaming interests that will devote significant financial and political resources to fighting the newly recognized tribe's proposed land acquisition. This presents a terrible no-win situation for the newly recognized tribes. The Cowlitz Tribe has worked hard navigating the fee-to-trust process in an honorable way. We chose a parcel of land located within the service area designated exclusive Cowlitz by both HUD and IHS so it is well placed to serve the modern-day needs of tribal members who live in the surrounding area. We chose a parcel squarely located within an area where we have strong historical ties, ties that are documented in the Bureau of Indian Affairs' recognition documents and in our Indian Claims Commission land claim litigation. We chose a parcel in a local community that has demonstrated its tolerance for gaming by allowing four non-Indian card rooms to operate there. By choosing a parcel of land with which we have demonstrated modern and historical connections and which is located in a community tolerant of gaming cannot fairly be called reservation shopping. Congress needs to reject proposed amendments to section 20 that would eviscerate the initial reservation exception. I would respectfully suggest a few improvements to the current initial reservation provision. First, newly acknowledged tribes currently must apply for a reservation proclamation pursuant to section 7 of the Indian Reorganization Act before we may game on that trust land. Did Congress really intend to impose this additional administrative hurdle on newly recognized tribes? We ask that Congress clarify that the first land taken into trust under the exception automatically becomes the tribe's initial reservation so that the tribe is not subjected to yet another expensive time- consuming process. Second, Congress should impose time deadlines on Interior's processing of fee-to-trust and section 20 applications. The process now takes years to complete and costs millions of dollars. We think the only way to protect the integrity of the system is to require Interior to make decisions within 2 years of receiving the application. In closing, I would like to recognize the Snoqualmie Tribe from Washington State, whose Chief Jerry Kanim is sitting behind me today. The Snoqualmie, too, are a landless newly recognized tribe struggling with many of the same land acquisition issues as do we. In addition, I would like to recognize Mark Brown, chairman of the Mohegan Tribe and Tribal Councilman Bruce Two Dogs Bozsum. The Mohegan Tribe completed the Federal acknowledgment process 10 years before we did, and today they are working with us to reinvest in Indian country. We hope that our partnership will show that Indian tribes can and will reach out to help each other. I would hope that the Mohegan's example will encourage other successful tribes to help those who are less fortunate. All my life, I have served my tribe in the pursuit of what is right and what is just. I have grown old, but my purpose is not complete. That day will come when the Cowlitz have a federally protected homeland that will ensure a brighter day for our future generations. The Cowlitz Tribe thanks you for the opportunity to provide this testimony and we offer our continuing assistance to the committee as it considers whether and/or how to amend section 20 of IGRA. Thank you. [Prepared statement of Mr. Barnett appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much. Charles Enyart. Welcome. STATEMENT OF CHARLES D. ENYART, CHIEF, EASTERN SHAWNEE TRIBE OF OKLAHOMA Mr. Enyart. Thank you. Mr. Chairman, I have oral testimony here, but with your permission I would like to address a couple of comments that the Senator from Ohio made at the end of this, if I may. Good morning, Chairman McCain. My name is Charles Enyart. I am the chief of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, a federally recognized tribe whose aboriginal homeland was in what is now the State of Ohio. I appreciate the opportunity to be here today to explain the importance of our land claims in Ohio for our people. I am here for three reasons: No. 1, to ensure that we have the opportunity to return to our aboriginal homeland in present-day Ohio; No. 2, to ensure that we have the same rights as other Indian tribes to conduct Indian gaming on our lands under current laws; and No. 3, to advocate for the rights of tribes, States and local communities to work together for their mutual benefit. The Shawnee want to return to Ohio. Our historic cultural ties to Ohio are undeniable. It was 150 years ago that the tribe was driven out of its homeland in the State of Ohio. Violence against our people, disruptive raids, and the burning of Shawnee Indian villages by the U.S. Army was methodical. The unauthorized taking of the Shawnee lands by encroaching occurred. Our people were forcibly removed from their villages and sent to reservations first in Ohio, then in Missouri, and ultimately Oklahoma. It was an ugly and shameful time in American history in which our people endured unspeakable fear, intimidation and military violence by the United States and the early Ohioans. When we return to Ohio, we wish to do so on the same legal basis as other federally recognized tribes. That is, we want the right to conduct activities on our land that would be permissible for any other recognized tribe anywhere in the United States. We do not want to return as a second-class citizen by only being allowed to conduct certain activities. Thus, we would strongly oppose any legislation that would bar a federally recognized tribe with legitimate claims from regaining land in its historical area and using that land for any permissible tribal activities, including gaming. I am sure you would agree that to bar a tribe such as the Shawnee from using any land it may gain in its aboriginal homeland for federally recognized purposes would create a group of second-class Indians who are only allowed to do limited things on that land. It is clear the people of Ohio are receptive to the establishment of Indian lands and Indian gaming. They desire the introduction of gaming for the unquestioned economic benefits that it produces. There are many reasons for them to prefer Indian gaming over alternatives. First, there are numerous controls on the scope of tribal gaming which diminish the potential for uncontrolled expansion. Only so many tribes have a historical or cultural connection to any given State. Second, tribal gaming revenues as a matter of law may only be expended for social benefit purposes approved by Congress. Commercial gaming only benefits private interests. In historic contrast, tribal gaming lifts entire communities out of poverty, educates children who once had little hope for higher education, builds schools, roads, bridges, funds law enforcement and emergency services, preserves languages and cultures, builds clinics and hospitals, and provides dialysis and diabetic centers, and funds charitable activities of every kind. Gaming has yielded economic benefits to our tribe. Until very recently, our historic legacy was one of poverty and isolation. Left virtually landless for over 1\1/2\ centuries, our people had very little realistic hope that things would ever improve. Like other tribes in similar circumstances, we had no economy and no tax base. Indian gaming has changed our bleak outlook as to our future. The revenues from our modest gaming operation, Bordertown Casino, located in West Seneca, OK, has provided us the means to make improvements in the lives of our people and to rekindle the hope for a better life for our children and grandchildren. However, the rural character of the land we now occupy, combined with the economic conditions in the surrounding area, severely restrict our economic potential. The lot of the Eastern Shawnee people has improved, but we have a long way to go to achieve the level of prosperity that once was ours. Our interest in returning to Ohio is to establish a mutual benefit political and economic relationship with the State of Ohio and the communities that have reached out to us with a vision of what is possible. We do wish to fully resolve our outstanding land claims, but not in a manner that will be detrimental to the people of Ohio. Those with whom we have established a relationship understand our intentions and have welcomed us into their communities to discuss the potential for tribal gaming. In fact, local communities in the State of Ohio have recently sought out the tribe and asked us if they could help bring the Shawnee back to our homeland. We are committed to working through appropriate governmental channels in Ohio to ensure that we are welcomed back to our homeland. On June 27, 2005, we filed a valid land claim in Federal court in Ohio. The tribe brought the action to vindicate our aboriginal land rights. We further seek damages for wrongful possession and trespass on our former reservation lands in Ohio. These violations continue today. The tribe has sought redress for these wrongs from the State of Ohio. The State of Ohio has refused to take any action to redress these wrongs or even discuss the matter with us. We had no choice but to take our valid claims to the court for redress. The full explanation of these claims is contained in material from our attorneys which I have submitted with my written remarks for the record. Tribes with legitimate claims should be allowed to regain portions of their homeland and should be allowed to enter into agreements including gaming agreements that promote economic development and benefit tribal, State and local economies. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for this chance to testify to the committee. Again with your permission, if I may address a couple of comments. The Senator made a comment about secret negotiations. Senator, there have been no secret negotiations. It has been in the newspaper. It is all over TV in Ohio. He talked about the agreements we have with certain communities. That is true. We have four. Only one of the agreements did we pursue ourselves. The other three pursued us, these communities. He also talked about economic blackmail. Senator, our land claim has never been intended to be blackmail. We have been up front with the State of Ohio. In fact, I have mailed, I think it was in April, a letter to the Governor, Governor Taft, and to Attorney General Petro explaining that we would like to meet with him and discuss our land claim to see if there is something we can work out. At no time was this blackmail. [Prepared statement of Mr. Enyart appears in appendix.] The Chairman. Thank you very much, sir. Mr. Gray, prior to termination, where was your Band located? Mr. Gray. When you ask prior to termination, do you mean when the original lands were ceded? Which territory are you searching for? The Chairman. No; the termination that took place in the 1950's, I guess it was. Mr. Gray. Okay. The original rancheria is located in what is now Ukiah, CA. The Chairman. Which is near? Mr. Gray. Mendocino County. The Chairman. Do any of the tribe still reside in that area, or do they live in the Bay Area? Mr. Gray. When you ask ``any of the tribe,'' are you asking specifically about Guidiville? There are several tribes in the area. The Chairman. The Department has testified that it applies a rigorous historical nexus test for restored lands. How do you think you are going to be able to meet that historical nexus test? Mr. Gray. Well, it is very difficult, as they testified, and very expensive and time-consuming. The tribe would not pursue this particular piece of land if it did not believe that it had a strong historical tie to the property. So what we would like to see happen is that the exception under which we fall would be left alone as it is and that we be allowed to go through that rigorous process. The tribe is willing to live with the end result. The Chairman. How do you answer the charge that your interest in the off-reservation sites is only in conducting gaming? Mr. Gray. Well, off-reservation, just the term alone presupposes that the tribe has a reservation. The Chairman. But you are interested in off-reservation sites, are you not? Mr. Gray. We do not have a reservation. I understand your question. This is within our historical area, and we firmly believe that. But in California where we are from, it is simple economics. In an area where lands at our northern boundary of our territory and lands that are at our southern boundary of our territory are approximately the same, well in excess of $200,000 an acre. It will take us over $100 million just to do the land purchase. So you have to be able to draw enough people to the casino to make enough money to be able to pay just for the land. That is not infrastructure or any of the other things that need to occur. The Chairman. Chief Norris, you indicate that the Department declined to consider your request to have land in Logansport declared restored lands. What was the basis for their decision? Ms. Norris. On Logansport? The Chairman. Yes; was it due to a lack of sufficient historical nexus? Ms. Norris. We proved that there were ties to the port in Logansport. We were not saying it was the Jena Band that were originally there, but we were saying that it was the Choctaw Nation. We proved through documentation that there were Choctaw people there during the removal period from the east to Oklahoma. With the Logansport package, they did give us a two-part determination in that, with the support of our Governor from Louisiana at the time. Unfortunately, all indications were that we were going there for the two-part determination which Interior did issue that proclamation, but the former Governor Foster did not carry through with his decision before leaving office. The Chairman. You state in your testimony that you have a three parish or county service area. How was that service area determined? Ms. Norris. It was determined by the Bureau of Indian Affairs when we began our process for the Federal acknowledgment process. The people in my tribe resided in Grant, Rapides and La Salle Parishes. This is where we would have a delivery service area for health services for our tribe. The Chairman. Did the Department indicate that this was the area in which you could have an initial reservation? Or did the Department tell you that there was a certain area where it would take land into trust for your initial reservation? Ms. Norris. No, sir; it did not. It only deemed this area for delivery of services to my people for health care, education, and social services. The Chairman. Obviously, you have had a very difficult time. Ms. Norris. Yes. The Chairman. If you had to do it over again, what would you have done differently? Anything? Ms. Norris. I think that my tribe I feel during the relationship that I have had in Government for the 30 years, we worked with our State, we worked with our Governor. Perhaps there lies the reason that we have been criticized most in the media because we went to the areas where our Governor, he very adamantly came out and said, I will not give you a compact in those service areas of the three parishes in which you reside because those areas voted out gaming. If you will go where they want you, where the people will accept you, where they already have a form of gaming, I will support you. Because of that statement that was issued, we sought to seek these places. The three parish area that voted out gaming is where we reside, where we live and go to church. We go to school with these people. We wanted to be good neighbors. I would have not chosen any other course than what we participated in. I believe it was right. I believe we worked with our local government to get to these areas, to get to where we are today. The Chairman. You must feel a little betrayed. Ms. Norris. Of course I do. I feel betrayed by the administration in my own State, because of the other three federally recognized tribes. As a leader, as you have heard from the testimony of these other tribal leaders, it is up to me to give my people a better way of living, to improve their quality of life. That is what I am here for and that is my journey and that is what my mission is to my people. My story has been an open book. It has been published in the media around the country. We have everybody looking at the decisions that are made today based on the Jena Band of Choctaw. It is before you to see and everyone else to see. We have tried to work with governments and with local bodies to do what is right, to do the right thing. The Chairman. Chairman Barnett, welcome back. Mr. Barnett. Thank you, sir. The Chairman. You state that the site you are proposing is 14 miles from the territory identified by the Indian Claims Commission as the traditional territory of the Cowlitz. Why did the tribe not seek a site within the traditional territory as identified by the Indian Claims Commission? Mr. Barnett. In 1973, we went through the process, a hearing with the Indian Claims Commission. We were awarded $1.5 million for 1,716,000 acres of land. We were not allowed to include Clark County because we could not at that point in time prove exclusive use and occupancy. There is a reason for that and I think it is a very important reason. The Cowlitz Tribe has always been since time immemorial the resident tribe all the way down to the Columbia River. When the Hudson's Bay Company built Fort Vancouver, which is just north of Portland, OR, across the river, it changed things, because other tribes, for instance the Umatilla, the Nez Perce, Grand Ronde, those tribes came to Fort Vancouver for the benefits of trade or to get supplies or whatever it happened to be. The Cowlitz were already there. These tribes came, did their business and went back home. We did our business and we stayed there because that is where we were from. The Chairman. But the Indian Claims Commission does not acknowledge that. Mr. Barnett. That is right. They did not acknowledge that fact that we were there and we have proven all along. And that is one of the problems that we have had with Clark County is that these four card rooms there are throwing tons of money to try and say we do not belong in Clark County, when we have documented proof that we do. I think that is a very valid point that has to be considered here is that we are different. We are within our aboriginal area, even though the difference between exclusive use and occupancy and just being there, use and occupancy in the area because of the other tribes coming in, makes it a little bit different ball game. The Chairman. Does the local community support your efforts to get land and a casino? Mr. Barnett. Some do, some don't. I think we are making some progress. There has been a lot of misinformation that is coming out. We have always tried to take the high road and not get into defensive battle with Clark County. I think we are going to have to go on the offensive a little bit here to explain truthfully to the people of Clark County just exactly why we are there. There are some people that say you belong up in Toledo, way up in the middle of Washington, things like that. We find that hard to swallow, but it is something we just have to deal with, and we will be coming out with documentation before this fee-to-trust issue is done that will conclusively prove that this is our aboriginal area, even though we were not paid for it. I might mention that approximately 500,000 acres of land we are talking about here that were not included by the Indian Claims Commission as a result of this distinction between use and occupancy. The Chairman. Chief Enyart, you filed your land claim on June 27 of this year. Isn't that a long time to have waited after you were removed from Ohio? Mr. Enyart. Yes; it is, Senator, but let me give you a little history of our tribe. We were removed from Ohio in 1832. We eventually wound up in Oklahoma. We were awarded approximately, not quite 59 acres. That is what we had for our tribal headquarters. The only income that the tribe had was moneys that farmers would pay to farm that 59 acres. We had no income. The tribal leaders had to meet in churches, in courthouses, and their budget in the 1940's and 1950's was $50, and that was to get stamps. So then in the 1980's, we were able to get grants to build some buildings where have a tribal headquarters down there now. And then also the 1980's, we went into gaming. To go on, we did not have the resources to do it. It is only through the gaming that we have been able to have some monies that we can be doing things that we were not able to do at that time. Gaming has been very good to the Eastern Shawnee. We put our money right back into the tribe. We have all kinds of social programs for our tribal members such as children having clothing allowances, scholarships for people going to college, a trade school. So this money goes right back in. Yes, it was a long time, Senator, but we did not have the resources then. The Chairman. How would you answer people who say you are just looking to leverage a better, more lucrative gaming location? Mr. Enyart. I would say this, let me tell you my vision for the Indian tribes. I foresee the day, and part of it is now, the Federal dollar is getting harder to get, drying up. In my opinion, the tribes that want to make it in the future need to be self-sufficient. There is only one way that we can do this and that is to use our profits from gaming to get into other businesses so that down the line we can become self-sufficient. We would no longer be dependent upon the Federal Government to take care of us. It is our homeland. We do want to go back. Is it lucrative? Sure it is, but we are also willing to share in this with the State, with the community. We are not just trying to take all of this for ourselves. We have been very open about this in the press and on TV coverage, too. The Chairman. So people are correct when they say you are looking to leverage a better, more lucrative gaming location? Mr. Enyart. The terminology gets me, Senator. Are we looking for a better economic place to build, yes, but again the funds are going to be used in the State and also in the community and the tribe, so this would not only benefit us, but the State and the community as well. So to put that in, is it 100 percent, I could not say that, no. The Chairman. Assuming you obtain the land, are you confident the Ohio Governor would sign a compact with your tribe? Mr. Enyart. The present Governor? No, if Governor Taft is in there. I am sure you are familiar with a famous Oklahoman, Will Rogers. Well, Will Rogers used to say, all I know is what I read in the paper. Well, that is all I know about the Governor and the Attorney General because we made an effort to meet with them. They didn't even respond to my letter. So the only thing I know is what I see in the paper and what I read and what is forwarded to me. He has made comments that he would not sign that. Again, I understand that he made the same comments when the lottery was coming in. He made the same comments, but lottery was approved. The Chairman. Are there any limits to where a tribe should be able to return to exercise sovereignty either in geography or in the amount of time that has elapsed? Mr. Enyart. I think if you have a legitimate land claim, you have historical data that proves that you were there, I don't think there should be any limits on it. The Chairman. Shouldn't that be a decision of the Indian Claims Commission? Mr. Enyart. Well, I am sure that they would like to have part of that, but also it is a legal question. If we have legal reasons to go and file land claims, why can't we pursue those legal reasons? Now, it would be determined in court anyway. The Chairman. Do you want to respond to that question also, Chief Barnett? Are there any limits to where a tribe should be able to return to exercise sovereignty? Mr. Barnett. Sovereignty is an issue I think that all tribes, whether we are federally recognized at one time, restored through the acknowledgment process. Senator Inouye told me at a fundraiser for Maria Cantwell, I sat next to him for dinner. He was the keynote speaker and he said two things and they really impressed me. He said, always protect your sovereignty and always protect your traditions. Those words I think are true and I think all Indian tribes adhere to those words, that if we are going to survive as tribes, we have to do that. But in this day and age, we do have to make certain adjustments to the way we do things. Indian gaming is one of the things. As a landless tribe, you might say, well, are we reservation shopping? Well, how can you be reservation shopping when you do not have a reservation to begin with? That is our problem and it is the problem of having to say that we are in our own aboriginal area, and I think that ``aboriginal'' word is important because that means that we have been there since time immemorial. The Chairman. I was speaking because of the odious practices of the Federal Government tribes were moved from east to west and resided in certain areas for long periods of time before they were finally relocated, if that is the right word. Do you see my point? Mr. Barnett. Yes; I do. In our situation, for instance, we did not sign a treaty. The reason we did not sign a treaty was because we were asked to move by Governor Isaac Stevens, 200 miles away over to the coast of Washington, to be on the Quinault Reservation with eight other tribes. At that point in time in our history, there was slave-taking between the Cowlitz and the Quinaults. You know, it was a situation where we would not even consider those types of things. We stayed on our aboriginal lands because that is where we wanted to be, and that is where we want to make our living and that is where we want our children to come. I agree with you on reservation shopping, if there are valid reasons, this gentleman here, I do not know that much about his situation, if there are valid reasons and if the legal situation is there to take it to court, I think that is certainly their prerogative to do. I think the big issue here on reservation shopping is the opportunists that get involved. They are there for one reason, to convince tribes that may not have as much smarts that this is the way you are going to make yourselves lots of money. And oh, incidentally, we might make some at the same time. And there is a lot of that going on. I do not know how you people are going to handle it, but I know that you will handle it in an equitable way. I am confident of that. The Chairman. We have seen ample evidence of what you just stated. What is your next step, Chairwoman Norris? Ms. Norris. Our next step is to pursue gaming in one of our home parishes of Grant Parish. We went the route, as I explained earlier, with the Governor and the movement of the State. We are back home in our parish area. How can they deny us a gaming facility, Federal land to be taken into trust? We are waiting for it to be declared initial reservation. With the three other tribes who are federally recognized that have gaming facilities in Louisiana, we will be the next. I do not look at it as a form of expansion of gaming. I look at it as this is our right to be there to pursue this economic development. Unfortunately, gaming is the most lucrative in economic development. I wish it wasn't. I wish there was something else. I feel like we are put in a box. The Chairman. I think that is their view in New Orleans. Ms. Norris. Yes; I feel we are put in a box by these gaming developers with the money. Unfortunately, as everyone has stated here before, landless tribes, we do not have any money to pursue economic development. We do have to depend on, but we still maintain our Indian sovereignty by making these decisions to accept or not to accept. So my next move will be to establish a facility in the Grant Parish area. The Chairman. Thank you. Again, since you mentioned Senator Vitter, I would repeat the committee has seen absolutely no evidence that Senator Vitter's opposition to your attempt to obtain a gaming facility has had to do with anything other than his longstanding principled opposition to the expansion of gaming. Mr. Gray, what is your next move? Mr. Gray. Hopefully with the assistance of the committee, we will continue to pursue the project that we have proposed under the existing rules. We hope that they are not changed. We have made extreme investments of money and time into the process and we feel we are halfway there. We do not feel that the rules are broken and we hopefully will be able to continue to pursue the project under those rules. The Chairman. Thank you. I thank the witnesses. It has been very helpful. This hearing is adjourned. [Whereupon, at 11:50 a.m., the committee was adjourned, to reconvene at the call of the Chair.] ======================================================================= A P P E N D I X ---------- Additional Material Submitted for the Record ======================================================================= Prepared Statement of Hon. Daniel K. Inouye, U.S. Senator from Hawaii Senator Inouye. Thank you Mr. Chairman. Today is the sixth hearing of the 109th Congress in which the committee will receive testimony about off-reservation gaming, with today's hearing focusing on the exceptions specified in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. As the original sponsor of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, I want to assure everyone that the exceptions for conducting off-reservation gaming were thoughtfully considered and deliberately included. At the time the act was drafted, the committee was well aware of the United States' responsibilities to, and past actions toward, the Indian tribes. I am sure that most of those present today know that history but it is important that it be restated. For the Federal Government's past treatment of Indian tribes was a shameful period in our history and is part of the reason that the exceptions were included in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. Indian tribes were forced to sell millions of acres of land to the U.S. Government through treaties that were never honored. Some treaties were not even signed without providing any notice to the signatory tribes, thus leading them to believe that they had a valid agreement with the United States. Lands reserved by the Indians were usually the lands that the United States felt were the least undesirable as were the lands upon which the United States forced other Indian tribes. Even then we did not stop our dishonorable treatment. Many of the lands reserved by Indian tribes were divided up and provided to the individual Indians in an attempt to break tribal ties. So-called excess lands were sold to non-Indians. But we did not stop there. We went through an era of terminating our government-to-government relationship with some tribes and continued to ignore our obligations to others. Although we restored our relationship with some tribes, others were and are still forced to go through an administrative process at the Department of the Interior in order to gain Federal recognition. But gaining Federal recognition does not ensure that the United States will honor its responsibilities and obligations to tribes. It does not guarantee that a tribe has the land or the tools necessary to fully exercise its sovereignty or to provide for its members. And that is why we purposefully included a mechanism for off- reservation gaming. The exceptions were intended to acknowledge the Federal Government's dishonorable treatment of Indian tribes. They were intended to be a mechanism for Indian tribes to gain a measure of economic self-sufficiency and to further tribal self-governance and self-determination. I am confident that the exceptions have not been abused. It is estimated that since 1988, approximately 27 applications have been approved pursuant to the exceptions. A few months ago, the Department of the Interior testified that only eight land into trust applications under the section 20 exceptions have been approved since 2000, and three of those applications were on-reservation. Under the two-part determination exception, State Governors have only concurred in three of the decisions by the Secretary of the Interior. While the Department testified that there are 11 pending applications, the Department also testified that it is a lengthy, time-consuming process. Some tribes have been criticized for attempting to conduct gaming off-reservation while others have been accused of abusing the exceptions. I am confident that the exacting processes established by the Department of the Interior will prevent any such abuse. It saddens me that there are those who ignore the purpose of the exceptions included in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. For doing so seems to also ignore Congress' continuing responsibilities, the Federal Government's past actions, the sovereign status of Indian tribes, and the benefits that gaining provides to Indian tribes. I have repeatedly made it clear--I do not support gaining. But Indian gaming is about tribal sovereignty and the Federal Government needs to start living up to its responsibilities. While it must be well-regulated, I am confident that the regulatory mechanism included in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act does that. Indian gaming has provided the resources necessary for Indian tribes to strengthen their governments. It provides jobs in Indian country. It has helped to alleviate the deplorable conditions that exist in Indian country. Most of all, it has helped tribes meet the needs of its members for which the Federal Government is responsible but has failed to do. Yet there is still so much more that needs to be done. Thank you. ______ Prepared Statement of Penny J. Coleman, General Counsel [Acting], National Indian Gaming Commission Chairman McCain, Vice Chairman Dorgan and members of the committee: My name is Penny Coleman. I serve as the acting general counsel for the National Indian Gaming Commission. Thank you for allowing us to speak with you today. We appreciate the opportunity to testify today about the Commission's involvement in Indian lands questions. Indian land is the foundation upon which Indian gaining is built. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act [IGRA] defines Indian lands; it requires that gaming take place on Indian lands; it limits the National Indian Gaming Commission's regulatory authority to gaming that takes place on Indian Lands; it establishes a prohibition against gaming on trust lands acquired after October 1988; and it exempts many lands from that general prohibition. Thus, Indian lands are central to many of the Commission's functions. The Commission must determine whether gaming facilities are located on Indian lands in order to determine whether the IGRA permits gaming on those lands and permits the Commission to regulate it. If a facility is not located on Indian lands, the NIGC has no authority whatsoever over any gaming occurring there or any jurisdiction to stop the activity. The Commission is also required to decide whether a specific parcel is Indian lands when a management contract or a site- specific tribal ordinance has been submitted to the Commission for approval; such determinations are part of our final agency actions on management contracts and tribal ordinances. The Office of General Counsel also issues advisory opinions on Indian lands. These opinions are often intended to advise tribes whether they should attempt to proceed with gaming on a given site. Sometimes our opinions confirm that a specific parcel is Indian lands. Sometimes they warn a tribe that we do not consider the gaming to be legal. We share the responsibility for deciding Indian lands questions with the Department of the Interior. The Department makes decisions on lands when a tribe seeks to acquire land I into trust, seeks a trust-to-trust transfer for gaining, or seeks approval of a land lease or a tribal-State compact. For many years, the Department of the Interior assumed the primary responsibility for making Indian lands determinations. However, as gaming expanded in recent years, the Commission's need to make such decisions became more and more pressing. The Commission thus began making these decisions on its own. Because of the shared responsibility with the Department, we entered in a Memorandum of Understanding that requires each agency to notify the other when Indian lands questions are pending and to provide advice and assistance on the Indian lands determinations. This is not a small undertaking. Altogether, the Department's Office of the Solicitor and the Office of General Counsel have issued over 50 written opinions and the Commission has made decisions on over 40 management contracts. Right now, the Commission has approximately 50 Indian lands determinations pending. Some of these will be simple decisions. The land will be held in trust and within the tribe's reservations boundaries, and no lengthy analysis will be required. Many Indian lands determinations, however, are complex and difficult. For example, IGRA exempts from the general prohibition of gaming on lands acquired after the date of its enactment when ``lands are taken into trust as part of...the restoration of lands for an Indian tribe that is restored to Federal recognition.'' To establish that a tribe's lands fall within the restored land exception, a tribe must establish that it is a tribe restored to Federal recognition and that the parcel on which the gaming is being conducted is restored land. For a tribe to be restored to Federal recognition under the IGRA, it must have been previously recognized; it must have lost its recognized status; and it must be returned to a recognized status. This last can be straightforward, for, in most instances, it will or will not have been included by the Secretary of the Interior on her list of federally recognized tribes. The first two elements, however, require much delving into our history. Beyond looking to 18th and 19th Century Treaties and laws, the specific political and ethnographic history of the tribe must be reviewed. Just gathering the relevant information requires a large, cooperative effort among the tribe, various divisions within the Department of the Interior, and perhaps historians and research archives. Beyond all of that, determining that lands are restored lands requires the casting of an even broader research net, for not all lands re-acquired by a tribe are ``restored'' lands within the meaning of IGRA. Whether lands are restored lands requires a case-by-case determination. We must look to the factual circumstances of the land acquisition. We must look at the location of the acquisition and consider such questions as whether it is close to the tribe's population base and important to the tribe throughout its history. We must look at the two temporal relationship of the acquisition to the tribal restoration (in other words, was this land acquired 1 year after the tribe was restored to recognition or 30 years later and after the tribe acquired 20 other parcels). All of this requires the tribe to hire historians and ethnographers and also to produce voluminous historical documents and archaeological evidence, which, of course, can take time to assemble and submit, not to mention time for the NIGC to digest. A number of our determinations have also resulted in litigation, which slows down our ability to make decisions even further, and to add to the complexity, Congress has the ability to, and occasionally does, legislate the status of lands belonging to individual tribes, and that can change the Indian lands analysis completely. The Commission and the Department have been criticized by the Department's Office of Inspector General for failing to decide the Indian lands questions before a facility opens and for failing to have a systematic approach to making such decisions. We share the Inspector General's concern on this. Good government requires that regulators know the extent of their jurisdiction. Furthermore, if we decide that a tribe should not have opened a facility because the lands did not qualify for gaming under the act, extensive litigation is guaranteed and, if the Commission is correct, the tribe will have incurred millions of dollars in debt with few options for repaying the debt. We are, therefore, developing a system which is designed to track Indian lands determinations and to identify new problems quickly. Recently, we sent a team to the State of Oklahoma to obtain copies of deeds, maps and other documentation on some of the gaming sites. In California, we also hired a title company to conduct title searches on some sites. This information as well as other information we obtain will be used in establishing the central file system for the Indian lands documentation. We hope to convert this file system into an electronic system in the near future. We are also considering regulations that would require a tribe to establish that a gaming operation is on Indian lands before it licenses the facility. We thank the committee members and staff and stand ready to assist you as you continue to review these Indian lands questions. If you have any questions, I would be happy to answer them. 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