TRIBAL GAMBLING LEADER WORRIED ABOUT ONLINE GAMBLING
15 January 2010
Barney Frank has the attention of land tribal
casinos in California
Congressman Barney Frank will perhaps be heartened by
the news that his latest carefully planned and timed
attempt to legalise online gambling in the United States
has the opposition worried.
One of those who
feels threatened by Frank's HR 2267 is the chairman of a
major tribal gaming organisation in California, who
recently characterised Frank’s legislative proposals to
legalise and regulate online gambling in the USA as
“...the greatest threat to Indian gaming in 20 years.”
Daniel Tucker of the California Nations Indian
Gaming Association (a non-profit association comprised
of federally recognised tribal governments) seems intent
on gathering support for attempts to halt the Frank
legislative juggernaut.
Last week Tucker invited
tribal leaders to the 15th California Nations Indian
Gaming Association (CNIGA) Western Indian Gaming
Conference at Palm Springs, California, writing:
“The recent drive by members of Congress to legalise
internet casino gambling nationwide represents the
greatest threat to Indian gaming in the last 20 years.
"I sought the chairmanship of CNIGA because it
is my intention to lead the fight against this
outrageous and unjust proposal by Congressman Barney
Frank.”
Tucker, who is also chairman of the
Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation, wrote that
attendance at he conference was important in order that
tribal gambling leaders be informed of what he termed
"..the threat of Congressional legislation that will
transfer billions of dollars from Indian Reservations to
foreign offshore internet casinos.”
Tribal
leaders clearly feel threatened by the possibility of
more competition - InfoPowa readers will recall the
statement to a Frank Congressional hearing recently in
which Robert Martin, chairman of the Morongo gaming
tribe of California spoke against HR2267, only to be
reminded by the House Financial Services Committee
chairman that not long before he had been trying to
negotiate an exclusive online poker legalisation deal in
concert with certain Californian poker operators.
UPDATE:
The Desert Sun newspaper out of Palm
Springs reports that of all the CNIGA sessions, the
panel that is expected to be most heavily attended is on
Internet poker, and how the initiative launched in 2009
by the Morongo Band of Mission Indians and California
card rooms would affect tribal governments.
Susan
Jensen, director of CNIGA communications, said the
Internet gaming panel is one reason conference
preregistration has been so strong.
The newspaper
reports that there has been speculation that the
California state Assembly Committee on Governmental
Organization could set an informational hearing on the
topic as early as this (January 2010) month.
"Assemblyman Joe Coto, a San Jose Democrat who chairs
the organization committee, is expected to be among
lawmakers attending the conference," she said.
Moderated by Michael Lombardi, executive director of the
Augustine Gaming Commission, the Internet poker panel is
expected to include Eric Ramos, CNIGA legislative
committee chair; Robert Martin, chairman of the Morongo
Band of Mission Indians; lawyer George Forman; and Matt
Franklin, chair of the Ione Band of Miwok Indians.
Primary sponsors include the Sycuan Band of the
Kumeyaay Nation, the Morongo Band of Mission Indians,
The PENTA Building Group and Aristocrat Technologies.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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