http://www.abqjournal.com/opinion/guest_columns/542761opinion03-02-07.htm
Friday, March 2, 2007
Tribal Fox Gets to Guard
Casino Hen House
by Guy C. Clark
Executive Director, N.M. Coalition Against
Gambling
Because of a federal court ruling
and inadequate proposed state regulation, New Mexico could get
locked into 38-year tribal casino compacts with virtually no
regulation.
In October of last year the U.S. District
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that the federal
government, through the National Indian Gaming Commission, has no
authority to regulate tribal casino gambling and that such
regulation was the responsibility of tribes and the states where
they exist.
Federal regulation was the third tier of
regulation of tribal casinos. The first tier is tribal regulation,
and the second tier is state regulation.
Tribal regulation is self-regulation, which
would be like Donald Trump regulating the Taj Mahal Casino in
Atlantic City. New Mexico state regulation of tribal casinos
occupies about four pages in the current compacts. The proposed new
38-year compacts would add about another five of actual state
regulation.
The NIGC's regulations took up about 84
pages of federal law. Those 84 pages of regulation are now
non-operational.
That means that if the proposed 38-year
compacts are approved, the combined state and federal regulation
drops from about 88 to nine pages— nearly 90 percent. That would
present an open invitation for money-laundering, embezzling and
slot-fixing.
The tribes and the governor's negotiators
knew about the ruling while they were negotiating the compacts. The
Legislative Committee on Compacts knows about it, because I
testified to that point Feb. 16. Attorney General Gary King knew
about it before he testified to the committee on Feb. 23 but
apparently didn't feel it was important enough to warn of the
consequences. None of these people did anything to prevent the
compacts from being sent on to the governor with totally inadequate
regulation. None of them seem to think poor regulation is a problem.
Regulators don't agree. NIGC Chairman Phil
Hogan was quoted after the ruling: "Without independent oversight
the growing gaming industry could become fraught with corruption."
I talked with the state gambling
representative (the one and only New Mexico regulator), and he
agreed that this situation would greatly diminish regulation of
tribal gambling in New Mexico.
Other states have far better regulation. We
now have about four pages of state regulation for tribal casinos.
Arizona has dozens of pages. We have one state gambling
representative who visits all 16 casinos. Arizona has dozens of
regulators who work side-by-side with tribal regulators all day,
every day that they are open. The Arizona Gaming Control Board has
authority to revoke casino licenses and issue penalties for
violations. New Mexico can only take violators to arbitration, where
the final outcome is very vague.
This is an enormous regulatory problem! If
the proposed compacts are approved by the Legislature, the state
will likely be stuck with totally inadequate casino regulation for
38 years. The Legislature needs to hear from its citizens that they
should reject the proposed compacts. In the future we can work on
vastly improved regulation in compacts that don't extend their life
for generations.
I hereby challenge the governor's
negotiators, Hilary Tompkins and Paul Bardacke, to a 90-minute
debate on the merits of the proposed tribal gambling compacts.
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