NY localities hurt as Indian casino cash dries up
,MICHAEL HILL, Associated Press
Sunday, July 29, 2012
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Since the casino cash stopped flowing, Salamanca has laid off workers, Niagara Falls has cut back on cleanups and county reserve funds have dried up in the North Country.
The struggling municipalities in western and northern New York are collateral damage in a high-stakes confrontation between the state and Indian tribes involving gambling dollars.
The Seneca and Mohawk tribes have for years withheld casino payments to the state, claiming that New York violated contracts with the tribes by allowing gambling in their exclusive territories.
Consequently, the state stopped sending money — more than $100 million so far — to municipalities where Indian casinos operate.
Without their share of casino money, the local governments are straining to provide basic services.
And with no compromise in sight, arbitrators may have to resolve the long-running dispute.
"Our piggy bank is empty now," said Niagara Falls Mayor Paul Dyster, whose city is out almost $60 million in casino payments.
The Seneca Nation of Indians, which operates casinos in Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Salamanca, stopped sending payments starting in 2009. They say the state violated the compact that gives the Seneca exclusive gambling rights west of the Finger Lakes when it allowed three western New York harness tracks to operate video lottery terminals.
Seneca President Robert Odawi Porter said about $400 million worth of withheld payments to the state have been placed in escrow. A quarter of the money would have gone to host cities like Buffalo and Niagara Falls.
"We're not going to sit by idly while we're being cheated," Porter said.
The St. Regis Mohawks, who operate a casino on their land straddling the Canadian border, separately decided in October 2010 to stop making payments, citing slot machines operating on Indian territory elsewhere in northern New York. After two years, Franklin and St. Lawrence counties and four local towns are out $12 million.
The losses in casino revenue are a small part of New York state's $132 billion budget, but is felt keenly in the smaller municipalities struggling to balance their books.
St. Lawrence County Administrator Karen St. Hilaire said the county has eliminated positions, cut back programs and hasn't replaced equipment. Next door in Franklin County, the lack of casino cash is complicating plans to help pay for a natural gas pipeline. If the money doesn't flow, the cost will have to be shouldered by local taxpayers, said County Manager Thomas Leitz.
"We have made a commitment so we'll have to find a way to finance it," he said.
In western New York, Salamanca Mayor Jeffrey Pond said the roughly $5 million a year from the Senecas was about half the city budget. Salamanca laid off 49 people and has gotten by with a no-interest loan from the state.
In Niagara Falls, Dyster said the city had to cut back on cleanup crews that fixed up vacant lots, and was not able to invest extra money to promote itself as a destination for weddings for same-sex couples after the state legalized gay marriage a year ago.
Leaders of both tribes cast the issue in terms of gambling and broken promises, though some observers believe the long-simmering resentment among Indians over the state's efforts to tax Indian cigarettes played a role as well. The dispute also intensified as the state considers a constitutional amendment to allow casinos on non-Indian land.
Discussing the payment dispute with reporters in June, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he wouldn't rule out approving non-Indian casinos in western New York.
"If there are no payments, then you would argue, there's no exclusivity," he said.
Senecas, Mohawks and state officials all express sympathy to the local communities for their lost payments — and they blame each other for it.
"It's unfortunate that the state has really put them in the middle of our dispute and left them high and dry," Porter said.
Cuomo spokesman Richard Azzopardi said that under state law, New York can only make a local-share payment out of revenue received from slot machines but there's no revenue to share.
"We have made it clear to the Senecas and the Mohawks that they can make payments to local communities directly and that these payments will be recognized and credited by the state," Azzopardi said. "They have apparently chosen not to do so."
The issue of payments — from the Indians to the state and from the state to local communities — could wind up before arbitrators.
"They have basically ignored our attempts to settle our issues," the Mohawk council said in a statement.
Where gambling operations get to locate could add to the pressure if New York legalizes casinos on non-Indian land. The state Legislature approved a measure to amend the state constitution, but needs to take another vote before voters can make the final decision in a referendum, possibly next year.
Proponents are focusing on the New York City area and the Catskills, far away from New York's Indian casinos. The Mohawks say they aren't worried.
"It will cost the state a tremendous amount of capital to get to where the Indian casinos are in the state," the Mohawks say.
Read more: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/business/article/NY-localities-hurt-as-Indian-casino-cash-dries-up-3744442.php#ixzz223b53tSo
NY localities hurt as Indian casino cash dries up
Wall Street Journal
Associated Press. ALBANY, N.Y. — Since the casino cash stopped flowing, Salamanca has laid off workers, Niagara Falls has cut back on cleanups and county reserve funds have dried up in the North Country. The struggling municipalities in western and ...
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