In light of the rampant explosion in indian gaming why do the tribes even bother fishing? I say it is just because they can. Poverty and alcoholism are still raging on the Rez but the money is pouring in..The following is a reprint of a recent report on tribal gaming :
Tribal casinos surpass all other gambling businesses in Washington
by The Associated Press
Reprinted with permission from the Associated Press.
SPOKANE – Tribal casinos in Washington now take in more money than the state lottery, pull-tabs, cardrooms, bingo and horse racing combined.
The tribes’ share of Washington’s gambling market rose from 40 percent to 53 percent in the past two years, state Gambling Commission Director Rick Day recently told a legislative committee.
The commission estimates that tribal net receipts – the amount wagered minus prizes paid out – rose from roughly $422 million in 2001 to $700 million this year.
During the same time, pull-tab sales and charity bingo games have lost millions of dollars in net receipts. The state lottery has seen sales drop $33 million since 2001.
It’s a worrisome trend for people like Don Kaufman, general managing director of Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Spokane, which operates a bingo hall to raise money.
“I think there’s a definite relationship there,” he said. “People who gamble only have so many dollars.”
In 1992, Kaufman said, his group earned $690,000 from its bingo hall. Today, that’s dwindled to $210,000, and more than half of that comes from renting out the property, particularly empty parking spaces.
State Rep. John McCoy, a Tulalip tribal leader, said tribal casinos can’t be blamed for all the reduction in lottery and bingo revenue. He thinks those games simply don’t appeal to younger people.
“Yes, we’ve had some impact on the lottery, but I’m not willing to say we’re the entire reason,” he said. “Before we brought in machines, it appeared that the lottery had plateaued.”
He also points to the direct benefits of tribal gambling: health centers, jobs, scholarships and economic development, much of it benefiting nontribal residents.
Statewide, the competition for gambling dollars will soon get fiercer. The Tulalip Tribes opened a $78 million casino complex north of Seattle this past summer. The Puyallups are working on a $200 million one to the south. And the Stillaguamish, Snoqualmie and Cowlitz tribes are also considering opening casinos near Arlington, Snoqualmie and La Center.
Over the past five years, according to the National Indian Gaming Commission, tribal gaming revenues nationwide rose from $8.5 billion to $14.5 billion and from a market share of 15 percent to 21 percent.
Critics contend the tribes’ success is the result of electronic gambling machines that other gambling facilities are not allowed to offer.
Washington’s 27 tribes that have reached compacts with the state have more than 13,000 such machines.
“They have a monopoly on the most popular gaming device on the planet,” said Linda Matson, executive director of Washington’s Entertainment Industry Coalition.
In a few weeks, her group, which includes nontribal cardrooms, bingo halls, bars, restaurants and bowling alleys, will again try to convince the state Legislature to allow them to have the machines.
Her group tried the same thing last session, only to be rebuffed by lawmakers who said they didn’t want to add thousands more slot machines across the state.
Ron Allen, former president of the National Congress of American Indians, said the tribes will fight any such proposal.
“I don’t give them good odds,” said Allen, chairman of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.
Tribes say it’s wrong for people like Matson to try to equate bowling alleys and other private businesses with tribal casinos.
Although untaxed by the state, McCoy said, tribes spend their casino profits locally, on jobs, education, construction and other things that benefit the surrounding economy.
NOTICE THE KEY SENTENCE: "Although untaxed by the state.........." Taxes that pay for services they use and roads they drive on...military that keeps them safe....Coast Guard....on and on and on. So with all their money why do they bother fishing?