The Day

Tribes urge

- By BRIAN HALLENBECK Day Staff Writer b.hallenbeck@theday.com

federal response that would pave way for East Windsor casino.

Having met last week with U.S. Department of the Interior officials, lawyers for the Mashantuck­et Pequot and Mohegan tribes sent a letter Tuesday urging the department to publish notice that amendments to the tribes’ gaming compacts with the state have been “deemed approved,” action seen as requisite to the tribes’ developmen­t of an East Windsor casino.

“We urge the Secretary to perform his ministeria­l statutory and regulatory duty to publish notice of approval in the Federal Register,” the lawyers write in their letter to James Cason, the Interior Department’s associate deputy secretary.

In the letter, the lawyers thank Cason for meeting with them last Thursday “to discuss our request, in which the State of Connecticu­t joined.”

The meeting stemmed from controvers­y surroundin­g an Interior Department official’s Sept. 15 response to amended state-tribal gaming agreements the tribes submitted for approval in August. The official, Michael Black, acting assistant secretary for Indian affairs, wrote that department action “is premature and likely unnecessar­y.”

While the tribes regarded the response as tantamount to approval, or “deemed approved,” the leading opponent of the tribes’ East Windsor project, MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, has claimed otherwise. MGM Resorts is building a nearly $1 billion resort casino in Springfiel­d, Mass., 15 miles north of East Windsor.

The lawyers’ letter Tuesday says that under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, the Interior secretary “has only two options once a compact (or a compact amendment) has been submitted for review — he must either affirmativ­ely approve or affirmativ­ely disapprove within 45 days of receipt ... if the Secretary neither approves nor disapprove­s a compact, it is deemed approved ...”

“Returning the Amendments submitted for approval is not one of the options available to the Secretary under IGRA ...,” the letter says.

The lawyers who signed the letter are George Skibine and V. Heather Sibbison of Dentons, a Washington, D.C., firm representi­ng the Mohegans; and Rob Gips and Kaighn Smith Jr. of DrummondWo­odsum, a Portland, Maine, firm representi­ng the Mashantuck­ets. Earlier this year, Skibine, who spent decades working for the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, testified on behalf of the tribes at a legislativ­e hearing.

Regarding their meeting with Cason, the lawyers write that he suggested they “provide a legal analysis of why such a notice must be published and address a concern Secretary (Ryan) Zinke raised with you regarding whether he has the legal authority to approve the Amendments.”

IGRA requires that notice of approvals be published in the Federal Register, the daily journal of the U.S. government, within 90 days of receipt. That deadline was thought to be Tuesday — 90 days since Aug. 2, the date Interior received the tribes’ amendments.

The lawyers say the legislatio­n authorizin­g the tribes to operate a state-regulated casino on nonreserva­tion land does not interfere with existing agreements related to Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun, both of which turn over to the state 25 percent of their slot-machine revenue. In exchange, the tribes have the exclusive right to offer casino gaming in Connecticu­t.

The third-casino bill that Gov. Dannel P. Malloy signed into law in June specified that authorizat­ion for the East Windsor casino was contingent on the amended gaming agreements being approved or deemed approved by the Interior secretary. The tribes have said they were consistent­ly led to believe that approval would be forthcomin­g.

“It was only on September 14th that representa­tives of the tribes were informed the Department had inexplicab­ly changed course and no longer planned to issue an approval,” the lawyers say.

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