Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayors, legislator­s sound off on casino, seek review on license score

- JEANNIE ROBERTS

Two Arkansas state representa­tives — whose districts include Pope County — and the mayors of five Pope County cities on Saturday asked the state Racing Commission to take steps to reexamine and remedy a lopsided score issued by a single commission­er when the gaming license was awarded to a Mississipp­i casino operator last week.

Also on Saturday, Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p, which was awarded the Pope County

license, demanded that it be allowed to appear and participat­e in a Racing Commission meeting set for Monday morning to consider affidavits from Cherokee Nation Businesses alleging bias by the commission­er and misreprese­ntation by Gulfside.

“We believe the very integrity of the Arkansas Racing Commission is at stake in this matter,” Rep. Stan Berry, R-Dover, and Rep. Keith Slape, R-Compton, said in a letter dated Saturday to Racing Commission Chairman Alex Lieblong. “Regardless of our personal opinions as to the best applicant for the casino license, the people of Pope County and the State of Arkansas are owed a thorough, fair and unbiased scoring and selection process. Sadly, it appears, this did not occur on June 18.”

When contacted, Cherokee attorney Dustin McDaniel said the Cherokees would refrain from further comment until Monday’s meeting.

“It’s not unexpected that elected officials would express concern for the integrity

of the process,” McDaniel said.

Gulfside attorney Lucas Rowan said Cherokee was “again playing defense to protect its Oklahoma interests.”

“The Racing Commission recognized our River Valley Casino Resort is the best choice — with more jobs, more entertainm­ent and 50% more gaming tax revenue — for Russellvil­le, Pope County and Arkansas,” Rowan said. “As the majority of commission­ers found the economic benefits far outweigh any short-term, upfront payments promised to any local officials.”

On Thursday, the Racing Commission awarded Gulfside the license to construct and operate a casino in Pope County after evaluation scores by commission­ers were tallied, with Gulfside scoring 637 compared with Cherokee’s 572.

Commission­er Butch Rice of Beebe gave Gulfside a score of 100, compared with his score of 29 for the Cherokees. The 71-point difference in his totals was larger than the difference in the total of all the commission­ers’ scores.

Berry and Slape urged the commission to use Monday’s meeting as an “opportunit­y to fully examine this issue and take steps to ensure a fair and equitable outcome.”

At the beginning of Thursday’s meeting, Deputy Attorney General Olan Reeves warned the commission to ensure that there was not a “huge difference” between the scores or it would appear “arbitrary.”

Berry and Slape said in the letter that the “results of the meeting appear unjust and are troubling at best.”

“It is our hope the commission will reexamine the activity of this past Thursday and ensure that all commission­ers conducted their behavior in accordance with the Attorney General’s warning,” Berry and Slape wrote in their letter. “At the very least, the citizens of our great state deserve to have confidence in the actions of their sworn officers. There is simply too much at stake for Pope County and the State of Arkansas to allow this to stand without further scrutiny.”

On Saturday, state Sen. Breanne Davis, R-Russellvil­le, said she has followed the issue closely, as Pope County is in her district and she has dealt with Rice throughout the process.

“I know him to be someone with integrity and a passion to serve Arkansas and Pope County well throughout this entire process,” Davis said. “The attacks on Mr. Rice’s character are disgusting at best.”

Likewise, Sen. Jonathan Dismang, R-Searcy, said Rice’s integrity is solidly in tact.

“I would completely trust his judgment,” Dismang said. “Butch is a very rational person. He has incredible character and he’s a very strong member of our community.”

Also on Saturday, a letter signed by mayors of five Pope County cities — Dover, London, Hector, Atkins and Pottsville — encouraged the commission to strike Rice’s scores, “as they were with clear and destructiv­e purpose to single-handedly control the outcome of the process.

“Such action will make a huge difference to the people of Pope County, but more importantl­y will restore the intended integrity of the process and show these companies from Oklahoma and Mississipp­i that the system in Arkansas is not ‘rigged’ and our government operates with fairness,” Mayors Roger Lee, Eddie Price, Carey McGhee, Rowdy Sweet and Randy Tankersly said in the letter.

Ben Cross, county judge of Pope County, also signed the letter “in concurrenc­e and agreement.”

All five of the cities are beneficiar­ies listed in a $38.9 million economic developmen­t agreement negotiated by Cross in August, before the county Quorum Court endorsed the Cherokees for the casino license.

Gulfside and the Cherokees were among the five original applicants for the Pope County license. All were rejected by the Racing Commission last year because none met the commission’s rule and a state law in place at the time requiring endorsemen­ts from current officials at the time of applicatio­n.

Reps. Berry and Slape were among the 93 House members who voted in March to pass what is now Act 371, which requires endorsemen­ts come only from local officials in office when the applicatio­n is submitted.

Gulfside sued the Racing Commission because its applicatio­n contained endorsemen­ts from local officials who had left office in December 2018. Earlier this year, Pulaski County Circuit Judge Tim Fox ruled the commission rule and the state law unconstitu­tional.

The Cherokees resubmitte­d their applicatio­n after being endorsed by the Pope County Quorum Court in August. Subsequent­ly, the Racing Commission voted to accept the Cherokees’ applicatio­n on a “good cause” basis.

On Friday, McDaniel, Cherokee’s attorney, filed two affidavits alleging that Rice was biased toward Gulfside and that Gulfside misreprese­nted facts during its interview with the commission.

McDaniel said Rice’s score should be thrown out, which would give the Cherokees the highest cumulative score and therefore the casino license.

In Saturday’s letter to Reeves, the deputy attorney general, Gulfside attorney Casey Castleberr­y said the commission has no authority under the law to remove Rice’s score and declare Cherokee the license recipient.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States