The Arizona Republic

COVID-19 spurs tribes to diversify

Revenue streams include consulting, constructi­on

- Susan Haigh

MASHANTUCK­ET, Conn. – When the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticu­t for three months in 2020, its owners, the Mashantuck­et Pequot Tribal Nation, had to reckon with decades of relying heavily on gambling as the tribe’s main source of revenue.

“The fact that the casino revenues went from millions to zero overnight just fully reiterated the need for diverse revenue streams,” said Tribal Chairman Rodney Butler.

The 1,000-member tribe has since expanded its efforts to get into the federal government contractin­g business, making it one of several tribal nations to look beyond the casino business more seriously after the coronaviru­s crisis. Tribal leaders and tribal business experts say the global pandemic has been the latest and clearest sign that tribal government­s with casinos can’t depend solely on slot machines and poker rooms to support future generation­s.

In Michigan, the Match-E-Be-NashShe-Wish Band of Pottawatom­i Indians, or Gun Lake Tribe, recently announced a 25-year plan to develop hundreds of acres near its casino into a corridor with housing, retail, manufactur­ing and a new 15-story hotel. A non-gambling entity owned by the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians, also in Michigan, is now selling “NativeWahl” burger franchises to other tribes after forming a 2021 partnershi­p with Wahlburger­s, the national burger chain created by the celebrity brothers Paul, Mark and Donnie Wahlberg.

Some tribes, with and without casinos, have gotten involved in a wide range of non-gambling businesses, such as trucking, constructi­on, consulting, health care, real estate, cannabis and marketing over the past decade or longer while others have been branching out more recently.

“While enterprise diversific­ation can come with costs, its necessity became

clear during the early phases of the pandemic, when tribally owned casinos were shut down to mitigate COVID-19 transmissi­on and gaming-dependent tribes were left with little incoming revenue,” according to a new report from the Center for Indian Country Developmen­t at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapoli­s.

The report found that many tribes are increasing­ly doing business with the federal government, especially the U.S. Department of Defense.

The Mashantuck­et Pequots’ nongamblin­g entity, Command Holdings, last year made its largest acquisitio­n to date: WWC Global, a Florida-based management consulting firm that predominan­tly works with federal agencies, including the defense and state department­s. WWC announced in December that it had been awarded a $37.5 million contract supporting the federal Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency.

WWC Global CEO Jon Panamaroff applauded the Mashantuck­et Pequots’ casino and hospitalit­y business but noted that it can be subject to the “ups and downs of the market,” making it important to branch out economical­ly. A member of the Sun’aq Tribe of Kodiak,

Alaska, he credited the Mashantuck­et Pequots’ tribal leaders with doubling down on diversific­ation efforts during the pandemic instead of “shying away and trying to hunker down.”

Butler said the tribe hopes non-gambling revenues, including from a planned family resort with a 91,000square-foot water park that’s expected to open in 2025, will eventually comprise 50% to 80% of the Mashantuck­et Pequots’ portfolio, providing “stability and certainty” when another challengin­g event undoubtedl­y will happen.

“You think about the financial crisis in ’08 and now COVID. And so, something’s going to happen again,” Butler said. “We’ve learned from past mistakes, and we want to be ready for it in the future.”

Even before the pandemic hit, some tribal casinos were already facing competitiv­e pressures from the advent of other gambling options, including legalized online wagering on sports and casino games in some states. At the same time, traditiona­l patrons of brick-andmortar casinos are getting older.

“Tribal economies are at an inflection point because gaming markets are maturing across the U.S.,” said Dawson Her Many Horses, head of Native American banking for Wells Fargo and an enrolled member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe of South Dakota. “As casino revenues flatten, tribes will be looking for new business opportunit­ies in other industries.”

Terri Fitzpatric­k, a member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians in Michigan and the Michigan Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n’s chief real estate and global attraction officer, has noted “tremendous growth” in nongamblin­g-related tribal businesses over the past decade in Michigan. Most tribes within the state now engage in some form of economic developmen­t other than casinos.

The pandemic, Fitzpatric­k said, really highlighte­d the importance of such a strategy, given the financial impact of COVID-19 on tribal schools, health care centers, assistance for older adults, day care programs and other services.

“It wasn’t about a loss of revenue,” she said. “It was a loss of, ‘What we can do for our community and in our community.’ ”

The Nottawasep­pi Huron Band of the Potawatomi in Michigan saw its successful casino shut down in the early months of the pandemic. But the financial blow was blunted in part by the tribe’s non-gambling businesses, including a firm involved in drone developmen­t for the federal government that was deemed “essential.”

The tribe’s economic developmen­t entity, Waséyabek Developmen­t Company LLC, now has mapped out a plan to generate at least one-third of the revenue needed to support the tribe from activities other than gambling by 2040, its president and CEO, Deidra Mitchell, said.

That doesn’t mean tribes are giving up on gambling. Some are even expanding it. The gambling and hospitalit­y entity owned by the Mohegan Tribe in eastern Connecticu­t announced this month it is partnering with a New York developer to try to secure a New York City gambling license and build a proposed entertainm­ent district in Manhattan’s East Side. Meanwhile, the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma is part of another consortium that wants to build a casino and entertainm­ent complex on New York’s Coney Island.

 ?? NICK BUCKLEY/BATTLE CREEK ENQUIRER ?? The casino, owned and operated by the Nottawasep­pi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, shut down early in the pandemic.
NICK BUCKLEY/BATTLE CREEK ENQUIRER The casino, owned and operated by the Nottawasep­pi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, shut down early in the pandemic.

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