FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE
PROPOSED DONA ANA COUNTY CASINO
1. WHY IS A BIG CASINO BEING PROPOSED
FOR ANTHONY, NM?
It is being proposed by Santa Fe developers
who have explored gambling opportunities in their own area but
could find none. They seek profits from southern NM residents.
To get the casino approved the developers are partnering with
the Jemez Pueblo of northern NM who are 300 hundred miles away
from the proposed casino site. Under federal law, Indian pueblos
are permitted to have gambling casinos on their land.
2. BUT JEMEZ PUEBLO HAS NO LAND OR TIES
TO DONA ANA COUNTY WHERE THE CASINO WOULD BE BUILT. HOW CAN
THEY BUILD ONE HERE?
Because the developers are proposing that they
buy land near Anthony, NM for the Pueblo, deed it to the Jemez
Pueblo and then operate the casino for the Pueblo.
3. THAT SOUNDS AWFULLY COMPLICATED AND
TRICKY. HOW CAN IT HAPPEN?
According to federal law, the only way Jemez
Pueblo can build a casino not on their land is to have the land
the casino developer buys for them placed in “federal
trust” by the U.S. Secretary of Interior. This is hardly
ever done because it it violates the spirit and intent of the
Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) that permits Indian casinos.
4. YOU MEAN THE JEMEZ PUEBLO DOES NOT
HAVE ANY LAND WHERE THE CASINO IS PLANNED?
That’s right. Their land is in northern
NM but they do not want to build a casino on it because the
casino market is saturated and their land is not in a highly
populated area.
5. BUT IF THE DEVELOPERS BUY THE LAND
FOR THE PUEBLO AND THE INTERIOR SECRETARY ALLOWS IT TO BE USED
FOR A CASINO, COULDN’T OTHERS DO THAT TOO?
Yes, they could. If this scheme is approved
it will open the floodgates to casinos across the state and
multiple casinos in Dona Ana County even though the IGRA was
passed to help Indians on their native lands. It’s one
of the reasons so many New Mexicans are opposing the Anthony
casino scheme.
6. WOULDN’T GAMBLING PROVIDE JOBS
FOR JEMEZ PUEBLO?
No. How could it? Jemez is located over 300
miles from the proposed casino. No one is going to travel that
far for a low wage job.
7. IF NATIVE AMERICANS ARE NOT GOING
TO GET ANY JOBS AND THE DEVELOPERS ARE GOING TO GET SUCH A BIG
SHARE OF THE PROFITS, WHY SHOULD THE ANTHONY CASINO BE APPROVED?
It shouldn't. Only a very few will benefit from
the casino scheme. The developer will get at least 30 percent
of the profits, possibly 40 percent. But the casino will damage
the economy and expose Dona Ana County to the development of
multiple 24 hour casinos.
8. I HAVE HEARD NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY
WILL LOSE FUNDS IF THE OFF-RESERVATION CASINO IS BUILT. IS THAT
CORRECT?
Yes. The owner of Sunland Park Racetrack &
Casino has pledged half the ownership in Sunland, valued at
up to $100 million, to the university upon his death. However,
if the new casino is built Sunland estimates its business will
decline by half. That means there will be much less money to
leave to NMSU. The university says a conservative estimate is
that the planned gift would generate at last $10 million each
year for educating New Mexico State students. If the casino
is built Sunland’s owner will be forced to withdraw his
gift.
9. HOW WOULD THE CASINO HARM ANTHONY
AND DONA ANA COUNTY?
Small businesses, such as restaurants, gas stations
and convenience stores will see a dramatic decline in business
when the casino opens. Jobs will be lost and businesses could
fail. The casino developers say they will provide hundreds of
jobs but most of them will be offset by job losses as the casino
takes millions of dollars out of the local community. Also,
Anthony and Dona Ana County will see a significant decline in
tax
revenue since an Indian casino pays no gross receipts or property
taxes. In addition, if the developer opens other businesses
on the Indian land, they also would pay no taxes and further
threaten existing businesses that do pay taxes.
10. WHAT OTHER PROBLEMS COULD ANTHONY
AND THE SURROUNDING AREA EXPERIENCE?
The Anthony fire chief points out that emergency
service calls would skyrocket in the small town which means
taxpayers would have to increase funding for the department.
More calls for the Sheriff’s department will also mean
the need for more taxes to pay the additional personnel needed
to handle the extra calls for speeding, DWI and other traffic
violations that would result.
11. WHEN WILL THE DECISION BE MADE ON
BUILDING THE CASINO?
The developers say they will submit their proposal
to the Secretary of Interior in December. The Secretrary will
then study the proposal. If it is found that the casino would
harm Dona Ana County, it will be rejected. The timetable for
a decision ranges from months to several years.
12. WHAT CAN I DO TO STOP THE CASINO?
Sign and pass around to your friends and neighbors
the petition opposing the developers’ casino plan. Join
the Committee to Protect Dona Ana County so your name or business
can be listed in opposition. That will encourage others. Visit
Our web site--www.protectdonaanacounty.com-- and email or mail the
Secretary of Interior in Washington who will make the decision
on whether this unusual scheme is approved. Also, email and
write the Dona Ana County Commissioners who will also have a
say. You should also contact your local legislator and let them
know of your opposition and write letters to the editor of local
newspapers. There are links on the web site to do all of these.