People Against a Casino Town
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Casinos fall short of expectations to curb poverty

Fourteen years and hundreds of millions of dollars later, tribal
casinos in Tucson have not met federal and state requirements to lift American
Indians out of poverty and reduce their dependence on taxpayer money.





Tribal casinos fall short of expectations to curb poverty among  Indians
Associated Press
Oct. 15, 2007 12:00 AM

TUCSON -  Fourteen years and hundreds of millions of dollars later, tribal casinos in Tucson have not met federal and state requirements to lift American Indians out of poverty and reduce their dependence on taxpayer money.

This despite  the fact that this is what federal and state compacts that legalized Indian  casinos called for.

The Pascua Yaqui government since 1997 has more than  doubled its per-person spending of federal dollars, and aid to the Tohono  O'odham Nation has been up nearly 10 percent in that time.

Among Yaquis,  usage of food stamps hasn't changed at 18 percent. It has fallen among O'odhams  but is still at a 23 percent average.

Members using a health-care plan  for indigents are up 27 percent among Yaquis and 13 percent among O'odhams over  six years. Both tribes' unemployment rates are three to five times as high as Tucson's.

"When you look at the needs of the nation, 14 years later, have  we accomplished the things we wanted to accomplish?" O'odham Chairman Ned Norris Jr. said. "We've got a long way to go yet."

Tribes have not used casino  money to replace outside aid. Rather, they have combined profits with taxpayer  dollars to add services from youth centers to libraries they couldn't afford on  casino money alone.

Norris said the tribe won't ask for less federal  money because the federal government is obligated to care for Indians in payment  "for taking our land."

David Ramirez, a Pascua Yaqui councilman, said his  tribe seeks as much federal grant money as possible to finance programs in  combination with casino money. Tribal leaders say they are making progress but  add that they need more time to reverse decades of poverty and  neglect.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/1015casino1015.html


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