San Francisco Uprising: Native American Tribe Attempting to Obtain Land for Gaming

While cruising the net, I came across news of some interesting happenings in the San Francisco area.
With some editing, what follows is a release authored by Nelson Pinola, chairman of the Manchester-Point Arena Band of Pomo Indians. His release was first published in the San Francisco newspapers.
I find it very interesting. I hope you do too.
The Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians, a Mendocino County Pomo tribe, is attempting to obtain land in trust for gaming at Point Molate, Contra Costa County, in the heart of the urban San Francisco Bay Area.
While the tribe’s non-Indian developers clearly see dollar signs at Point Molate, that site is 120 miles away from the tribe’s ancestral homelands, their former rancheria, and their existing tribal trust lands in Mendocino County.
The Native American Pomo people know very well that Contra Costa County is not within our aboriginal territory. It has always been the home of Miwok, Ohlone and other native peoples, while the lands of our Pomo people have always been in the areas now called Sonoma, Mendocino, and Lake County.
The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act prohibits gaming on land taken into trust by the United States for a tribe after 1988 unless the tribe meets one of the exceptions to that rule, which has so far been rare.
In this case, the Tribe is trying to use the “restored-lands exception.”
Federal regulations say that in order for a tribe to qualify for that exception, it must have a “significant historical connection” to the land it wants as a casino site. Guidiville has no historical or cultural connection whatsoever to Point Molate, and it must not be allowed to proceed with its casino plans there.
Here’s what could happen if the proposed casino site is permitted.
If one tribe with no historical connection to its proposed casino site is permitted to use the restored-lands exception, others are sure to follow – to Sacramento, San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, San Diego and any other location that looks profitable.
That would be contrary to the law, the best interests of the great majority of gaming tribes whose casinos are on their rural reservations, and the essential basis of tribal sovereignty: connection to our ancestral homelands.
It would also violate the trust the voters of California when they amended the California Constitution to permit tribal casinos.
The Manchester-Point Arena Band of Pomo Indians opposes the Guidiville Point Molate project because granting this restored-lands exception would seriously undermine the sovereignty that all tribes have struggled to keep and to enhance.
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Posted on January 25, 2010 by doclotto | Filed Under Culture, Games, Legal, News
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I pray in the Roundhouse for my people to better our selves. If only we would work together rather than against one another. My heart was broken when I read this…. what kind of Pomo Leader is going to bad mouth other Pomo groups…. We are the same… I would give you the shirt off my back and my last can of commodity’s. If we work together in the long run our people we survive. No disrespect to Point Arena…… I love it there I have blood there even. If we got along maybe people would take us seriously. I will keep praying for all of us.
*”our people will survive”*