(This article is from year 2000)
Outcasts of the Reservations / Tribal councils hold power to decide who shares in casino wealth - SFGate
Outcasts of the Reservations / Tribal councils hold power to decide who shares in casino wealth
Kevin Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer
Published 4:00 am, Monday, April 10, 2000
Larry Lewis would love to move out of his trailer, a metal hovel with no electricity and plastic scraps warding rain off the roof holes, and go home to the mountain where his father was once chief of his tribe.
His cousin, Joe Casillas, would like to leave his cramped apartment -- and better medical care for his cancer-riddled wife would not hurt, either.
About 200 of their financially floundering relatives want the same sorts of things, things that money could buy.
And they actually have an entire tribe full of family members who could provide them: the people of the Table Mountain Rancheria, all millionaires many times over, thanks to the opulent casino that sits just a few miles down the road from Larry Lewis' ramshackle trailer.
But there won't be any checks coming any day soon from Table Mountain. Or ever, if the current tribal leadership has anything to do with it.
That is because the Table Mountain Tribe's 110 members, as the sole citizens of their sovereign Indian nation, have a written constitution that says only they are the rightful heirs to their tribal legacy. And those 200 outcast cousins, uncles and aunts and so forth, like Larry Lewis and Joe Casillas, are not.
So the lucky few live high off casino cash while their Mono-Chuckchansi bloodline relatives, many of whom grew up with their now-rich cousins, struggle either on the edge of poverty or sunk deep into its seamy belly. And the outcasts have almost no legal recourse.
The wealthy Table Mountain members see no irony or injustice in this. It's simple, said tribal attorney Majel Russell.
"Tribes as sovereign governments have the right to decide who is enrolled or not," she said, and the 200 disenfranchised Indians just don't meet the criteria.
The same reasoning applies in leadership council rooms of California's other 41 casino-operating tribes, many of which face similar have- and have-not blood-relative situations.
Only about 40,000 of the state's 300,000 American Indians -- 13 percent -- are guaranteed to see even a dime of the billions set to flood in under the gambling explosion promised by last month's Proposition 1A, because that is the total number of Indians enrolled in federally recognized tribes. Only those who were part of the tribes when they were granted federal status -- regardless of whether they currently live on a reservation -- are in on the gambling money.
The other 260,000 Indians, who either moved off universally impoverished reservations decades ago or whose forebears did, are out of luck.
"My grandfather's house sat on that same spot the casino is right now," said Casillas, 39, who earns so little at his job at a mobile home supply store that he still needs welfare to pay rent. "Now, they won't even let me onto the reservation for a visit, let alone move back."
Casillas and his six brothers and sisters were carted off the reservation as children in 1968 and put into foster homes when Fresno County authorities determined their 93-year-old grandfather was too old to care for them. His parents were in jail at the time. Casillas subsequently bounced in and out of trouble for many years before he cleaned himself up, got a job and settled down.
Today, Casillas jams into a tiny Fresno apartment with his wife, Pauline, and their three young daughters. Pauline Casillas' basics-only chemotherapy for colon cancer is paid by Medi-Cal, which also picks up the cost of her 12-mile bus rides to the clinic. But the money for the rides will end soon, and Casillas said she cannot pay the fare without it.
"We need help," Joe Casillas said, voice squelched to a whisper by frustration. "If not for us, then at least for the heritage of our children."
Odds are he will hit a jackpot at the Table Mountain Casino first.
Outcasts of the Reservations / Tribal councils hold power to decide who shares in casino wealth - SFGate
Outcasts of the Reservations / Tribal councils hold power to decide who shares in casino wealth
Kevin Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer
Published 4:00 am, Monday, April 10, 2000
Larry Lewis would love to move out of his trailer, a metal hovel with no electricity and plastic scraps warding rain off the roof holes, and go home to the mountain where his father was once chief of his tribe.
His cousin, Joe Casillas, would like to leave his cramped apartment -- and better medical care for his cancer-riddled wife would not hurt, either.
About 200 of their financially floundering relatives want the same sorts of things, things that money could buy.
And they actually have an entire tribe full of family members who could provide them: the people of the Table Mountain Rancheria, all millionaires many times over, thanks to the opulent casino that sits just a few miles down the road from Larry Lewis' ramshackle trailer.
But there won't be any checks coming any day soon from Table Mountain. Or ever, if the current tribal leadership has anything to do with it.
That is because the Table Mountain Tribe's 110 members, as the sole citizens of their sovereign Indian nation, have a written constitution that says only they are the rightful heirs to their tribal legacy. And those 200 outcast cousins, uncles and aunts and so forth, like Larry Lewis and Joe Casillas, are not.
So the lucky few live high off casino cash while their Mono-Chuckchansi bloodline relatives, many of whom grew up with their now-rich cousins, struggle either on the edge of poverty or sunk deep into its seamy belly. And the outcasts have almost no legal recourse.
The wealthy Table Mountain members see no irony or injustice in this. It's simple, said tribal attorney Majel Russell.
"Tribes as sovereign governments have the right to decide who is enrolled or not," she said, and the 200 disenfranchised Indians just don't meet the criteria.
The same reasoning applies in leadership council rooms of California's other 41 casino-operating tribes, many of which face similar have- and have-not blood-relative situations.
Only about 40,000 of the state's 300,000 American Indians -- 13 percent -- are guaranteed to see even a dime of the billions set to flood in under the gambling explosion promised by last month's Proposition 1A, because that is the total number of Indians enrolled in federally recognized tribes. Only those who were part of the tribes when they were granted federal status -- regardless of whether they currently live on a reservation -- are in on the gambling money.
The other 260,000 Indians, who either moved off universally impoverished reservations decades ago or whose forebears did, are out of luck.
"My grandfather's house sat on that same spot the casino is right now," said Casillas, 39, who earns so little at his job at a mobile home supply store that he still needs welfare to pay rent. "Now, they won't even let me onto the reservation for a visit, let alone move back."
Casillas and his six brothers and sisters were carted off the reservation as children in 1968 and put into foster homes when Fresno County authorities determined their 93-year-old grandfather was too old to care for them. His parents were in jail at the time. Casillas subsequently bounced in and out of trouble for many years before he cleaned himself up, got a job and settled down.
Today, Casillas jams into a tiny Fresno apartment with his wife, Pauline, and their three young daughters. Pauline Casillas' basics-only chemotherapy for colon cancer is paid by Medi-Cal, which also picks up the cost of her 12-mile bus rides to the clinic. But the money for the rides will end soon, and Casillas said she cannot pay the fare without it.
"We need help," Joe Casillas said, voice squelched to a whisper by frustration. "If not for us, then at least for the heritage of our children."
Odds are he will hit a jackpot at the Table Mountain Casino first.
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