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Category: 21. Business,
economics, and employment
DANI002. Daniels, Stephen, and John Rustin.
Lumbee casino gambling: Would another casino be good for North Carolina?
North Carolina Family Policy Council, February 2004. 4 p. 54 notes.
Publication type: Report
Electronic access: http://www.ncfamily.org/ppgambling.html
This report briefly reviews the Indian
Gaming Regulatory Act and the three categories of gaming it
defines. It then explains the nature of the tribal-state compact
between the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and the State of North
Carolina, signed in 1994 and renewed (for thirty years) and expanded in
November 2000.
Following brief discussions of the Harrahs Cherokee
Casino and the current bills for full federal recognition of the Lumbee,
the report provides more extensive analysis of the impacts of casino
gambling. If a casino were built on I-95 in Robeson County, it
would be accessible to about 39,000 automobiles per day and would be
the only casino on I-95 between New Jersey and Florida. The report
then discusses gambling addiction; the increase in crime that follows
introduction of a casino (citing evidence from law enforcement officials
in the area of Harrahs Cherokee Casino); effects of gambling on
the family; the drain of income from consumer goods and services to
gambling and from business and tourism in other areas of the state to
the local area of the casino; the increased taxpayer costs for public
services; and the costs of broken families of gambling addicts
to local governments, to employers, and to insurance companies.
Note: The President of the North Carolina Family Policy
Council, William Brooks Jr., testified about his concerns over the possibility
of a casino in Robeson County during the April 1, 2004 hearing on H.R.
898 (see JENK029).
Additional Subjects: Casinos |
Gambling addiction | Harrah's Cherokee Casino | Federal recognition |
Families | Crime
This annotation was written on April 29, 2004
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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