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 | Native American rights and environmental responsibilities In  Key to all of this is that land owned by federally  recognized Native American tribes is subject to federal control and is  exempt 
                from city and county land use regulations. In California, this  is significant, for much of our environmental protection occurs at city  and county levels. 
                 Developers are seizing this opportunity to bypass  environmental protection. For  The casino: location, location, location  An analogy could be made to big-box retail development  in Gilroy, which is destroying the last agricultural stronghold in Santa  
                Clara County and increasing pressure to widen highways. Even worse, rural  casinos tend to attract resort development, with golf courses and expensive  second homes that do nothing to reduce 
                housing shortages and housing prices.   The tribe under discussion, the California Valley  Miwoks, formerly known as the Sheep Ranch Rancheria of Mi-Wuk, has 
                only  five members, one of whom opposes the casino and claims to be the authentic  chairman. Their historic connection to the local area is tenuous at best;  they last owned land in the Sierras. And 
                their plan is opposed by the  local Native American people who actually live in the area, the Amah-Mutsun.  There are clearly many reasons to oppose this particular casino in 
                this particular place. The possibility that the California Valley Miwoks are not actually controlling the whole process is particularly jarring. A recent press conference to announce the 
                casino location was attended by local developers and a Maryland-based lawyer, but no Miwoks. It is not even clear whether any of the tribal members have even so much as visited the area.  
                Nevertheless, the California Valley Miwoks derive  certain rights from their federal recognition. The local community also  has rights, as well as a responsibility to protect the environment.  
                Although this is a local issue, resolving it has  statewide implications, and while CGF recognizes the severity of the problem,  finding a workable solution will be difficult. 
                The new "friend" of the Amah-Mutsun - a Sargent  Ranch developer Now a deal has come to light involving one of the  two factions of the Amah-Mutsun. The Amah-Mutsun tribe is not currently federally  recognized; 
                going through the recognition process can be long and expensive.  Wayne Pierce is apparently paying for that process (in addition to looking  for ways to use Congress to circumvent that process).  
                In return for his help, one faction of the tribe  has a land deal with Pierce. The agreement apparently involves his selling  3,500 acres to the tribe, which would keep 500 acres and lease back the  
                remaining 3,000 acres to Pierce. If the tribe reaches federal recognition,  both the tribe and Pierce could develop the property without being subject  to County land use regulations. 
                 To complicate matters, the other tribal faction  does not support this deal. At this point, a Congressional end-run recognizing  the Amah-Mutsun tribe is unlikely, and the administrative process for  
                granting recognition (through the federal Bureau for Indian Affairs) takes  years.  Ironically, that process may have become slower  because in other contexts, recognition facilitates casino development.  The 
                schism in the tribe and questions about tribal governance may also  slow recognition.  While this issue may take time to develop, it will  not go away. What is new about the Sargent Ranch deal is that it does  not 
                involve a casino. The developer is using the deal to sell land to  the tribe and lease it back to skirt local land use protection.  This is a frightening precedent not just for southern  Santa Clara 
                County, but elsewhere in California. Environmentalists here  and elsewhere will have to determine how to respect Native American rights  while protecting the environment for everyone. | 
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