Seneca Nation Casino Payments

By Nicholaus Garcia. Andrew Cuomo has emerged victorious in a battle over revenue-sharing payments between the state and Seneca Nation of Indians. In a ruling last week, an arbitration panel said the tribe must continue its payments to the state. The tribe stopped making payments in March 2017, claiming the compact agreement only lasted 14 years. ALBANY - The Seneca Nation that runs three casinos in western New York said Wednesday it will stop paying a portion of its revenue to state and local governments, saying the agreement has expired.

Seneca Nation Casinos

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Seneca Nation Casino Payments Phone Number

A tribal nation in upstate New York has been ordered by a federal judge to pay $255 million to the state, according to a report from the New York Post.

The Seneca Nation, the owner of three casinos in Western New York, had been withholding revenue sharing payments from the state government since 2017. The tribe agreed to a compact with the state in 2002 and that agreement laid out how revenue would be divided between itself and the state government.

That agreement expired at the end of 2016 and a new agreement was never negotiated, which led the tribe to stop making payments to the state the following year. The tribe argued that without a new agreement, there was nothing forcing them to hand over the 25 percent share of the slot machine and video lottery revenue that was agreed upon nearly two decades ago.

Seneca Nation Casino Payments

Seneca Nation News

In exchange for payments, the state government agreed to give the tribe gaming exclusivity over large portions of Western New York. During the two full years of non-payment, 25 percent of that revenue was worth $255 million.

Payments

Last April, a three-person arbitration panel said that the tribe should continue paying the state and follow the old compact through 2023. The tribe challenged that decision and brought it to a federal court.

Seneca Nation Casino Payments Bill

On Friday, a federal judge from the Western District of New York ruled in favor of the state. According to the Buffalo News, the $255 million only accounts for the two years of non-payment. The paper estimates that another $100 million will be owed in 2019.

“The court confirmed what we’ve said all along: the Seneca Nation needs to fulfill their obligations, make their neighbors and the state whole, and pay what they owe in exchange for their exclusive gaming rights,” said Rich Azzopardi, an advisor to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in a statement. “It is our hope that they end this charade, stop using the courts to delay, and pay what they owe.”

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