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Casino Arizona Keno Results

4/11/2022
Casino Arizona Keno Results Average ratng: 4,2/5 3772 votes

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Proposition 200 was on the November 5, 2002 ballot in Arizona as an initiated state statute. It was defeated.[1]

Proposition 200 would have allowed the governor to negotiate tribal gaming compacts with Native American tribes in the state to allow them to install video gaming machines in casinos on tribal lands.

Election results

Governor to Negotiate Tribal Casino Compacts
ResultVotesPercentage
No995,68685.2%
Yes 173,126 14.8%
Election results from Arizona Elections Department.

Text of measure

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Below is the summary from the Legislative Council:

Proposition 200 directs the Governor to enter into tribal gaming compacts allowing Indian tribes to operate slot machines and card and table games on tribal land. Tribes would contribute 3% of 'annual net income' (defined as the annual total amount of money collected from Class III gaming, less any annual amounts paid out as prizes or paid for prizes awarded and annual labor and other operating expenses and annual interest expenses, depreciation and amortization) to the state to fund university, community college and tribal college scholarships, programs benefiting senior citizens, tribal education purposes and tribal elderly health care services. These distributions are outside the regular legislative process.

Arizona has entered into gaming compacts with 17 of the state's 21 Indian tribes. These compacts permit the tribes to operate specific gaming activities, including slot machines, that are, according to a federal court decision on appeal, illegal off of Indian reservations. These compacts begin to expire in the summer of 2003.

Proposition 200 directs the Governor to enter into a new gaming compact with each Indian tribe that requests it. All compacts must have the following provisions:

  • Term - 20 years. May be extended for an unlimited number of additional 20-year terms at the request of the tribe.
  • Facilities - Each tribe may operate 3 gaming facilities. The tribe and the Governor may agree to authorize additional facilities.
  • Games - Tribes may offer all forms of gambling legal under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act including slot machines, card and table games including blackjack, poker, roulette, craps and baccarat, wagering on horse and dog races, lottery games, bingo and keno. Each tribe may operate 1000 slot machines or the number of machines that the tribe currently operates (whichever is greater) and may operate 20 gaming tables at each facility. Tribes may offer keno games at no more than 2 facilities unless the Governor and tribe agree on a greater number. The number of slot machines allowed increases each year based on changes in the state's population.
  • Transfer provisions - Tribes may transfer a portion or all of their slot machine allotments to other tribes.
  • Revenue - Each tribe must contribute 3% of the tribe's net income from gaming to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund. Monies are distributed to universities, community colleges and tribal colleges for scholarships, to programs throughout the state that benefit senior citizens and to Indian tribes to be used for educational purposes and for elderly health care services. In addition, each tribe must pay an annual fee of $500 per slot machine to the state to reimburse the state for administrative costs incurred in relation to Indian gaming.
  • Disclosure - Each tribe's contribution to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund is confidential, but the Arizona Department of Gaming may make public the aggregate contributions from all tribes. The Director of the Arizona Department of Gaming also must annually disclose the amount of money collected from the tribes as administrative costs.
  • Regulation - Gaming facility operators must keep surveillance logs that are open to inspection by the Arizona Department of Gaming, but no other records are subject to Department of Gaming inspection, including financial and accounting records. Tribes must investigate reported compact or tribal gaming ordinance violations and require gaming facility operators to correct violations. Tribes must notify the Arizona Department of Gaming within 48 hours when a violation is reported. Tribes must license gaming employees who are not enrolled tribal members. Tribes must also license each manufacturer and supplier of gaming devices and each person providing gaming goods and services in excess of $50,000 in any single month. The state must certify nonenrolled tribal members who are involved in gaming or financial activities, manufacturers and suppliers of gaming devices and persons providing gaming goods and services in excess of $50,000 in any single month. The tribal gaming office is authorized to conduct investigations of compact violations. The Department of Gaming has access to tribal gaming office reports but is not authorized to conduct independent investigations.
  • Results of Statewide Expansion of Gambling - If state law changes to allow anyone other than Indian tribes to offer slot machines or card and table games for profit or if the state imposes any additional assessments related to gaming on Indian tribes, the tribes no longer have to make payments for regulatory costs or to the Arizona College Scholarship and Elderly Care Fund and the limitations on slot machines and card and table games become null and void.

[S](1534)[2][3]

Similar measures

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Arizona 2002 election results
  2. NCSL ballot measure database, accessed December 31, 2013
  3. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
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Retrieved from 'https://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php?title=Arizona_Governor_to_Negotiate_Tribal_Casino_Compacts,_Proposition_200_(2002)&oldid=8225769'

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1. All winnings are paid according to the computer generated ticket(s) only. Any errors not corrected before the game is closed will be computed and paid accordingly. Talking Stick Resort is not responsible for writer errors.

Casino Arizona Keno Results 2019

2. Maximum aggregate payout to all players participating in each game is $250,000.

3. Keno runners are available for your convenience only. Talking Stick Resort is not responsible if tickets arrive too late for the current game. Wagers are not valid until accepted into the computer system at the Keno computer. Please have your tickets ready. Keno runners are instructed not to wait if tickets are not ready for the current game.

4. Multi-race ticket(s) (2 or more games) will not be changed or voided after they are entered into play, unless approved by a Keno supervisor.

5. All federal and state tax laws shall apply and are the responsibility of the winning patron. (Reportable amounts $1,500 or more net in one Keno game). Suitable identification (i.e. Drivers License and Social Security Card) are required before payment.

6. Non-resident aliens are subject to a 30% withholding tax and Talking Stick Resort is required to deduct such amount before payment.

7. A $1.00 minimum bet is required on a one-game straight ticket(s).

8. A $0.50 wager requires a 10-game minimum.

9. Way ticket(s) with three ways or more may play a minimum of $0.25 per way.

10. To play 'QUICK PICKS' simply mark 'QP' in the center of your ticket. Let the computer select your numbers. Tell your friendly Keno employee how many numbers you wish to play and the rate you wish to wager.

11. Management is not responsible for lost or stolen tickets.

12. All tickets are good for 30 days before they expire.

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