Shame on the NDP! The people of Brandon have held two plebiscites on whether a casino should be built in the city and the outcome both times with an over whelming majority was NO, what part of NO don't the frickin NDP not understand?
Native casino near Brandon angers mayor
Water sealed deal for adjacent RM
The province is rolling the dice for a third time in a bid to put a native-run casino in the Brandon area.
The latest gamble, which has infuriated Brandon's mayor, involves building the casino on land just outside the Wheat City in exchange for a promise to bring fresh drinking water to residents of the adjacent rural municipality.
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"I feel it's a slap in the face to Brandon," Mayor Dave Burgess said shortly after hearing the news Friday.
"To have it right beside our border came as a surprise to me. I didn't think the province would take that step."
Through plebiscites, Brandon residents have twice rejected having a First Nations casino built downtown.
But Brandon Chamber of Commerce president Ron Cumming disagreed with the mayor.
"The city had an opportunity and they dropped the ball," Cumming said.
"Now Brandon won't get any of the extra revenue that would have come to the city. It's a lost opportunity."
Attorney General Dave Chomiak, minister responsible for the Gaming Control Act, and Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Ron Evans said the new casino will be built on 500 acres of farm land at the northwest corner of the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 10 junction, a coin toss outside Brandon.
Chomiak and Evans said the project will create hundreds of jobs for aboriginal people and profits will be split evenly among Manitoba's 64 First Nation communities. The casino is expected to open in about two years.
Aboriginal leaders said the project would not have been possible without the unanimous approval of the Rural Municipality of Elton council, which will be the home of the casino and proposed recreational site.
Reeve Jon Burton said the decision to approve the project in July came down to one thing -- water.
Burton said the municipality of 1,400 residents has no collective source of clean drinking water for home and livestock use. Water comes from wells, dugouts or is trucked in.
With the new casino, the rural municipality will get access to water from a new multimillion-dollar treatment plant to be built in the neighbouring RM of Whitehead. Fresh water had been the sticking point in negotiations, as the City of Brandon has a long-standing policy of not extending water and sewer services beyond its boundary.
Keeseekoowenin First Nation Chief Norman Bone, one of three chiefs behind the project, said more work has to be done on binding agreements and the casino's design. The other bands directly involved are Rolling River and Waywayseecappo First Nations.
Burton said the bands have already reached an agreement to buy the land, which has been used to grow canola, from a local farmer.
bruce.owen@freepress.mb.ca
-- With file from the Brandon Sun