Navajo lawmakers OK casino reopening - Albuquerque Journal

Navajo lawmakers OK casino reopening

Navajo Nation lawmakers approved legislation Monday to reopen the tribe’s four casinos, even as the tribe’s health director warned that the coronavirus is spreading uncontrollably.

The tribe’s casinos in New Mexico and Arizona have been closed since March. The Navajo Nation Gaming Enterprise got the blessing of the Navajo Nation Council to reopen them at a minimum 50% capacity later this month, but it still needs an OK from the tribal president.

Navajo President Jonathan Nez has 10 days to act on the legislation once it reaches him. He has not indicated whether he’ll support it.

The casinos employ nearly 1,200 people, most of whom are Navajo. They have been on paid administrative leave. The gambling enterprise has used federal Paycheck Protection Program funding and a share of the tribe’s coronavirus relief funding to stay afloat.

“Our concern is that if we’re unable to reopen, we’re going to be forced into a situation where we would no longer have the cash reserves to be able to open again at some point in the near future,” the enterprise’s interim chief executive, Brian Parrish, told lawmakers.

The enterprise also wants to fully open a new travel center east of Flagstaff, next to its Twin Arrows Casino Resort. The tribe’s other three casinos are in northwestern New Mexico.

Parrish said the enterprise has drawn up a health and safety plan in line with recommendations from tribal and federal health experts.

It includes social distancing, no smoking, partitions, hand sanitizer and face shields. Safety isn’t guaranteed, but Parrish said employees and patrons will be safer at the casinos than other places off the reservation.

Navajo Nation Council Delegate Carl Slater said he couldn’t support the reopening while COVID-19 cases are surging across the reservation and in neighboring states.

“My fear is that we will overwhelm our health care system,” he said.

Tribal health officials said 126,331 people on the vast reservation that covers parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah have been tested for COVID-19 since the pandemic started.

A shelter-in-place order, mask mandate, daily curfews and weekend lockdowns remain in effect on the Navajo Nation.

Dr. Jill Jim, who oversees the Navajo Nation Department of Health, said the tribe was doing well in September, but has been seeing close to 100 new cases per day lately. The tribe also is in need of more contact tracers, she said.

“We’re all at uncontrolled spread, she said.

Under the executive branch’s reopening plan, tribal casinos would not be allowed to operate until community spread is low, Jim said.

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