The Saskatchewan Indian Gaming Authority has announced that all seven of its casino properties are set to open to the public on June 20, including the Bear Claw Casino at the White Bear First . . .
The Saskatchewan Indian Gaming Authority (SIGA) is pleased to announce that all seven casino properties, including the Bear Claw Casino north of Carlyle, are set to open to the public on June 20.. . .
All seven casinos in the province are set to open to the public on June 20. During the initial phase of opening, SIGA will start up in a reduced capacity with a150-person maximum and maintaining . . .
And the feds keep leaving the ball in the province’s court, saying it’s up to Saskatchewan to regulate, while seemingly not touching the on-reserve pot shop issues. Yet the issue is black and white for two chiefs who spoke about their communities’ recently opened stores: As signatories to Treaty 4, Pheasant Rump Nakota Nation and Zagime (Sakimay) Anishinabeck have the sovereign right to do as they wish with business on their own lands. Now that they’re hearing interest from other First Nations about opening stores, the two chiefs Pheasant Rump’s Ira McArthur and Zagime’s Lynn Acoose spoke about recent development plans for a safety association, while explaining what the federal government s gap-filled weed law means for First Nations sovereignty.