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South Dakota tribe to open nation's 1st marijuana resort

cigaretteman

HB King
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The Santee Sioux tribe has already proven its business acumen, running a successful casino, a 120-room hotel and a 240-head buffalo ranch on the plains of South Dakota.

But those enterprises have not been immune to competition and the lingering effects of the Great Recession, so the small tribe of 400 is undertaking a new venture — opening the nation's first marijuana resort on its reservation. The experiment could offer a new moneymaking model for tribes nationwide seeking economic opportunities beyond casinos.

Santee Sioux leaders plan to grow pot and sell it in a smoking lounge that includes a nightclub, arcade games, bar and food service and, eventually, slot machines and an outdoor music venue.

"We want it to be an adult playground," tribal President Anthony Reider said. "There's nowhere else in America that has something like this."

The project, according to the tribe, could generate up to $2 million a month in profit, and work is underway on the growing facility. The first joints are expected to go on sale Dec. 31 at a New Year's Eve party.

The legalization of marijuana on the Santee Sioux land came in June, months after the Justice Department outlined a new policy that allows Indian tribes to grow and sell marijuana under the same conditions as some states.

Many tribes are hesitant to jump into the pot business. And not everyone in Flandreau, about 45 miles north of Sioux Falls, believes in the project. But the profit potential has attracted the interest of many other tribes, just as the debut of slot machines and table games did almost 27 years ago.

"The vast majority of tribes have little to no economic opportunity," said Blake Trueblood, business development director at the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development. For those tribes, "this is something that you might look at and say, 'We've got to do something.' "

Flandreau's indoor marijuana farm is set against a backdrop of soybean fields. If not for a security booth outside, the building could pass as an industrial warehouse.

Inside, men are working to grow more than 30 strains of the finicky plant, including those with names like "Gorilla Glue," ''Shot Glass" and "Big Blue Cheese."

Pot is prone to mildew and mold, picky about temperature and pH level and intolerant to tap water. So the Santee Sioux have hired Denver-based consulting firm Monarch America to teach them the basics.

Tribal leaders from across the country and South Dakota legislators will tour the Flandreau facility in mid-October.

"This is not a fly-by-night operation," said Jonathan Hunt, Monarch's vice president and chief grower. Tribal leaders "want to show the state how clean, how efficient, how proficient, safe and secure this is as an operation. We are not looking to do anything shady."

Elsewhere, crews have begun transforming a bowling alley into the resort.

A marijuana resort open to the public has never been tried in the U.S. Even in states such as Colorado and Washington, where pot is fully legal, consumption in public places is generally forbidden, although pro-pot activists are seeking to loosen those restrictions. Colorado tolerates a handful of private marijuana clubs.

Unlike the vast reservations in western South Dakota, where poverty is widespread, the little-known Flandreau Santee Sioux Reservation is on 5,000 acres of gently rolling land along the Big Sioux River. Trailer homes are scarce and houses have well-trimmed lawns.

The Santee Sioux hope to use pot in the same way that many tribes rely on casinos — to make money for community services and to provide a monthly income to tribal members. The existing enterprises support family homes, a senior living community, a clinic and a community center offering after-school programs.

Reider hopes marijuana profits can fund more housing, an addiction treatment center and an overhaul of the clinic. Some members want a 24/7 day care center for casino workers.

The prosperity that marijuana could bring to Indian Country comes with huge caveats. The drug remains illegal under federal law, and only Congress can change its status. The administration that moves into the White House in 2017 could overturn the Justice Department's decision that made marijuana cultivation possible on tribal lands.

Meanwhile, tribes must follow strict security measures or risk the entire operation.

The marijuana cannot leave the reservation, and every plant in Flandreau's growing facility will have a bar code. After being harvested and processed, it will be sold in sealed 1-gram packages for $12.50 to $15 — about the same price as the illegal market in Sioux Falls, according to law enforcement. Consumers will be allowed to buy only 1 gram — enough for two to four joints — at a time.

Want another gram? The bar-coded package of the first gram must be returned at the counter.

Since the Santee Sioux announced their plans, the Passamaquoddy Tribe in Maine signed a letter of intent with Monarch to build a cultivation facility for industrial hemp. The Suquamish Tribe and Washington state officials signed a 10-year agreement that will govern the production, processing and sale of pot on the tribe's land.

In the long run, Reider is certain that the benefits will outweigh the risks of tribal marijuana enterprises.

The tribe, he said, must "look at these opportunities because in order to preserve the past we do have to advance in the present."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-marijuana-resort-20150929-story.html
 
A friend of mine just bought 100 acres of land in the North woods of Minnesota. Up fairly close to Walker. Only about 10 acres of the land is tillable right now, but I am guessing he will be growing weed for the tribe up there at some point.

Members of the tribe on their 18th birthday receive a million bucks from the casinos if they are 2/3 of the blood.
 
I bet they will have plenty of buses running between the resort and the casino.
 
I'm surprised tribes don't run legal brothels. You would think they would be all over the sin trades.
 
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I bet they will have plenty of buses running between the resort and the casino.

Hopefully the buses serve snacks.

There is money to be made buying the land right next to the reservation and putting in a White Castle.
 
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We've given almost everything a group of people can ask for and yet they go and to this type of thing. We don't need a black market drug trade coming out of the Dakotas. I'm sure it's just a few that want to profit off their heritage, but it's a sad deal.
 
We've given almost everything a group of people can ask for and yet they go and to this type of thing. We don't need a black market drug trade coming out of the Dakotas. I'm sure it's just a few that want to profit off their heritage, but it's a sad deal.

This post would be grand satire except for the fact that you're apparently serious about it.
 
We've given almost everything a group of people can ask for and yet they go and to this type of thing. We don't need a black market drug trade coming out of the Dakotas. I'm sure it's just a few that want to profit off their heritage, but it's a sad deal.

We have given them everything they wanted in the fashion that Socialism gives people "everything" they want.

They wouldn't have to rely on these gimmicks if they didn't have the burden of communal property rights. Legitimate business doesn't want any part of moving into the reservation economic environment that the government has "gifted" to them.

The sad part is that they still believe communal poverty keeps them closer to their heritage.
 
We have given them everything they wanted in the fashion that Socialism gives people "everything" they want.

They wouldn't have to rely on these gimmicks if they didn't have the burden of communal property rights. Legitimate business doesn't want any part of moving into the reservation economic environment that the government has "gifted" to them.

The sad part is that they still believe communal poverty keeps them closer to their heritage.

And you have a sadly poor knowledge of past and present Indian policies and the Reservation system. I know that Indian Reservations as socialist failures have become a common wingnut myth in recent years, but it does nothing but demonstrate that proponents of this notion have little idea of what they are talking about. In fact, a great many of the problems were created or exacerbated by the misguided attempt at parceling out the communal property to individual ownership through the Allotment Act.
 
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Quite frankly, I don't think we have any right to judge what happens with them today. Let them have a pot resort. Its their goddam land.

I'd like to see how "Americans" would be today if say 150 years ago we were invaded and pushed off our lands breaking "only" 250 years on the continent...considering the American Indians were here a millennium before us.

To call anything they do today a failure when they're trying to co-exist after 125 or so years on what amounts to being Mars for them is just plain silly. It's going to take to the year 3000 before they recover as a people and race.

Just feel lucky we don't have to give back every inch of this continent...because we stole it from them, and tried to effectively genocide them in the process.
 
And you have a sadly poor knowledge of past and present Indian policies and the Reservation system. I know that Indian Reservations as socialist failures have become a common wingnut myth in recent years, but it does nothing but demonstrate that proponents of this notion have little idea of what they are talking about. In fact, a great many of the problems were created or exacerbated by the misguided attempt at parceling out the communal property to individual ownership through the Allotment Act.

It may not be a good example of Socialism, but it is a great example of Communism. Everyone knows that Socialism is Diet-Communism.
 
It may not be a good example of Socialism, but it is a great example of Communism. Everyone knows that Socialism is Diet-Communism.

And when it's not really Communism you can call it Fascism. It's the circle of statism. If one label doesn't fit call it something else, nobody will now the difference anyways!!. Rinse and repeat with any subject that is political.
 
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