- Home
- Our County
- Departments
- Office of Budget & Finance
- Grants
- Proposition 202 Tribal Gaming Program
Proposition 202 Tribal Gaming Program
In November 2002, the voters of Arizona approved Proposition 202 which initiated new gaming compacts between the State of Arizona and the Native American communities. An important provision of Proposition 202 was the sharing of gaming revenues with the State. Henceforth, tribes would be assessed by the State a percentage of their gross gaming revenue. Tribes had the option of either paying all of this assessment into a State managed fund or to pay 88% of the assessment into the State managed fund and retain 12% of the assessment for distribution as grants.
Documents
- What is a tribal gaming grant?
-
In November 2002, the voters of Arizona approved Proposition 202 which initiated new gaming compacts between the State of Arizona and the Native American communities. An important provision of Proposition 202 was the sharing of gaming revenues with the State. Henceforth, tribes would be assessed by the State a percentage of their gross gaming revenue. Tribes had the option of either paying all of this assessment into a State managed fund or to pay 88% of the assessment into the State managed fund and retain 12% of the assessment for distribution as grants.
- Who can apply for a tribal gaming grant?
-
The law also stipulates that local non-profits may submit applications to tribal entities if the non-profit organization’s application is "sponsored" by an appropriate local government such as a county. As stipulated by the law, sponsorship means the adoption of a board of supervisor resolution authorizing the submission of the grant application and/or pass-through resolution under the auspices of the local government. The board of supervisor resolution is a mandated part of application and/or award based on each individual tribe’s process.
- How do eligible organizations apply for a tribal gaming grant?
-
It is the responsibility of the non-profit to obtain and adhere to the grant requirements outlined by each tribal community and their respective due dates. Once a resolution is approved by the Board of Supervisors, the county will email the resolution to the non-profit. It is the responsibility of the non-profit to submit their application to the tribal community for consideration.
- How do I get the county’s support?
-
Requests for county support should be made a minimum of 5 weeks prior to the application due date in order to get the items placed on a Board of Supervisor’s agenda for consideration and adoption of a resolution.
To request support, fill out the Tribal Grant Approval Form and email it to the Grants Division. A separate form must be submitted for each tribal community for which you are requesting funding. Please email the grants office or call the Grants Administrator at 520-866-6422 with questions.
- Where can I get information on Pinal County tribes?
-
- Ak Chin Indian Community
- Gila River Indian Community
- San Carlos Apache Tribe
- Tohono O’odham Nation
- What role does the county play in the tribal gaming grant process?
-
If Pinal County agrees to act as a pass-through, the County receives the grant funds from the tribal community and in turn issues a check to the non-profit agency. The County may execute a pass-through agreement prior to the distribution of the grant funds. To be eligible, a resolution or an authorized signature must accompany your application based on the tribal entities requirements.
- What role does the tribe play in the tribal gaming process?
-
The tribal community is the awarding agency. It is their sole discretion on who they will fund.
- What is the process to submit an application?
-
- Provide a separate application package for each tribal community grant to which you are applying. Email the grants office or call 520-866-6422 with questions and to confirm the due date of the following items:
- Complete the request for support form
- Complete the entire tribal community grant application and applicable forms
- If the tribal community grant form requests the fiscal agent contact information, please email the Grants Office.
- The request for support form, complete application, and proof of non-profit status should be emailed to the Grants Office in a single PDF document.
- After the Board of Supervisors provides their support by adopting a resolution, Pinal County will email the resolution and the signed tribal cover sheet (if applicable) to the non-profit.
- The non-profit submits their application to the tribal community.
- Provide a separate application package for each tribal community grant to which you are applying. Email the grants office or call 520-866-6422 with questions and to confirm the due date of the following items: