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Tribal payments are no jackpot for his department, El Dorado County sheriff says

By Cathy Locke - clocke@sacbee.com

Published 12:00 am PDT Thursday, May 8, 2008
Story appeared in El DORADO FOLSOM RANCHO CORDO section, Page G5

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El Dorado County will receive $500,000 annually for 20 years for law enforcement under a pact with the Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians. But the sheriff believes that won't cover the staffing and equipment that will be needed to handle the anticipated increase in calls for service that will come with the opening of the Red Hawk Casino.

That word from Sheriff Jeff Neves took the Board of Supervisors by surprise last week as the members considered transferring the first $250,000 payment from the tribe to the Sheriff's Department and authorizing the department to add six deputy positions and a sergeant's position for casino-related coverage.

Neves also requested approval to purchase two patrol vehicles and related law-enforcement equipment.

Under a 2006 settlement that ended more than a decade of county lawsuits seeking to block the casino, the tribe agreed to pay the county at least $190 million over 20 years to offset the casino's impacts.

The tribe agreed to pay $250,000 of the first year's payments six months before the casino's anticipated opening to give the Sheriff's Department time to purchase equipment and hire officers.

The casino is scheduled to open late this year on Shingle Springs Rancheria north of Highway 50 between Shingle Springs Drive and Greenstone Road.

Neves said it takes at least 11 months to hire and train an officer.

But board members said the county could face a funding gap if deputies began work before the casino opens, because the remaining $250,000 won't be paid until the third and fourth quarter of the casino's first year of operation.

Asked whether he had the budget to absorb the new employees if the casino's opening were delayed, Neves said he did not.

"Then we have a distinct budget problem," said Supervisor Jack Sweeney.

"I have a public safety problem," Neves replied.

The sheriff said the situation is complicated because he already is short of deputies, with five vacancies, 11 deputies in training at the academy and eight on leave.

The only reason the department is in the good shape it is, he said, is that no deputies have retired in the past year. But seven have indicated they plan to do so in the coming year, Neves said.

"We have the challenge of the casino. We don't have sufficient staff," the sheriff said.

Supervisor Ron Briggs asked whether the $500,000 a year the county is to receive for casino-related law enforcement is sufficient, and Neves said it is not.

The total cost per deputy is about $125,000 annually, he said.

"You're telling me the work force is $1 million per year and the allocation (from the tribe) is a half-million (dollars) per year," Sweeney said.

Neves said he wasn't consulted during the county's negotiations with the tribe.

Neves said he planned to stagger the hiring over the year.

"If the casino doesn't open in six months, we won't be so far down the road that we don't have time to adjust," he said.

The supervisors finally voted 4-1, with Helen Baumann opposed, to place the $250,000 in a reserve account for the Sheriff's Department and authorize the hiring of deputies.

The motion did not include approval to purchase vehicles and equipment.

About the writer:

  • Call The Bee's Cathy Locke, (916) 608-7451.

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JEFF NEVES Tribal payments are no jackpot for department, the sheriff says.

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