Seneca Nation Bingo Irving

2021年3月20日
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President Pagels statement on Irving Bingo Hall fire On Monday December 28 the Seneca Gaming and Entertainment bingo hall in Irving had a power surge from an outside transformer at approximately 7:11 PM. The cause appears to be a bird hitting a grounding wire and the transformer blowing a fuse. The building was evacuated without any injuries.
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President Pagels statement on Irving Bingo Hall fire 12/28/20. On Monday December 28 the Seneca Gaming and Entertainment bingo hall in Irving had a power surge from an outside transformer at approximately 7:11 PM. The cause appears to be a bird hitting a grounding wire and the transformer blowing a fuse. The building was evacuated without any. 6 reviews of Seneca Gaming and Bingo ’Bingo got it! Slot machines got it! Did I win no but I did have fun! You need a card to play bingo so if you go get the card before you walk into the gaming area. You need it to play the slot machines as well. It is not a smoke free place but the have enclosed non smoking areas. Bingo lasts about 3-4 hours. Seneca Gaming & Entertainment is the place to be for the best Bingo action! We feature both smoking and non-smoking Bingo Rooms and Game Rooms for your comfort and enjoyment! Prize Payouts are as much as $500 per regular game during the week and $1,000 per regular game on Fridays and Saturdays.Nya:wëh sgë:nö’ swagwë:goh,
So long, farewell…2020, an unforgettable, turbulent year! I welcome 2021 with high hopes and well-being for our Nation! Then we see six days later the President of the United States of America insight and provoke what he called a protest. That protest quickly turned into riot, just think if those were brown or blacks what the result would have been? But, with a new year come new beginnings, resolutions and reflection here in our Nation.
Since the beginning of March 2020 we entered a different world starting with travel restrictions and school closures. Little did we know we would continue to be under strict Covid-19 protocols with social distancing and mandatory mask wearing as we enter 2021. We can fight together as a collective rather than in isolation to contain the spread of this virus. Our resilience has historically sustained us and we will continue to beat adversity by staying vigilant in protecting each other.
The Seneca Nation Health Systems (SNHS) began administering the Moderna vaccine to front line workers at both LRJ and Cattaraugus Health Centers on December 29th. The Moderna is proposed to be 94.5% effective against the coronavirus and we must have at least a 70% vaccination rate to have an impact in combating the spread of the virus. As I write this article, SNHS will have provided more than 350 vaccines to front line workers and the first phase of elders (74+ with underlying health issues). As we are allocated more doses, the continuance of vaccinations will proceed. Please consider accepting the vaccination when approached for the safety of your family and community. If you have questions or concerns about the vaccination, contact SNHS for more information. Also, please update your contact information with SNHS so you may be contacted directly with pertinent news.
As a reminder, community testing will continue through January scheduled for the 11th, 18th, and 25th at the Cattaraugus Fire Hall and on January 12th, 19th and 26th at the Allegany DPW building. Pre-registration is recommended to ease the time in line.
As I mentioned in a previous public statement, the Seneca Gaming and Entertainment facility in Irving, NY experienced a small electrical fire which significantly damaged the system. This is currently being repaired causing the facility to remain closed for weeks, maybe months. Two starlings flew into the transformer and have caused serious downtime and closures. We are working closely with our insurance providers to get the facility open soon and safer than before.
I’d like to congratulate the Buffalo Bills on an exciting season as AFC East Conference Champions! I have to Billieve they will go on in the playoffs!! Go Bills!President Pagels statement on Irving Bingo Hall fire 12/28/20
On Monday December 28 the Seneca Gaming and Entertainment bingo hall in Irving had a power surge from an outside transformer at approximately 7:11 PM. The cause appears to be a bird hitting a grounding wire and the transformer blowing a fuse. The building was evacuated without any injuries. It remains closed for cleaning and maintenance, but will reopen on Wednesday as soon as it is safe to do so. [Update 12/30 11am: Due to electrical issues being more substantial than expected, the facility will remain closed until further notice.]
The excess power into the building caused some electrical systems damage and smoke. Verizon has restored phone services and work is ongoing to get everything back up and running as soon as possible. We are taking every precaution that our facility is a safe and clean environment. This is our commitment to our patrons and employees that they have a quality experience and safe environment to work and game in.
Most importantly we are very thankful that there were no injuries to our patrons and staff, who make our SGE locations the great places they are. We:so nya:wëh for Seneca Fire who responded very quickly and were supported by SNI Marshals and Seneca EMS!President Pagels updated statement on Irving SGE Facility 12/31/20
While we did not have a full out fire at any point, there was a power surge and then a brown out. Due to the length of time of the brown out, a lot of electrical equipment was damaged. The HVAC unit motors burned up and smoke was being pumped into the building through the vents.
In consultation with our insurance company, Mazza HVAC and Disaster Relief, it is apparent It could take as long as a month for 8 HVAC units to be replaced. Additionally, the entire building and gaming machines must all be very thoroughly checked and cleaned for any soot or smoke residue.
Our hard-working staff are diligently continuing to assess equipment losses and maintenance needs for restoring the facility back to normal. Unfortunately, we will not be reopening the building until further notice.OnondawagaCapitalIrving, New YorkJimerson Town, New York(rotating)Largest citySalamanca, New YorkOfficial languagesSeneca (national)English (national)GovernmentMatthew Pagels• Treasurer Rickey Armstrong, Sr.Marta Kettle• 1142Population8,000Time zoneESTSeneca Nation of New York official websiteFederal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) officer present an award to Art John, Director of Emergency Response for the Seneca Nation of Indians, 2009
The Seneca Nation of Indians is a federally recognizedSeneca tribe based in western New York.[1] They are one of three federally recognized Seneca entities in the United States, the others being the Tonawanda Band of Seneca (also in western New York) and the Seneca-Cayuga Nation of Oklahoma. Some Seneca also live with other Iroquois peoples on the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario.
The Seneca Nation has three reservations, two of which are occupied: Cattaraugus Reservation, Allegany Indian Reservation, and the mostly unpopulated Oil Springs Reservation. It has two alternating capitals on the two occupied reservations: Irving at Cattaraugus Reservation, and Jimerson Town near Salamanca on the Allegany Reservation.[2] A fourth territory de facto governed by the nation, the Cornplanter Tract in Pennsylvania, officially expired in 1957 and was flooded in 1965.Government[edit]
The government of this tribe was established in 1848 by a Constitutional Convention of Seneca Indians residing on the Allegany and Cattaraugus Territories in present-day New York. The Seneca Nation of Indians Constitution established a tri-partite governing structure based on general elections of 16 Councilors, three Executives (President, Treasurer, Clerk), and Court justices (Surrogates and Peacemakers). These elections are held every two years, on the first Tuesday in November, usually concurrent with Election Day in the rest of the United States (the exception is in years when November 1 is a Tuesday; in those years, the Seneca Nation holds their election on November 1 while the rest of the U.S. holds their elections November 8). The leadership rotates between the two reservations each election, and no officer can serve consecutive terms because of this. There are no other term limits, and elected officers can serve numerous nonconsecutive terms.[3]
The Council has established rules for membership or citizenship within the nation. In the 21st century, the Seneca Nation of Indians in New York has a total enrolled population of nearly 8,000 citizens. Its territories are generally rural, with several residential areas. Many Seneca citizens live off-territory, and some are located across the country, as well as in other countries. Off-territory residents, who often work in the urban areas that provide more jobs, comprise nearly 1/2 of the enrolled citizens. These off-territory members are eligible to vote and are often bussed in during elections.
The Seneca Nation’s republican form of government stands in contrast to that of the federally recognized Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians. That tribe retained its traditional government of hereditary chiefs chosen by clan mothers from the maternal lines responsible for such leadership. Within the Senaca Nation, such hereditary leaders were deposed in the 1848 convention of the Seneca Nation of New York. Followers of the traditional government structure split off and organized the Tonawanda Band, later gaining federal recognition.
Women were denied the right to vote in Seneca elections until the early 1960s. The tribe’s male voters had rejected female suffrage in three consecutive referenda in the 1950s, all rejected with widespread opposition from the Allegany Reservation, before the referendum passed.Politics[edit]
Since the late 20th century, the Seneca government is reported to be primarily under one-party rule, with the Seneca Party having control of the political process. In 2011, the Seneca Party was reported by The Buffalo News as having bribed people for votes and bussed voters in from out of state during elections.[4] The party also controls human resources management in the nation’s various enterprises, allowing them to hire people for patronage jobs and fire people for political dissent.[5] Opposing political parties have accused the party of electoral malfeasance through violating the secret ballot.
According to J.C. Seneca, a former Seneca Party politician who defected from the party in 2014, the ruling class has ensured that only the Seneca Party has had enough candidates to qualify for straight-ticket voting in which voters can select all of a party’s candidates for office with a single ballot mark by intimidating candidates from other parties out of the race, and on election day, poll workers eavesdrop upon voters by timing how long it takes to cast a ballot. In years past, the nation has used lever-action voting machines, a process that will be replaced as of 2016 by scanned paper ballots, If a poll worker heard a voter depress more than one lever, or take too long to complete their ballot, they could report this back to the Seneca Party bosses, who could then punish the voter by denying them jobs or seizing their homes.[6] There have been numerous factions and disputes within the Seneca Party; tensions increased during the presidency of attorney Robert Odawi Porter in 2010-2012. Supporters of Porter were at odds with supporters of the John family, an old-line, politically powerful family in Seneca circles. In the years following Porter’s lone term, the disputes have mostly been settled.
In November 2011, the John family led a vote to depose Porter by stripping him of most of his powers and give the title of chief executive officer to Michael ’Spike’ John. He is the cousin of Maurice ’Moe’ John, who served as Seneca president from 2006 to 2008, and ran unsuccessfully for Seneca President against Porter in 2010.[4] Diane Kennedy, Tribal Clerk and a Porter ally, invalidated this vote under conflict of interest statutes. In an October 2012 Council Session, a close friend of Kennedy said that Porter wrote the invalidation letter for Kennedy to sign.[4] The action for de factoimpeachment was taken after John supporters said politically motivated charges were made against Susan Abrams, a John ally.[4]
The 2012 elections were marked by a split in the Seneca Party and one of the most wide-open (and bitterly contested) Seneca elections in several years: five candidates competed for the post of president, including two endorsed by the two major factions in the Seneca Party.[7] Barry E. Snyder, Sr., a John ally who had previously served several other terms as President (including the one immediately before Porter), was re-elected to the post in 2012.
On November 4, 2014, with 66% of the vote, Maurice ’Moe’ John of the Seneca Party was elected to serve as President of the Seneca Nation of Indians. John faced council member Darlene Miller, who ran on the One Nation Party ticket. The Seneca Party had a landslide victory in the 2014 Elections; Todd Gates was elected Treasurer, and Pauline ’Snap’ John was elected Clerk. Elected to the Council were Ross L. John, Sr., Llona LeRoy, outgoing President Barry Snyder, John Adlai Williams, Jr., all of the Cattaraugus Territory. Tina Abrams, Rickey Armstrong, William ’Billy’ Canella and Stephen Gordon were elected to the Council from the Allegany Territory.[citation needed]
The Seneca Party nominated then Treasurer/CFO, Todd Gates, as its nominee for President in September 2016, spurning Barry Snyder’s efforts at a sixth term; Snyder, a supporter of the party machine, endorsed Gates, who faced challengers J.C. Seneca and Sally Snow.[5][8] The Seneca Nation elections took place on November 1, 2016. Gates defeated candidates J.C. Seneca and Sally Snow for President. Outgoing President Maurice ’Moe’ John was elected Treasurer, Lenith Waterman was elected Clerk. Elected to Council were Linda ’Soupy’ Doxtator, Jeffrey Gill, Arlene Bova Michael Williams, Presley Redeye, Keith White, Al E. George and Timothy Waterman.
In the 2018 Seneca Nation elections, Rickey L. Armstrong, Sr., a Nation Councilor since 2014 and a past Seneca Nation President from 2002-2004, received the Seneca Party nomination for President along with Matthew Pagels for Treasurer, and Bethany Johnson for Clerk. Armstrong defeated independent candidate Stephen L. Maybee with over 89% of the vote in the November 6th, 2018 general election. The Seneca Party won all Seneca Nation offices, Councilors elected were Tina Abrams, William Canella, Josh Jimerson, Angie Kennedy, Llona LeRoy, Robert W. Jones, Ross John, Sr., and John Adlai Williams, Jr. Andrew Keyes and Brandon Crouse were elected Chief Marshals; Darby LeRoy, Cheyne Jimerson, Rory Wheeler, Josh Becker, Christopher Bova, and Randy White were elected Marshals.[9]
The 2020 Seneca Nation election featured a across the board sweep by the Seneca Party, who endorsed Matthew Pagels for President, Rickey Armstrong, Sr., for Treasurer, and Marta Kettle for Clerk. They defeated the Senecas for Change 2020 ticket led by presidential candidate and businesswoman Sally Snow, newcomer treasurer candidate Karen Johnson Veeraswamy, clerk candidate and former court of appeals judge Julie Snow, and Independent treasurer candidate Stephen Maybee. Elected to the council from the Allegany Territory were longtime council members Al E. George, Arlene Bova, outgoing marshal Josh Becker, and former Seneca Nation Health System president/chief executive officer, Tim Waterman. Councilors elected from the Cattaraugus Territory were the Seneca’s environmental director, Lisa Maybee, current councilor and fire chief of the Nation’s volunteer fire department, Presley Redeye, deputy chief of staff to the treasurer, Eliot “Chub” Jimerson, current councilor and former chief marshal, Keith White.Economic development[edit]
The tribe owns and operates the Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino, located in Buffalo.[10] Other gaming and resort properties include the Seneca Allegany Casino in Salamanca and Seneca Niagara Casino in Niagara Falls.[2]
The Seneca Nation also owns Seneca Gaming and Entertainment, a chain of small video slots and bingo facilities with locations in Irving, Salamanca, and on the Oil Spring Reservation in Cuba.
Through a tribal-owned holding company, the tribe owns a telecommunications firm, Seneca Telecommunications; a construction management company, SCMC LLC; and a radio station, WGWE. Under the presidency of Robert Odawi Porter, the tribe began pursuing diversification of the Nation’s businesses. It promoted founding of new Seneca-owned businesses beyond the Nation’s traditional strongholds of gasoline retail and tobacco products. In 2010 the tribe acquired a controlling interest in wireless and telecommunications provider CT COMM, based in Washington, D.C.
The tribe has developed a brand of cigarettes called Native Pride. The tribe also owns a small chain of smoke shops and gas stations under the ’Seneca One Stop’ brand, but the vast majority of smoke shops on Seneca reservations are independently owned. The refusal of Seneca businesses to pay New York state excise taxes, because their businesses are operated on sovereign land, has given them a price advantage over non-Seneca, to whom the Seneca refuse to grant equal rights on their territory. The issue of such excise taxes has been a source of controversy between the tribes and the state government and non-Seneca convenience store operators in the vicinity for several decades.Seneca Pumped Storage Project at Kinzua Dam[edit]
For decades, the Seneca developed their land primarily for agricultural and related uses. The floodplain along the river was highly fertile. In the 1960s, members of the tribe became increasingly politically active. This was related to asserting sovereignty as part of a general Native American activism in this period and, specifically, to try to defeat proposals by the United States Army Corps of Engineers to take thousands of acres of reservation land as part of construction of Kinzua Dam, a flood-control project on the River.
While alternatives existed, the federal government’s study concluded that these were not viable. The COE proceeded with the project: construction of the dam and associated reservoir. While alternatives existed (alternatives that the federal government considered not only non-viable, but laughable in their lack of understanding of hydrology), the COE proceeded with the project: construction of the dam and associated reservoir caused huge losses for the tribe, taking 10,000 acres of their reservation, nearly one third of their total property and much of it the most fertile farmland.[11] More than 600 families were displaced and relocated. The tribe received a few hun

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