They could file suit in local courts.īut none of those tactics works when the developer is a sovereign entity. They could lobby elected officials to intervene. If Home Depot wanted to build here, residents could fight the proposal before the zoning board, the county Planning Department and other agencies. They are discovering, to their dismay, that there is little they can do to block the tribe’s ambitious development plans.ĭespite raising more than $300,000 and hiring lawyers, lobbyists and consultants over the past year, residents can point to just one tangible achievement: delaying the issuance of liquor licenses for the casino resort.Ĭharles “C.J.” Jackson, a leading opponent of the tribe’s development proposals, says the struggle has been exasperating. Accustomed to having their way, these property owners are confronting a sovereign entity flush with gambling revenue and unfettered by state or local land-use regulations.