HR-4881-117
Became Public Law No: 117-275.
What it does
This law directs the Department of the Interior to take tribally owned lands in Pima County, Arizona, into federal trust on behalf of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe of Arizona. Once taken into trust, those lands become part of the official Pascua Yaqui Reservation. The law also explicitly permits gaming activities on the newly designated trust lands.
Who benefits
The Pascua Yaqui Tribe of Arizona is the primary beneficiary, gaining federal trust status for tribally owned land in the Old Pascua community in Pima County. Tribal members living in or connected to the Old Pascua community would gain the legal protections and sovereign status that come with reservation land. The tribe's government would gain expanded jurisdiction and potential gaming revenue. Local businesses and employees connected to any future gaming operations on the land could also benefit economically.
Who is hurt
Pima County and the State of Arizona would lose property tax revenue and some regulatory jurisdiction over the land once it is converted to federal trust status, as trust lands are generally exempt from state and local taxation. Neighboring property owners and residents could be affected by increased traffic or development associated with gaming operations. Non-tribal gaming operators in the region could face increased competition if a gaming facility is developed on the trust land.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that placing the Old Pascua community lands into federal trust corrects a longstanding historical inequity. The Pascua Yaqui Tribe was only federally recognized in 1978, decades after many other tribes, leaving the Old Pascua community — a traditional Yaqui settlement predating that recognition — without the full legal protections of reservation status. Taking this tribally owned land into trust fulfills the federal government's trust responsibility to the tribe, strengthens tribal sovereignty, and gives the community the same legal standing that other federally recognized tribes have long enjoyed. Permitting gaming on the land provides the tribe a path to economic self-sufficiency consistent with the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act framework already in place for other tribal nations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that converting land to federal trust status removes it from state and local tax rolls, shifting the fiscal burden onto Pima County and Arizona taxpayers who fund local services like roads, schools, and emergency response that may still serve the area. Critics also contend that the explicit authorization of gaming on the newly designated trust land goes beyond a simple land-status correction and introduces significant land-use changes that neighboring communities had no meaningful opportunity to contest. Some argue that such land-into-trust decisions should go through the standard administrative review process at the Bureau of Indian Affairs rather than being mandated by Congress, bypassing the regulatory checks designed to evaluate local impacts before trust acquisitions are approved.