The Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community (SMSC) has applied to put in trust nearly 300 acres of recently purchased acreage in Prior Lake and Shakopee, a designation that allows the federal government to take ownership and protect it for the tribe indefinitely.
The designation would also allow the tribe, which owns and operates Mystic Lake Casino Hotel, to forgo paying taxes on the land since it would provide all services there.
The trust designation puts the property under tribal law and jurisdiction, helping the tribe to meet its housing, economic development and environmental goals. Putting land into trust is one of the tribe's "most essential functions," said tribal planner Nicole Hendrickson.
Joseph Bauerkemper, American Indian Studies professor at the University of Minnesota Duluth, noted another benefit: "If the land were not put into trust … it could be sold without significant process or oversight."
The process takes 10 months to two years, Hendrickson said, and will need approval from the U.S. Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
"There is an excitement as a community," she said. "The tribe once held half the state of Minnesota and has been so drastically affected culturally and socially from land loss."
The SMSC purchased the land on the market a couple of years ago. Named Hinhankaga, referring to the number of owls there, the property includes eight parcels in Prior Lake and 11 in Shakopee, Hendrickson said.
Most of the land is row crops and pasture, forests and wetlands. The tribe doesn't plan to change its uses; there are five tribal homes on the land.