Gambling has provided tribal members with jobs, opportunity and income.
The Ho-Chunk are tied with the Oneida in the number of casinos, and their profits are comparable to those of the Potawatomi. That accounts for more than a third of the annual totals reported for all 11 state tribes in a 2012 state audit.
The Ho-Chunk’s gambling operations generate about $200 million in profit annually, a figure confirmed by tribal officials. The tribe, which prefers the word “gaming,” now operates a network of six casinos, with 175,000 square feet of casino floor space, 5,000 slot machines and about 100 tables, for games including blackjack, poker and roulette. “We were, for all practical purposes, a welfare state.”Īll that is different today, due in large part to the tribe’s ability to run gambling operations. “The tribe subsisted wholly on federal and state programs,” said Lowe, who served as the Ho-Chunk’s top political leader in the early 1980s and again in the mid-1990s. There were no tribal businesses, and debt stirred talk of bankruptcy. His people, the Ho-Chunk, were impoverished, like most of the nation’s Native American tribes. 28, 2014.Ĭhloris Lowe remembers how it used to be. Gannett’s John Ferak, editor of the project, discusses highlights with Frederica Freyberg on Wisconsin Public Television’s Here and Now, Feb.