The longstanding ban on alcohol at Minnesota's most popular casino could end soon.
Mystic Lake Casino is gearing up to begin selling alcohol -- even advertising to hire bartenders -- as it awaits approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. It has long been one of the state's few dry tribal casinos, but after watching revenue suffer along with the economy and years of requests from thirsty guests, the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community quietly agreed to a policy change.
"Adding alcohol service and sales to our Mystic Lake experience has been the most requested feature by our guests over the last 20 years," Mystic Lake announced in a statement Friday, noting that it has been looking into the issue of alcohol sales for several years.
The Mystic Lake permit is still under consideration at the federal level, and the casino will still have to apply to the state for the right to sell retail liquor. The tribe is one of the richest and most influential in the country.
"Upon receipt of the necessary approvals and licensing we will make a full announcement of our plans and timeline," the casino statement said. "We look forward to bringing this new offering to our guests."
Longtime Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community Chairman Stanley Crooks, who died Aug. 25, had been adamantly opposed to selling or profiting from the sale of alcohol at Mystic Lake. Although his death seems to have opened the door for a change in policy, tribal and community sources say he was aware of the impending change and knew it had to be considered to boost revenue, which has suffered during the economic downturn.
Even so, the change in policy is a sign of the changing of the guard within the band, which Crooks led for 20 years. His tenure paralleled the rise of Mystic Lake as the dominant tribal casino in the region. Of all the casino-owning tribes in the state, only the Shakopee tribe and Red Lake Band of Chippewa have a total ban on alcohol.
"I was quite surprised because Stanley Crooks' vision was that he didn't want any alcohol whatsoever and believed very strongly in keeping alcohol out of his casino," said Steven Howard, the executive director of the Leech Lake Band of Chippewa, based in Cass Lake, Minn. Only one of that band's three casinos, Northern Lights, near Walker, Minn., sells alcohol.