Joan Fawcett knew about the gift in advance. She had been coaxing it out for months. It didn't catch her unawares. Yet the theatrics had been so cleverly arranged that she found herself on her feet with the rest of the crowd at the charity gala a few weeks ago, blistering her palms with applause.
Confronted with the fact that a medical facility in Shakopee was turning away 60 people a month, a leader of the once-destitute but now casino-enriched Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community had just pledged $1 million to the cause. And some fierce critics of the tribe were among those stunned into what some remember as a five-minute-long ovation.
The tribe's biggest-ever gift by far to its immediate neighbors was the latest in a series of striking moments that appear to signal the start of a long-awaited thaw in the icy relationship between Scott County community leaders and the owners of the Mystic Lake casino -- a tribe many local residents resent for its overnight wealth.
The depth of the animosity has been a feature of local politics almost since gambling arrived in the 1980s. It was captured almost a decade ago in a book depicting life in a suburban high school. Teachers openly took digs at kids who were lucky enough to get free plots of land and a quarter of a million dollars the moment they turned 18.
Others in town spoke with disgust of the "fat cats on the reservation" who lived in huge mansions. According to a Scott County divorce filing from the period, members received annual payments of about $1 million from casino profits.
Plenty of suspicion and hostility remain. The tribe's critics dismiss much of what it does as self-publicized and self-serving. But there is also a sense of change. Though it still dishes out much of its charitable largesse to tribes in other states, as it has for many years, the tribe is taking a series of aggressively publicized steps to help its neighbors.
"There is a more positive relationship," said Scott County Commissioner Barbara Marschall, a veteran board member who has clashed with the tribe. "The projects that they come to the table with, and are wanting to participate in, have increased."
The tribe is allowing a new road to be built on its land, and it has resumed voluntary annual payments to the county of $280,000 a year in lieu of taxes, after ceasing to make them for several years.