
YOUR OPPORTUNITY FOR SUCCESS
There is an abundance of opportunities and advantages to locating
your business at Gila River Indian Community. It's all about increasing
profit to the bottom line. Your business can elect to participate
in some very generous benefits. Your success will partner with the
Community's efforts to produce a thriving self-sustaining economy.
In the first ten years, your business can enjoy accelerated depreciation
allowances on your federal tax return. The Omnibus Reconciliation
act of 1993 allows employers in Indian Country to accelerate rates
of depreciation on capitalized buildings and equipment. (See Table
1 below) The same law provides a twenty percent credit against the
employer's tax liability for the first $20,000 of qualified wages
and health insurance benefits paid to certain tribal member employees.
Land lease is a deductible operating expense. Prompt professional
development process (one stop shop)
While federal law prohibits the sale or mortgage of reservation
land because it is held in federal trust for each tribe, Gila River
Indian Community can create long-term lease agreements. These agreements
not only present the term of occupancy, but also clearly define
the requirements governing the relationship between the Community's
government and the business. Under certain circumstances, these
may include methods to eliminate or reduce state property taxes.
Gila River points with pride to the number of Community members
seeking higher education and degrees. Prior to gaming revenues,
which started in1994, scholarships and incentives were available
in the Community for only about dozen or so members. Today, over
600 community members are enrolled in advanced education. This can
provide partnerships with businesses looking for employees who want
to learn new disciplines and enhance job skills.
Additionally, Gila River has its own employment and training office,
which includes funding availability from JTPA, school to work and
welfare to work programs. Currently, the gaming scholarship program
also provides for internships to those attending colleges, universities
and trade schools, to allow them to work in the Community and keep
their training available within the Community. Plans are being developed
to expand the internship program to private businesses within the
Community boundaries.
Infrastructure has always been an expensive issue for development.
In the past, infrastructure installed was not designed for growth,
and the amount of dollars necessary was inadequate, in order to
position the Community in its growth. Today, in what we refer to
as the North Central Corridor or The Borderlands, several million
dollars worth of new infrastructure is now in place for future development.
This new infrastructure is the result of sound planning and unique
financing options. It includes advancing dollars to the State of
Arizona to accelerate construction of a new Interstate 10 access
to the Community. New dependable electric power is on line to meet
today's high tech demands. A tribally owned telecommunications company
continues to install fiber optics lines for today's telecommunications
needs. New and larger sewer lines and wastewater treatment plants
are under construction. Over a million gallons of overhead water
storage capacity is on-line to a looped system in the last five
years. Natural gas is available.
Further, safety issues are adequately being addressed within the
Community. Instead of a small one-location volunteer fire department,
the Community now has three fire stations with new state of the
art fire fighting equipment staffed by the first graduating class
of Native American firefighters in America. The police department
has tripled in size, with trained certified law enforcement officers
and state of the art equipment. These enhancements also include
a new quick-response emergency medical service around the clock.
Another key to a new business's success is transportation availability.
Our new development area is easily accessible from Interstate 10,
and the soon to be constructed San Tan Freeway. A new overpass transition
is scheduled by the Arizona Department of Transportation to be completed
by 2001, providing additional access. Sky Harbor International Airport
is less than fifteen minutes away and a general aviation airport
is within five miles. Rail is nearby in the Community's Lone Butte
Industrial Park. The Interstate and regional freeway and roads system
provide easy and quick access to the metro area distribution centers
as well as overnight delivery from Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and
other southwest distribution centers. To the south lies Pinal County,
an important emerging new market.
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