VIEWS: 280
January 29, 2025SRPMIC 12 Percent Gaming Grant Committee Update
The Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community’s 12 Percent Gaming Grant Committee provided several grants for the 2024 calendar year to local organizations as a requirement of the Arizona Tribal-State Gaming Compacts between the state of Arizona and all 22 federally recognized Arizona tribes.
Under the compacts, each tribe with a casino can distribute on its’ own terms 12% of the overall contribution that would otherwise go to the state of Arizona. Contributions are determined on a sliding scale based on the amount of gaming revenue realized each year.
Currently, the remaining 88% of a tribe’s total annual contribution goes to specific buckets with a variety of causes in the Arizona budget.
Recipients of 2024 funds from SRPMIC include: A New Leaf, Alice Cooper Teen Center, Helping Hands for Single Mothers, Lily’s Pad, Southwest Human Development and more (see sidebar for full list).
“Since the pandemic emphasis has been placed on organizations that provide critical services to the community at-large such as food banks, homelessness, veterans, social service organizations such as the Salvation Army, Red Cross, and health care,” said SRPMIC Special Assistant for Legislative Affairs Gary Bohnee.
Each year the committee determines general priorities for the year. Based on feedback with organizations and reviews of reports, the committee will define what organizations to consider and evaluate organization applications and what funds will be available to distribute as calculated by SRPMIC Casino management.
The SRPMIC 12% Committee is composed of Bohnee, SRPMIC President Martin Harvier, SRPMIC Vice-President Ricardo Leonard, Council member Cheryl Doka, Council member Mikah Carlos, Winter Wood and Jessica Sepulveda.
The annual SRPMIC 12% Committee luncheon took place on November 19. “The lunch event organized by the committee is a way to network with organizations who will be awarded and to thank them for the work they are doing in the Community,” said Bohnee. “In addition, several mayors attended and were thanked for their role in processing and distributing SRPMIC 12% grant funding vis-à-vis intergovernmental agreements.”
Next, the committee will begin its calendar year 2026 grant cycle mapping out goals for the year, reviewing reports, touring and seeking presentations from organizations.
2024 SRPMIC 12% Grant Recipients
Organization
Arizona Friends of Foster Children Foundation (AFFCF)
A New Leaf
American Indian Chamber Education Fund
Alice Cooper Teen Centers
ASU Indian Legal Program
Audubon Southwest
Arizona Cancer Foundation for Children (ACFC)
Arizona Humane Society
Arizona Science Center
Arizona Town Hall
Banner Alzheimer’s Foundation
Boys Hope Girls Hope
Center for Future of Arizona
Child Crisis
City of Mesa
City of Tempe
City of Scottsdale
Dignity Health – Dental Program
Dignity Health – Prescription Program
Family Promise
Feeding Matters
Fighter Country Partnership
First Tee
Florence Crittenton
Fountain Hills – Town of
Gabriel’s Angels
Heard Museum
Hellsgate Fire
Helping Hands for Single Mothers
Heroes to Hometown
Hospice of the Valley
Keys to Change (formerly Human Services Campus)
Lexie’s Voice
Liberty Wildlife
Lily’s Pad
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
Maricopa Community College Foundation
Miracle League
Native American Connections
Opportunity 4 Kids
Paz De Cristo
Phoenix Zoo
Red Cross
Ronald McDonald House Charities
Ryan House
Salvation Army
St. Mary’s Food Bank
Southwest Autism Research & Resource Center
S’edav Va’aki Museum
Soldier’s Best Friend
Sounds of Autism
Starry Foundation
STARS
Southwest Human Development
Town of Gilbert
United Food Bank
U.S. Vets
VMLC
Veterans 5-9
Visit Mesa
Non-Core Current Grantees
Southwest Archaeology
Mesa Public Schools
OSBI – Culinary Equipment
Hugh O’Connor Pipe Band
Rancho Feliz Foundation
Southwest Archaeology
Teen Lifeline
University of Arizona – Native Arizona Museum of Natural History