‘Legal Limbo’: Fate of $400 Million Madera County Resort Unclear After Failed Supreme Court Bid
A $400 million casino resort that developers have been building along Highway 99 in Madera County may never open its doors.
At least, not without another extended legal battle. The California Supreme Court has declined to reconsider a lower court’s ruling that withdrew the state’s approval for the project. Work has continued on the project, however, at the North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians will search for an alternative solution.
The tribe has already been through two decades of regulatory and courtroom struggles to get to this point. The planned casino resort would offer 100,000 square feet of gaming on a 61-acre site and was scheduled to open in fall 2026.
The Supreme Court’s decision leaves in place a ruling by California’s Fifth District Court of Appeal, which found that California voters rejected Proposition 48 in 2014. Although the legislature ratified North Fork’s gaming compact, signed by the governor in 2012, the ruling voids that agreement as illegal for the state to have entered into.
Two Decades in the Making
The North Fork project is one of the longest-running sagas in U.S. tribal gaming. The North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians first came up with the idea in the late 1990s, seeing a casino as a path to economic independence and promising about 1,500 new jobs. The federal government recognizes over 2,500 tribal citizens in Madera County, yet North Fork is still among the California tribes without gaming revenue.
It finally held the groundbreaking ceremony in September 2024, with the tribal chairman describing it as the culmination of more than two decades of collaboration with governmental partners at every level.
The tribe has partnered with Station Casinos, a Las Vegas-based operator with an extensive portfolio. The operator has experience in the California market, having previously managed Graton Casino and Resort and Thunder Valley Casino Resort under seven-year agreements before returning them to their tribal owners.
The casino, if it even opens, will host over 2,000 slots and video poker machines. The plans also include 40 table games, two full-service restaurants, and over 3,000 parking spaces. The developers planned to add a 200-room hotel in a subsequent phase of development.
The Rivals Next Door
Sometimes, the fiercest opponents of tribal gaming are other tribes, and that has been the case here.
The Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians filed suit against North Fork’s plans in 2016. That tribe operates the Chukchansi Gold Resort and Casino in Coarsegold, which is only 36 miles from the North Fork project site.
Chukchansi Gold opened in June 2003 just off State Route 41, between Fresno and Yosemite National Park. With a 56,000 square-foot gaming floor, it would be dwarfed by North Fork’s resort. A new competitor on the Highway 99 corridor with about double the number of slot machines would almost certainly have put an end to its dominance in the region.
The Chukchansi tribe successfully argued that the 2014 statewide referendum invalidated the North Fork compact and the governor’s concurrence. North Fork appealed, but Madera County Superior Court concurred in 2024, granting summary judgment in Chukchansi’s favour. Next, the Fifth District upheld that finding in December 2025. The California Supreme Court’s refusal to take up the matter this month means the appellate decision now stands as the final word on the matter.
Picayune Rancheria Chairperson Deann Kamalani said in a statement to Tribal Business News that the “project was rejected at the ballot box, and the courts have now made clear that the outcome cannot be ignored or worked around.”
Federal Versus State Authority
North Fork has consistently argued that federal law, not California courts, governs its right to operate on land that federal authorities have already placed in trust and approved for gambling. The tribe made a statement to the Fresno Bee in which it remarked that “Federal approvals of the North Fork project occurred in 2012 and 2016, and the federal courts have since upheld each approval in final, non-appealable decisions.”
The appellate court disagreed and focused on the state’s gambling framework. The court said the project can’t proceed regardless of what federal authorities approve, because the governor’s concurrence is legally tied to the compact ratified by the legislature.
North Fork’s options to pursue this legal avenue are now at an end. It’s unclear what the tribe’s next move will be, especially as construction crews continue work on the project despite the lack of state approval. Every passing month will deepen the stakes for a tribe that has been waiting more than 20 years to open its first casino.
Image Credit: Ken Lund via Flickr (license)
Andrew has a lifelong love of sports, whether it’s golf, football, soccer, or basketball. He’s been an avid sports bettor for many years and regularly plays casino games such as blackjack and roulette, along with the occasional game of poker.
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