Cache Creek Indian Casino California

Tribal Organization: Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation

14455 CA-16
Brooks, California 95606-0065

Cache Creek Casino Resort is a recreational facility that offers a variety of slots and games, such as blackjack and poker. The resort operates a hotel that provides dining, housekeeping, laundry and limousine transportation services and features more than 505-square-foot rooms and suites. It offers online reservation services. Rome2rio makes travelling from Fremont to Cache Creek Casino Resort easy. Rome2rio is a door-to-door travel information and booking engine, helping you get to and from any location in the world. Find all the transport options for your trip from Fremont to Cache Creek Casino Resort right here.

(530) 796-3118 - General Information
(800) 452-8181 - Toll Free California
(800) 992-8686 - Toll Free Nationwide
(888) 77-CACHE - Hotel Reservations

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Cache Creek Casino opened in 2004. It is located off Hwy 16 in Brooks, CA.

2019-2020 Expansion

After canceling previous plans for expanding its hotel, Cache Creek broke ground on a new hotel on June 1, 2017. The hotel will have 459 guest rooms, more meeting rooms, a ballroom and a new restaurant. A luxury spa reopened in January 2019. Final construction was scheduled for completion in March 2019, however, that date was not met.

In early January 2020 the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation fired and replaced the general contractor of the expansion project for non-performance. A new completion date has not been announced. See Story

News Headlines

Cache Creek Casino Resort fires hotel construction contractorJanuary 13, 2020 - The two new hotel towers under construction at Cache Creek were to open last March 2019. This week the general contractor was fired for non-performance, poor quality control, and... Read moreCache Creek Casino partners with SF 49ersSeptember 24, 2019 - Cache Creek Casino Resort is the official casino of the SF 49ers. The casino has similar sports partnerships with the Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings, San Jose Sharks and the Oakland A's.... Read moreCache Creek Casino expansion opens later in 2018
January 13,2018 - More details for the new expansion project were released today during the Woodland chamber of commerce luncheon. The presentation was for the Cache Creek Casino expansion. This will add... Read more More Headlines ...

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Gaming at Cache Creek

Open 24 hours daily
74,720 square-foot casino
2,400 slot machines - 200 in non-smoking area.
122 table games - Blackjack, Pai Gow poker, Mini-Baccarat, etc
High Stakes Table Area
- 2 Baccarat tables
- 12 Blackjack tables

Restaurants

C2 Steak & Seafood
Chang Shou
The Sports Page
Harvest Buffet
Canyon Cafe
The Deli
Asian Kitchen
Sweets, Etc.
Loco Express
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Resort Hotel

200-room luxury hotel
Day Spa
Gym
Swimming pool
Golf course
Reservations: (888) 77-CACHE

On June 1, 2017 construction began on a new hotel tower that will add 459 rooms, a new restaurant, pool, ballroom and more meeting space.

Driving Directions

From the Bay Area: Take Interstate 80 East to Interstate 505 North. Go approximately 20 miles, exit on Highway 16/Esparto, turn left at the light. Follow Highway 16 through Esparto, Capay and on to Cache Creek Casino Resort.

From Sacramento: Take Interstate 5 North through Woodland to the Esparto/Highway 16 exit. Turn left, then travel three miles to first stoplight. Turn right onto Highway 16, follow through the towns of Esparto and Capay and on to Cache Creek Casino Resort.

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News Articles

Cache Creek Casino Resort fires hotel construction contractor

January 13, 2020

Cache Creek Casino Resort has terminated its contract with Swinerton, the general contractor building Cache Creek's $180 million hotel expansion. The construction project includes two new hotel towers with 459 more guest rooms and suites, a pool complex, additional restaurants, and an event/entertainment center.

Construction began in May 2017 and was scheduled for completion in March of last year, however, it has not been finished.

Kari Stout-Smith, the General Manager of Cache Creek, said the reasons for terminating Swinerton includes 'non-performance, poor quality control and multiple missed milestones'. He explained:

'Significant efforts were made, including hiring an independent scheduling expert to ensure the project was delivered on-time and in accordance with the parties' contract. Despite ongoing efforts, it was determined the agreed-upon standards of quality would not be met. Ultimately, and only after an unsuccessful attempt to develop a constructive path forward with the current general contractor and multiple missed deadlines, the decision to terminate was reached. We have assessed the current state of the project and hired the necessary resources to complete the expansion, with a focus on the high quality that we and our guests expect.'

Anthony Roberts, tribal chairman of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, added:

'This decision was reached following considerable contemplation and more than one year of good-faith attempts to get the project completed. We are disappointed. This is not the outcome we expected, but we are fully committed to delivering a world-class product to guests of our casino resort.'

Hill International, Inc. will replace Swinerton and finish the project. Hill is a global company that has worked on other casino projects including Wynn Encore, The Cosmopolitan Resort & Casino, Tropicana Hotel & Casino and Northern Quest Resort.

A new opening date for the hotel expansion has not been determined. It is expected to be sometime in 2020.

Cache Creek Casino partners with San Francisco 49ers

September 24, 2019

Cache Creek Casino Resort is now a promotional partner of the San Francisco 49ers. Cache Creek has similar partnerships with other professional sports teams - Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings, San Jose Sharks and the Oakland A's.

The multi-year agreement provides for co-branded TV/radio ads, digital media campaigns and in-stadium co-branded signage. In addition:

  • Cache Creek will offer special fan promotions at Levi's® Stadium and at the casino throughout the season.

  • Cache Creek will be the presenting sponsor of the 49ers pre-game and post-game radio shows.

  • Cache Creek Casino Resort will launch 49ers Faithful activations around Levi's® Stadium for the 2019 season.

  • Cache Creek will provide digital prize giveaways for fans at each game.

  • Creek Casino Resort signage will appear on the visiting players tunnel behind the northwest end zone.

  • Cache Creek will be the presenting sponsor of the Faithful Appreciation game in the December Rams-49ers game.

  • Cache Creek will host an onsite guest engagement location.

  • Cache Creek will sponsor special VIP guests experiences.

The multi-year partnership was announced Sep. 19 by the San Francisco 49ers. In a released statement, Brent Schoeb, Chief Revenue Officer of the team, said

Indian

'As premiere entertainment providers rooted in Northern California, the 49ers are excited to welcome Cache Creek Casino Resort as a corporate partner supporting our efforts to bring the game to 49ers fans everywhere. As Cache Creek continues to expand its entertainment destination, it will afford the 49ers Faithful new opportunities on game days and non-game days for many seasons to come.'

The 49er-Cache Creek partnership also includes the tribal owners of Cache Creek Casino, the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation. The tribe will promote its Seka Hills brand of specialty foods including olive oils, wine, honey, nuts, beef jerky and beef sticks.

Cache Creek Casino expansion opens later in 2018

January 13, 2018

More details for the new expansion project were released today during the Woodland chamber of commerce luncheon. The presentation was for the Cache Creek Casino expansion. This will add an event center, 459 hotel rooms, and a restaurant. The casino is owned by the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation.

300 jobs will be created by the expansion project.

Club 88 can host 750 guests. The new event center will be able to double the number of guests. The casino is hopeful that the new center will attract more entertainment and larger acts.

Renovations will also be occurring at Chang Shou, Common Cafe, and C2 restaurants. Chang Shou will have 64 seats. Common Cafe will also increase seating for 40 to 50 guests. The new hotel tower will be the new location for C2.

A satellite office in Natomas will be the location for hiring and recruiting for the new jobs being added at Cache Creek. The office will open in March. Hiring will begin in June.

The casino employee base is made up of 40 percent Woodland residents. When the expansion is completed, it is expected that more Woodland residents will be working there.

Other plans for the expansion include an adult only pool, larger spa, conference and ballrooms, and a sushi restaurant.

2019 is the estimated construction completion date.


News Headlines Continued

06.01.2017 Cache Creek begins hotel expansion construction04.05.2017 Cache Creek Casino plans $200 million hotel expansion


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(Redirected from Cache Creek (Sacramento River))
Cache Creek
Cache Creek, Upper Yolo County section, California
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionYolo County, Colusa County, Lake County
Physical characteristics
SourceClear Lake
⁃ locationsouthwest of Clearlake, California
⁃ coordinates38°56′10″N122°38′35″W / 38.93611°N 122.64306°W[1]
MouthCache Creek Settling Basin
east of Woodland, California
⁃ coordinates
38°41′24″N121°41′30″W / 38.69000°N 121.69167°WCoordinates: 38°41′24″N121°41′30″W / 38.69000°N 121.69167°W[2]
30 ft (9.1 m)[2]
Length87 mi (140 km)
Basin size1,139 sq mi (2,950 km2)
Discharge
⁃ locationYolo, CA
⁃ average533 cu ft/s (15.1 m3/s)
⁃ minimum0 cu ft/s (0 m3/s)
⁃ maximum41,400 cu ft/s (1,170 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries
⁃ leftNorth Fork Cache Creek, Bear Creek

Cache Creek is an 87-mile-long (140 km)[3]stream in Lake, Colusa and Yolo counties, California.

  • 8Notes

Course[edit]

Cache Creek starts at the outlet of Clear Lake. It has two main tributaries: North Fork (starting in the Mendocino National Forest north of Clear Lake, and dammed by the Indian Valley Reservoir); and Bear Creek (starting in Bear Valley).

The Capay Diversion Dam, west of Capay, diverts water for distribution throughout Yolo County using a network of canals. At the end of the Capay Valley, near Esparto, Cache Creek runs east into Sacramento Valley, ending in a settling basin east of Woodland, the overflow of which runs into the Sacramento River through a flood control canal.

In addition to the recreational use of Clear Lake and Indian Valley Reservoir there are numerous trail-heads, parks and campgrounds, including the Bear Valley wildflower hotspot. Bear Creek and Cache Creek run in a scenic canyon along State Route 16 in Colusa and Yolo county, including the Cache Creek Regional Park. Cache Creek provides white-water rafting, both in the spring when it is flooded, and through the summer using the agricultural water flow. The entire area south of Route 20 and west of Route 16 is a wildlife preserve, hosting two herds of Tule Elk.

History[edit]

Cache Creek Indian Bingo & Casino California

The name of the water body comes from Hudson's Bay Company trappers who cached their furs along the Sacramento River and smaller tributaries, one of which became known to them as Cache Creek. One of their camps, recognized by early settlers as French Camp, was situated in a grove of oaks on the north bank of Cache Creek one mile (1.6 km) east of the present town of Yolo, California. Cache Creek was originally known to the Hudson's Bay Company trappers as Rivière la Cache.[4]

Cache Creek was temporarily blocked north of Rumsey by a landslide caused by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake : Our Rumsey correspondent mentions the fall of Cache Creek as a result of an earthquake shock Tuesday night. The water has continued to fall some since that date and in some places it is dry. Upon investigation by the officials of the Water Company it was found that a landslide had dammed the Creek near the Leonard ranch in Lake county....[5] The creek subsequently broke through, causing severe flooding in Rumsey.[6][7]

Geography[edit]

Cache Creek has two main tributaries: North Fork, and Bear Creek.[8]

Cache Creek begins at the south-east end of Clear Lake (for which it is the outlet), flowing east to the dam which now controls the level of Clear Lake.

The North Fork begins in Lake County in the Mendocino National Forest north of Upper Lake. It flows east, where it is joined by Bartlett Creek, and is then dammed by the Indian Valley Reservoir. It then flows south along New Long Valley Road, and turns east along State Route 20, which it crosses at the Cache Creek Recreation Area.

Cache Creek runs north-east from the dam, behind Perkins Creek Ridge and over The Jams Waterfall before joining the North Fork about 2 miles east of the bridge over Route 20.

Bear Creek starts in Bear Valley and runs south through a canyon (joining Sulphur Creek near Wilbur Springs) until it meets Route 20. It then runs east in parallel with Route 20 for a few miles, and turns south, again cutting through a canyon following State Route 16 in Colusa and Yolo Counties.

Meanwhile, Cache Creek cuts south-east between Cache Creek Ridge (on its north bank) and Little Blue Ridge (south bank), joining Bear Creek at Route 16 near the junction of Lake, Colusa and Yolo counties. The combined Cache Creek continues in the canyon until it emerges north of Rumsey in Capay Valley.

The Capay Diversion Dam, west of Capay, diverts water for distribution throughout Yolo County using a 175-mile (280 km) network of canals.

At the end of the Capay Valley near Esparto Cache Creek runs east into Sacramento Valley, ending in a settling basin east of Woodland.[9] If the Sacramento river is not in flood then any overflow runs into the Tule Canal,continues as Prospect Slough and finally enters the Sacramento River at Cache Slough. If the Sacramento IS in flood, then the overflow from the settling basin is swept into the Yolo Bypass and Sacramento Bypass flood control system, emerging directly at Cache Slough.

Hydrology[edit]

Cache Creek, in a canyon with native chaparral and woodlands habitat vegetation, in Lake County, northern California

Water rights and flooding protection have been in dispute between Yolo and Lake Counties since the late 19th century.

The Yolo County Flood Control & Water Conservation District ('Yolo') has 'an 1855 priority right to divert the natural flow of Cache Creek, and 1912 priority right to store waters in Clear Lake to elevation 7.56 feet Rumsey Gauge for later release and beneficial use.' Various decrees attempt to ensure a balance between the needs of the two counties, although high-water conditions can cause temporary disagreements. Under the Solano Decree Yolo currently holds appropriative rights for up to 150,000 acre feet (190,000,000 m3) per year from Clear Lake, and all the water from the Indian Valley dam.[10]

The Cache Creek Dam on the South Fork of Cache Creek, five miles (8 km) downstream from Clear Lake, was built to increase Clear Lake's capacity and to regulate outflow for downstream users of Cache Creek water. The dam was later modified to include a 3 MW hydroelectric plant. The stream has a relatively small capacity, less than a quarter of the amount the dam is able to release. There is a rock ledge a mile and a half downstream of Clear Lake, called the Grigsby Riffle, near the bridge on State Route 53. This ledge restricts the amount of water that can flow through at that point. The limited capacity of the stream means that it takes a very long time to drain excess flow from Clear Lake, increasing the chance of flooding around the lake. The bottleneck is seen as a backup to prevent flooding downstream and Yolo County is prohibited from increasing the capacity of the channel by the Gopcevic and Bemmerly Decrees.

The Indian Valley dam on the North Fork of Cache Creek forms Indian Valley Reservoir. The dam's primary purpose is water storage for irrigation, but a 3.3 MW hydroelectric plant was built to take advantage of the falling water.

The Capay Diversion Dam, west of Capay, diverts water for distribution throughout Yolo County using a 175-mile (280 km) network of canals. For example, water is pumped into the Winters Canal, which runs south and ends in a reservoir near Winters. This feeds into Willows Canal, which runs east for miles alongside Putah Creek—the water of which is used primarily by Solano County.[11] The 474 foot long, 15 foot high concrete dam was constructed in 1914. In 1994 its apron was raised with a 5-foot high inflatable bladder (the 'longest in the world'), which can be raised or lowered in 30 minutes. It underwent substantial repairs starting in 2009.[12][13]

Wildlife and Recreation[edit]

A large part of the creek within Lake County is designated a Wildlife Area by the state of California and the federal Bureau of Land Management, on which vehicles are prohibited but hiking, primitive camping, and hunting are allowed. The North Fork and Bear Creek each host a growing population of the rare tule elk, plus winter populations of bald eagles. The ruggedness of the area tends to ensure its isolation from human activity. In 2006 the United States Congress designated 27,245 acres (110 km²) of the area as the federally protected Cache Creek Wilderness. Cache Creek Conservancy [14] has restored a 130-acre Cache Creek Nature Preserve area downstream in the watershed.

Whitewater boating on Cache Creek includes kayaking, rafting, canoeing and innertubing which are popular in the summer using the water released from the dams for downstream agriculture.[15][16]

Nominally a tributary of the Sacramento River, Cache Creek now only reaches it during extremely wet years due to damming and diversion of the stream's water. Degradation of the channel caused by invasive plants, such as Arundo donax and Tamarix spp., as well as gravel mining has left no suitable habitat for Chinook salmon and steelhead to spawn, even if there is enough water. Consequently, there are no longer any anadromous fish species in Cache Creek.

The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment released an advisory regarding eating fish caught from this creek based on the mercury level.[17]

Cache Creek Casino Events

State Wild and Scenic River[edit]

Cache Creek was added to California's Wild and Scenic Rivers System in October 2005[18] which protects 31 miles (50 km) of the river from construction of new dams or diversions. Assembly member Lois Wolk introduced AB 1328 in 2005 which received support as well as opposition. New dam construction on Cache Creek was being considered in 2002 by the Yolo County Water District, the agency that had built the Indian Valley Dam and the present dam on Cache Creek.[19]

Cache Creek Casino Entertainment

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

Cache Creek Casino Brooks Ca

  1. ^U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cache Creek
  2. ^ abU.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cache Creek Settling Basin
  3. ^U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National MapArchived 2012-03-29 at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 10, 2011
  4. ^http://www.pa-roots.com/~yolo/maps/locations1.html#C[permanent dead link]pa-roots.com
  5. ^http://web.gps.caltech.edu/~meltzner/1906/1906-OFR.pdf
  6. ^http://www.yolocountyhistory.com/items/show/2554 Damage caused at the Rumsey Depot Caused by 1906 earthquake and resulting flood. The earthquake created a rock slide which blocked cache creek. The resulting floodwaters washed out the Rumsey Depot. Several damaged buildings are visible in the picture.
  7. ^http://www.yolocountyhistory.com/items/show/2555 .. Trees have been toppled over and are being pushed downstream by the floodwaters.
  8. ^National Maps Viewer. 'Cache Creek Hydrography'. Map. USGS. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  9. ^'Yolo County Flood Control & Water Conservation District', Floodplain Interrupted: The Story of the Cache Creek Settling Basin(PDF), retrieved 23 June 2014
  10. ^'WMP District Water Supply'. Article. Yolo County. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  11. ^Jenkins, Mimi. 'Conjunctive Use without management'. Masters Thesis. UC Davis. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  12. ^Moyle, Peter (4 March 2011). 'Capay Diversion Dam is key to Yolo County's water works'. The Davis Enterprise. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  13. ^Sabol, George. 'Capay Diversion Dam Modernisation'(PDF). Report. Yolo County Flood Control and Water Conservation District. Retrieved 16 February 2014.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^'Cache Creek Conservancy'. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  15. ^Tuthill, Bill. 'Cache Creek in Capay Valley'. Guide. California Creeks. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  16. ^Tuthill, Bill. 'Bear Creek into Cache Creek'. Guide. California Creeks. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  17. ^Admin, OEHHA (2014-12-30). 'Cache Creek'. OEHHA. Retrieved 2018-06-11.
  18. ^Logson, Terre (October 12, 2005). 'Cache Creek Bill Signed'. Sacramento River Portal and Library website. Lake County Record Bee. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008.
  19. ^'Cache Creek Bill Progresses Despite Opposition'. Headwaters. Friends of the River (Spring 2005): 14.

References[edit]

  • Trust for Public Land (PDF)
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