National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges (NCJFCJ) Announces Search for CEO

From the job announcement:

After five years of consistently strong stewardship under its current Chief Executive Officer (CEO), the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges (NCJFCJ) is embarking on a transition to new leadership. To guide the organization through this transition and beyond, the NCJFCJ is seeking a dynamic, inspired leader to make an extraordinary impact. This experienced executive will lead the organization during a time of exciting growth and development. The right candidate is hands-on, ambitious, can demonstrate a track record of strategic leadership, can advocate passionately for healthy courts and their connection to healthy communities, and is inventive and creative in increasing and diversifying revenue streams to ensure long-term sustainability. The CEO will lead a dedicated staff in accelerating and enhancing the dynamic, innovative programming the NCJFCJ is known and respected for nationwide.

Interested candidates must apply by February 28, 2016.

Link to details here

 

 

2016 NNALSA Moot Court Request for Judges

Link to announcement here.

Link to registration here.

This year’s competition is March 5-6 at Michigan State College of Law.

University of Arizona’s 4th Annual Tribal Lands Conference Coming January 25-26

Final conference announcement here.

Previous coverage here.

This year’s conference is focused on the American Indian Probate Reform Act of 2004.

Indigenous Summer Intensive

This May, the University of Victoria Law School is running a month-long Summer Intensive in Indigenous Law and Comparative Indigenous Legal Issues. Both Val Napoleon and John Borrows are teaching.

They accept other law professors, for-credit students, as well as students/lawyers who may want to audit the courses.

There are different application deadlines for credit vs. non-credit students. Here is the information:

http://www.uvic.ca/law/about/indigenous/indigenoussummerintensive.php

Here is an example of work from the Indigenous Law Research Unit:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uNgq7raxk4

Please feel free to write Val Napoleon, John Borrows, or Janet Person, the admissions officer, if you have any questions (1-250-721-8155).

Seminole Nation Seeks District Judge and Supreme Court Justice

Here.

Save the Date: 4th Annual Tribal Lands Conference

Link to announcement here.

Registration open for the University of Arizona College of Law’s 2-day conference in January.

Save the Date: N. Scott Momaday at U-M

The Inaugural Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr. Lecture
in Native American Studies

An Evening with N. Scott
Momaday

Friday, March 11, 2016
6:00 – 7:30 PM
Michigan League Ballroom
Reception to follow lecture

Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, Native American scholar, and poet N. Scott Momaday has been hailed as “the dean of American Indian writers” by the New York Times.  He crafts — in language and imagery — majestic landscapes of a sacred culture.

Named a UNESCO Artist for Peace and Oklahoma’s poet laureate, he was also a recipient of the 2007 National Medal of Arts, presented by President George W. Bush.  Momaday was the first Native American to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his novel, House Made of Dawn, widely considered to be the start of the Native American Renaissance.  His most recent volume, Again the Far Morning: New and Selected Poems, was released in 2011.

His other awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship and the “Mondello,” Italy’s highest literary honor. His works include The Way to Rainy Mountain, The Names: A Memoir, The Ancient Child, and a new collection, Three Plays, which celebrates Kiowa history and culture.  He was featured in the Ken Burns documentary, The West, that showcased his masterful retelling of Kiowa history and mythology.

For more information, contact Scott Lyons, Director of Native
American Studies at U-M (lyonssr@umich.edu).

Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr. (1931-2012) was an historian and a leading scholar in the field of Native American studies. The author of many influential books, including The White Man’s Indian: Images of the American Indian from Columbus to the Present (1978), Berkhofer taught at Michigan from 1973-1991.  This annual lecture on Native American Studies honors his work and legacy.

MCN Adopts Free Press Legislation for Mvskoke Media

Muscogee (Creek) Nation introduces protections for tribal media

NORMAN, Okla. – The Muscogee (Creek) Nation (MCN) added free press protections for the tribe’s media division, Mvskoke Media, with the passage of a free press act.

The MCN National Council passed NCA 15-218 by a unanimous vote of 14-0 during the Sept. 26 meeting at the tribal headquarters in Okmulgee, Okla. MCN Principal Chief George Tiger signed the legislation into law Oct. 8.

The council cited access to information and a need for an independent media with stronger objective reporting by the tribe’s media department as findings of support for the amendment.

Reps. Thomas Yahola, Pete Beaver, Johnnie Greene, David Nichols, Dode Barnett, Joyce Deere, Frank Coachman, Mark Randolph, Lucian Tiger, David Hill, Robert Hufft, James Jennings and Adam Jones co-sponsored the legislation.

The department includes a semi-monthly newspaper, weekly radio and television broadcasts and graphic design and printing services.

Mvskoke Media was previously organized under the tribe’s executive branch.

Sterling Cosper, editor of the tribe’s official newspaper, the Muscogee Nation News, said the passage of the act is a positive first step toward an independent press.

“Officially confirming the fourth estate to the framework of our government is an imperative exercise in tribal sovereignty and self-governance,” he said. “We intend to perpetuate this exercise by immediately utilizing the protective provisions of this bill to fulfill its purpose of bringing fair and balanced accounts of MCN affairs to the citizens.”

Jason Salsman was named interim manager of the department earlier this year. He is also the multimedia producer and host of Native News Today, the only all-Native news format currently airing on network television in the state of Oklahoma.

“The citizens will get timely, pertinent news from credible journalists with excellent sources and documentation to back their work,” Salsman said. “The fact that the fourth largest tribe in America will fund a department to be the watchdog sends a clear, concise message that transparent government is a top priority. My hope is that many others will do the same.”

The amendment established an independent three-member editorial board, which oversees Mvskoke Media, without influence from the tribal government.

The executive branch, legislative branch and Mvskoke Media are each responsible for nominating one member to the newly established three-person editorial board. Each member will serve a three-year term.

Travis Snell and Rebecca Landsberry were confirmed as board members by tribal resolution Oct. 31 during the MCN National Council quarterly session.

As of press time, a third member has not yet been nominated.

Snell is a member of the Cherokee Nation and serves as the associate editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, the oldest Native American newspaper. The Phoenix is one of a handful of tribal media outlets with free press protections currently in place. He is a longtime member of the Native American Journalists Association (NAJA).

NAJA is a nonprofit organization educating and connecting its membership through programs that promote diversity and defend challenges to free press, speech and expression. NAJA currently has more than 500 members across the U.S., and Canada covering Native communities through local, tribal and mainstream media.

Landsberry is a Muscogee (Creek) citizen and former editor of the Muscogee Nation News. She is the current NAJA interim executive director and treasurer for the Native Health News Alliance.

Landsberry says freedom of the press empowers tribes.

“It is essential for these journalists covering stories in Native America to have autonomy and the means to hold those in power accountable to the citizens,” she said. “This historic act will continue to strengthen tribal sovereignty and is a tremendous accomplishment for NAJA members there in Mvskoke Media, the Muscogee (Creek) Nation and Indian Country.”

Cosper said the next step will be to add a freedom of information act (FOIA).

“We encourage citizens and officials alike to strengthen our role in the checks and balances system by supporting the passage of a FOIA, which will provide attributive documentation for the content of our coverage,” Cosper said.

Cosper said the department aims to ask for citizen input with adding free press language directly into the MCN Constitution, in addition to the new code of law.

“Through this, citizens would vote to add us as a functioning body of the foundational document for MCN government with their approval being the only means to reverse it,” Cosper said.

MCN is the fourth largest Native American tribe in the U.S., and includes more than 79,000 citizens across the globe. It is the third tribe in the state of Oklahoma to enact free press protections, following the Osage Nation’s passage of the Independent Press Act in 2008 and the Cherokee Nation’s Independent Press Amendment in 2009.

New BIA Rights-of-Way Regulations: Webinar on Significant Opportunities for Indian Country

On November 17th the Department of the Interior published a final rule on Rights-of-Way on Indian Lands. The new regulations go into effect on December 21, 2015 and will have a substantial impact throughout Indian Country, particularly in eliminating state taxation, creating opportunity for new revenue streams for tribes, and increasing compensation for “piggybacked” uses. Virtually every reservation has multiple rights-of-way for varied purposes. These regulations contain a great deal of opportunity for tribes, but will require action and attention.

To prepare for the implementation of this final rule, NCAI is hosting a webinar to review the Rights-of-Way regulations, and will include discussion with BIA Realty on how to get started reviewing your rights of way. We will also have a discussion on negotiating. Please join us on December 11, 2015 at 2:00 pm EST. Register here.

David Mullon, former Chief Counsel of Senate Committee on Indian Affairs will offer an overview of the regulations.

Sharlene Roundface, Chief, BIA Division of Real Estate Services will share information on how to find documentation of existing Rights of Way

Stephen LeCuyer, Tribal Attorney for Swinomish Tribe, will related the Swinomish Experience with implementing tax provisions in the similar BIA Leasing regualations.

David Harrison, past Director, BIA Office of Trust Services, will discuss experiences in negotiating rights-of-way.

DOI Rights-of-Way Regulations – Final Rule

Highlights of this final rule include:

  • “Piggybacked” uses must be compensated, likely increasing values significantly;
  • State taxation of Rights of Way preempted;
  • Significant opportunity to create new sources of tribal tax revenue;
  • Simplified requirements and clarified processes for BIA review;
  • Streamlined process for obtaining a right-of-way on Indian land by eliminating the need to obtain BIA consent for surveying and establishing timelines for BIA review;
  • BIA disapproval only where there is a stated compelling reason;
  • Providing Indian landowners with notice of actions affecting their land;
  • Greater deference to individual Indian landowner decisions;
  • Promoting tribal self-determination and self-governance by providing greater deference to Tribes on decisions affecting tribal land;
  • Clarified tribal jurisdiction over lands subject to a right-of-way; and
  • Incorporating tribal land policies in processing.

NCAI Contact Information: Colby Duren, Staff Attorney & Legislative Counsel, cduren@ncai.org,  or Christina Snider, Staff Attorney, csnider@ncai.org