Story About Harvesting Wild Rice on Michigan Public Radio

Podcast here , slide show here

Summary:

For thousands of years, Native American tribes in the Great Lakes region have been harvesting wild rice. They call it manoomin.

But over the past few centuries, this tradition has been dying out. The rice beds have been shrinking, and the cultural knowledge has been disappearing. Many tribes were forced to relocate away from the wild rice beds. Starting in the 1870s, some children were taken from their families, into boarding schools. They were given English names and cut off from their culture and from the knowledge of how to harvest rice.

In Michigan, some people are trying to bring the tradition back.

Getches Stepping Down as Dean

From the University of Colorado-Boulder Law School press release (h/t Faculty Lounge):

CU-Boulder Law School Dean Announces Intention to Resign in 2011

September 1, 2010

David Getches, dean of the Law School at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has announced that he intends to resign as dean effective June 2011.

Getches, who will stay at CU-Boulder as a law professor, said he is “eager to return to teaching and research.” Now in his eighth year as dean of CU-Boulder’s law school, Getches announced his resignation to the faculty on Aug. 20.

“I have reached this decision with confidence that the Law School is on a solid footing,” Getches said. “With the support of alumni, faculty, staff, students and donors, we have many achievements that distinguish Colorado Law among the nation’s best law schools.”

Interim Provost Russell Moore will appoint a search committee by the end of September.

“Dean Getches forever left his mark by guiding the Law School into a new era and into the state-of-the-art Wolf Law Building,” Moore said. “I am very pleased we will be able to retain his vast expertise in water, natural resources and Indian law as a continuing member of our faculty.”

Under Getches’ leadership, the academic offerings at the law school have been greatly expanded. New programs include an endowed Experiential Learning Program, three Master of Laws degrees, three legal clinics, three certificates and eight dual-degrees.

An active fundraiser, Getches has helped raise $28.5 million in donations, increasing the law school’s endowment 80 percent since 2003. The increase in fundraising allowed Getches to fulfill one of his primary initiatives, to significantly increase the number and amounts of law student scholarships to attract the most promising students, regardless of financial capacity.

Getches, who has been on the faculty since 1979, is the Raphael J. Moses Professor of Natural Resources Law. He teaches and writes on water law, public land law, environmental law and American Indian law.

Getches is a nationally renowned expert in natural resources and Indian law issues. A prolific writer, he has published several books on water law and has written many articles and book chapters on water, natural resources and Indian rights issues that have appeared in diverse scholarly and popular publications.

In 1970, he became the founding executive director for the Boulder-based Native American Rights Fund, a national, nonprofit Indian-interest law firm. From 1983 to 1987, he was executive director of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources under Gov. Richard D. Lamm. The department is responsible for the operation of 10 divisions of state government that deal with parks, wildlife, land, water and minerals. In 1996, he served as special consultant to the secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior.

Getches earned his undergraduate degree from Occidental College in California and his law degree from the University of Southern California School of Law.

Contact

Malinda Miller-Huey, 303-492-3115

Michigan Indian Day Information and Registration Forms

Ashley Harding, former Program Coordinator at the ILPC, has done an amazing amount of work for this year’s Michigan Indian Day program.  We know the whole day will be great, but are sure some will be very interested in the second keynote speaker.

During the administration of Governor William G. Milliken, the Legislature designated the fourth Friday of September as Michigan Indian Day (Act 30 of 1974, Section 435.161). To honor this day in the State of Michigan, the Michigan Indian Day Planning Committee through the Ingham County Health Department’s Native American Outreach Program is proud to announce the 9th Annual Michigan Indian Day Event, entitled Strengthening Health, Strengthening Families: Empowering Indigenous Communities.

The event will be taking place Friday, September 24 at the Hannah Community Center in East Lansing, Michigan. The conference this year will be discussing health inequity and health disparities among the American Indian/First Nations populations of Michigan.

Our keynote speakers will be:

Stacy A. Bohlen, Executive Director, National Indian Health Board (NIHB), Washington, D.C.

Daniel Levy, Director of Law & Policy at the Michigan Department of Civil Rights. He will be discussing recent changes made to the Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver and the American Indian/First Nations populations this is affecting.

Workshop discussions include:
– Urban Native youth programming and its importance,
– Tobacco use among American Indians
– Tackling health inequity and why,
– Indian child welfare updates,
– Tribes and environmental justice issues,
– and MORE…

Costs
The cost of registration is $30 for the General Public and $15 for Students and Elders. Registration costs include materials, refreshments and lunch. No cash will be accepted.

Scholarships
Scholarships are available for students and elders (55 & up). Due to the limited number of scholarships, the committee will be taking these applications on a first come first serve basis.

Registration
Participants have the opportunity to register online or print off the registration form and mail it. Registration forms mailed must include payment. For those who register online, payment must be received within two weeks of registration. Please note the registration deadline is Friday, September 17.

Webpage
http://hd.ingham.org/other-services/native-american-outreach-program/michigan-indian-day-/mid-registration-2010.aspx

Questions
If there are any questions, please contact Ashley Harding at 517.272.4127 or by email at aharding@ingham.org

We hope to see you in attendance.

Registration Form
Registration Form-Elder Scholarship

Registration Form-Student Scholarship

Registration Open for ILPC Conference

Registration is open for our 7th annual conference.  Please go to www.law.msu.edu/indigenous/conf/register.php to register.  Meals and materials are included in the conference fee.

For more information on the conference and a tentative schedule, go here.

New ILPC Fellow, Peter Vicaire

The ILPC Fellowship is a year long, so as we said good-bye to our old fellow, Alicia Ivory, we also say hello to our new one, Peter Vicaire.  Peter just finished up both his U.S. and Canadian law degrees from MSU Law and University of Ottawa Law.  Peter is Mi’kmaw from Quebec and will be posting on Canadian Indigenous issues, among other things.

Justice Weaver to Resign

The Traverse City Record Eagle broke the news this morning.  H/T Michigan Legal Blog, which also notes the replacement is likely to be Court of Appeals Judge Alton T. Davis:

WEAVER TO RESIGN

Justice ends 16 years on Supreme Court

BY BRIAN McGILLIVARY bmcgillivary@record-eagle.com

TRAVERSE CITY — Justice Elizabeth Weaver, of Glen Arbor, whose frequent battles with fellow Republican justices over the past decade exposed deep political and personal rifts on the Michigan Supreme Court, plans to resign today.

Weaver, 69, decided to step down after she secured Gov. Jennifer Granholm’s promise to appoint a northern Michigan jurist to replace her on the state’s highest court.

“I have done all that I can do as a justice and now believe that I can be of most use as a citizen in helping further the critically needed reforms of the judicial system,” Weaver said in an exclusive interview with the Record-Eagle. “Now I will be able to work and speak freely.”

Weaver said she would not have resigned without Granholm’s agreement to select a northern Michigan replacement. A justice from northern Michigan brings independence and a different perspective to a court currently dominated by justices from the Detroit to Lansing beltway, she said.

“I think I’m proof of the pudding; I’m independent,” she said. “That independent-thinking judge is not agenda-driven and does not hold to political party lines.”
Continue reading

Little River Band’s Fruitport Casino Compact Not Discharged From Committee

Yesterday the Michigan House had to clear the board to prevent a huge loss on the vote to discharge the compact (a concurrent resolution) from the Reg Reform committee.  The Muskegon Chronicle has the news story:

Fruitport casino plan gets the cold shoulder from Michigan House of Representatives

Published: Thursday, August 26, 2010, 12:33 AM     Updated: Thursday, August 26, 2010, 1:11 AM by Eric Gaertner

FRUITPORT TOWNSHIP — The chances of the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians building a casino at the former Great Lakes Downs racetrack site suffered a setback Wednesday.The state House, which is required to concur with a compact amendment allowing the tribe to open an off-reservation casino in Muskegon County, failed to even approve the discharge of the resolution from committee.

State Rep. Doug Bennett’s request to have his bill discharged was on the verge of defeat during a House floor vote Wednesday when he had the board cleared and his request withdrawn. Greg McCullough, Bennett’s legislative aide, said the roll-call vote was at 53-13 against the discharge when Bennett withdrew his request. Bennett, D-Muskegon Township, introduced the bill in April.

Even if the discharge vote had been approved, the resolution still would require a full House vote on whether to concur with the compact amendment signed by Gov. Jennifer Granholm and Little River Band Ogema Larry Romanelli earlier this year.

McCullough called Wednesday’s vote frustrating. Fruitport Township Supervisor Brian Werschem said it was beyond disappointing.

“The delay continues,” Werschem said. “I’m a little surprised that the Legislature would stall economic development in West Michigan. We were looking at bringing jobs, entertainment and dollars to this community.”

Robert Memberto, Little River Band’s commerce director, criticized House Speaker Andy Dillon for listening to lobbyists, other tribes worried about competition for their casinos and the Detroit corporate casinos. Dillon, D-Redford, ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for governor.

“Speaker Dillon is playing politics with jobs,” Memberto said.

Continue reading

Nottawaseppi Huron Pays Back Loan Early

From the Kalamazoo Gazette:

Alex Nixon

EMMETT TOWNSHIP — The Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, the Native American tribe that owns FireKeepers Casino, said today it paid off a $35 million loan four years earlier than its due date.

According to a press release, the loan was used to purchase FireKeepers’ 2,680 slot machines.

The tribe paid off the loan on Aug. 12, a year after the casino in Emmett Township opened its doors. The casino is located on Interstate 94, just east of Battle Creek.

“Paying off this loan four years in advance attests to the success of FireKeepers Casino,” Tribal Chairperson Homer A. Mandoka said in the release. “The Tribal Council accomplished this on behalf of its 1,146 tribal members.”

The $300 million casino employs 1,500 workers. It’s owned by the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, but managed by a separate company, Gaming Entertainment Michigan LLC. Gaming Entertainment is a joint venture between Full House Resorts Inc.  and RAM Entertainment LLC, a privately owned investment company.

The tribe also contributed four percent of the casino’s slot revenues to the State of Michigan.

2nd Circuit: Not Sure Why You Thought We Meant Laches When We Said Laches

In its most recent decision (covered here and here) the Second Circuit in County of Oneida finally acknowledged what we’ve known for some time–whatever the reasoning is behind Sherrill and Cayuga, it’s certainly not laches.  In a stunning, if hardly surprising, defeat, the Court determined that there is a new equitable defense that invokes the principles of laches, but is not actually laches.  The Court states that this new defense “is properly applied to bar any ancient land claims that are disruptive of significant and justified societal expectations that have arisen as a result of a lapse of time during which the plaintiffs did not seek relief.”  This is regardless of the fact that the claims may be “legally viable,” “within the statute of limitations,” are limited to “monetary damages,” and “sound at law.”

What is unsettling about this decision, besides the obvious loss to the tribe after 35 years of litigation, is that rather than acknowledging that the courts have been misapplying laches since 2005 in these cases, the Court simply created a new defense.  In the face of clear and concise criticism from scholars and the United States’ own brief, it would be difficult for a court to properly apply laches to these claims.  However, the idea that the Court would simply create a new equitable defense entirely is a fairly breathtaking development.  The fact that this defense also manages to defeat federal immunity only makes this decision even stranger.

Finally, we should note that this defense does not limit itself to Nonintercourse Act claims, but rather applies to any “ancient” land claims.  This fits clearly into Alex Skibine’s argument that the courts may create a “virulent brand of ‘exceptionalism’ in Federal Indian law where ‘general’ principles are developed and adopted under the guise that they follow general theories of public law applicable to anyone when, in reality, they can only adversely affect Native American interests.”  Technically the definition of this new defense does not require that the claims be Indian land claims, only that they must be “ancient” land claims.  This defense,  however,  would only ever apply to Indian tribes.  So the questions remain–when was the last time a court created an equitable defense?  When was the last time a court created an equitable defense that only applies to tribes?

Sherrill‘s equitable defense,” as the Court called it, is not simply laches, mostly likely because it deviates so clearly from 699 years of precedent.  As the Court admits, “it is true that the district court in this case did not make findings that the Oneidas unreasonably delayed in the initiation of this action or that the defendants were prejudiced by delay—both required elements of a traditional laches defense.”

Unfortunately for the tribe and the United States, the 2nd Circuit only illuminated this new defense after the parties put forth arguments as to why laches didn’t apply (for very different reasons) in their briefs.   It turns out that arguments against applying laches are not the same arguments that would work against a  Sherrill defense.  Indeed, it’s difficult today to see what arguments could be made against this new defense, so while we’re changing names, how about we stop calling it “equitable” as well?