Karuk Tribe Wins Injunction against USFS Preemptive Forest Burn

Here is the order:

DCT Order Enjoining Orleans Project

From the order:

In light of the finding that defendants violated the National Historic Preservation Act, defendants are hereby ENJOINED from conducting further implementation of the Orleans Community Fuels Reduction and Forest Health Project until appropriate remedial measures are established to bring the project into compliance. Defendants shall submit a proposed remedial plan by NOON ON AUGUST 1, 2011. Plaintiffs may file a response to the proposal within TWO WEEKS of its submission. The plan then will be evaluated based on those submissions unless oral argument is found to be necessary, and if the plan is satisfactory the injunction will be lifted. In the meantime, the parties are strongly encouraged to work toward a solution at a June meeting before the July meeting they have planned.

Wash. Dept. of Corrections Issues New Regs on American Indian Religious Freedom

Here:

DOC 560200 Posted.

And here is news coverage. An excerpt:

The state of Washington’s Department of Corrections and United Indians of All Tribes Foundation have partnered to provide incarcerated offenders with religious support and resources.

Under an agreement signed last month, Seattle-based United Indians will provide religious services in the state’s 12 prisons, which, as of Dec. 2010, hold 1,620 American Indian/Alaska Native-affiliated inmates (though the actual population could be much more because many inmates don’t identify themselves as Native). The goal of the effort is to not only help offenders gain a greater sense of who they are but also to assist them transition more seamlessly into their respective communities.

“It’s extremely important for Indian Country to work collaboratively with the DOC to ensure Native inmates can freely exercise tribal religion, particularly as a means of rehabilitation and preparing them for their return to tribal communities and mainstream society,” said United Indians Vice Chairman Gabriel Galanda.

New Southern Ute Museum on NPR

The story is here.  The story about the museum is excellent.  The framing of the story as a “happy accident” and the “government’s blunder” is very strange–it was an accident and blunder that the Southern Utes remained on their land and are able to use their mineral resources for themselves?  Not being removed was a happy accident?

It’s not often that you hear of Native American tribes flourishing thanks to the U.S. government, but that’s what happened to Colorado’s Southern Ute.

With the help of a historic government blunder, the Southern Ute have become one of the country’s wealthiest tribes — so wealthy, in fact, that they’ve just transformed their old museum into an impressive new cultural center in Ignacio, Colo. It’s called the Southern Ute Museum and Cultural Center and it’s housed in a new $38 million building. The hope is that the center will help boost tourism, but it’s also meant to teach outsiders and tribal youth about Southern Ute history and culture.

History’s Happy Accident

In the late 19th century, the U.S. government divided the Ute people into three different tribes, sending them north or west and letting some stay where they were.

An excerpt from the better part of the story:

When the Southern Ute decided to diversify their already impressive financial portfolio by opening a casino, it became clear that the time had also come to update their museum.

“It was an awful little building, maybe not even 1,000 square feet,” Burch says. “So we decided to build a place where we could have a showcase for our children and grandchildren, and they would always know their culture.”

The community set out to retrieve Ute artifacts from all over the world and bring them home — priceless white clay pottery, intricate beadwork and glorious baskets by White Mesa weavers.

But for many Southern Ute, the most meaningful part of the museum is its display of family photographs. It was there that former tribal Chairman Matthew Box discovered a long-lost family photo.

“It is a picture that has my mother, my uncle Leonard, my grandpa and my dad and myself. And we’re all sitting around a drum,” Box says.

Box gets teary-eyed looking at it. He says he had never seen the photo — which was taken in the 1980s — before it was put on display at the museum.

 

 

SCIA Witness List with Links to Prepared Testimony

 Panel I

MR. DONALD “DEL” LAVERDURE, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington, DC

Panel II

MR. ROBERT T. COULTER, Executive Director, Indian Law Resource Center, Helena, MT

MR. JAMES ANAYA, Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, United Nations, Tucson, AZ

MR. LINDSAY G. ROBERTSON, Professor of Law / Faculty Director of the American Indian Law and Policy Center  / Judge Haskell A. Holloman Professor / and Sam K. Viersen Presidential Professor, University of Oklahoma College of Law, Norman, Oklahoma

MR. RYAN RED CORN, Filmmaker / Member, 1491s, Pawhuska, OK

Panel III

THE HONORABLE FAWN SHARP, President, Quinault Indian Nation, Taholah, WA

MR. FRANK ETTAWAGESHIK, Executive Director, United Tribes of Michigan, Harbor Springs, MI

MR. DUANE YAZZIE, Chairperson, Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission, Window Rock, AZ

MS. MELANIE KNIGHT, Secretary of State, Cherokee Nation, Tahlequah, OK

Yurok Tribe Presents Draft Legislation for the Transfer of National Park Land

An excerpt from the Times-Standard article:

According to the tribe, the draft legislation — which outlines the transfer of 1,204 acres of Redwood National Park land to the Yurok Tribal Park System — is a part of the tribe’s plans to reclaim ancestral territory. The tribe is scheduled to make a presentation on the matter to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday at 10 a.m.

The draft legislation also asks for an additional 285 acres of public lands and the inclusion of the California Coastal National Monument Redding Rock and would designate a conservation status to the Yurok Experimental Forest — 1,198 acres that are north of the national park land.

In a public meeting in March, tribal leaders spoke about the importance of the lands to the tribe’s culture, traditional hunting and gathering, and ceremonies. Environmentalists in attendance expressed concern over the precedent the legislation could set — transferring already protected land to a sovereign nation — particularly legislation that doesn’t come with a finalized management plan.

Yurok Tribe Policy Analyst Troy Fletcher said last week that the tribe has been working with groups since the meeting to address concerns in order to improve its draft before submitting it for consideration. He said the change in management is not intended to affect public access or the park land’s sustainability.

Saginaw Chippewa Indian tribe Accepts Mount Pleasant Indian School Grounds

From Indianz:

The Saginaw Chippewa Tribe of Michigan held a remembrance and healing ceremony on Monday at the site of the former Mt. Pleasant Indian Industrial School.

The school operated from 1893 to 1934. Officially, five children died there but a search of obituaries and local records turned up the names of nearly 150 more, whose names were read at the ceremony.

The city of Mt. Pleasant owns most of the site but the state deeded eight acres and six historic buildings to the tribe.

Get the Story:
Tribe remembers boarding school era, begins healing (The Mt. Pleasant Morning Sun 6/7)
Tribe plans day of remembrance, healing for June 6 (The Mt. Pleasant Morning Sun 5/31)

Arctic Slope Regional Corp. Challenge to USFWS Designation of Critical Habitat for Polar Bears

Here is the complaint in Arctic Slope Regional Corp. v. Salazar (D. Alaska):

Arctic Slope Polar Bear Complaint

The summary from the complaint:

1. When polar bears were recently listed as a “threatened” species under the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), it triggered a statutory duty for the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (the “Service”) to designate critical habitat to the extent prudent and determinable. The Service recognized that no on-the-ground North Slope activities (e.g., subsistence uses, oil and gas exploration activities) posed a threat to the species. Instead, the Service forecast that climate change was likely to cause sea ice to recede in the coming decades and that this would have a negative impact on polar bears.

2. The polar bear critical habitat designation is unprecedented in important ways. First, it is far and away the largest designation in history – covering 187,157 square miles along the North Slope. Second, it is not expected to result in a single additional conservation measure to help polar bears. The Service does not have the tools to address climate change, so instead it mechanically applied the critical habitat designation even though this action provides little to no assistance to polar bears and risks crippling the North Slope villages and Alaska Native communities in its path.

3. Alaska Natives have been the Arctic’s primary conservation stewards for thousands of years, carefully balancing subsistence needs and cultural traditions with a profound respect for polar bears and the other wildlife that share their habitat. As repeatedly recognized by the Service, Alaska Natives and other residents of the North Slope Borough are the key partners for any conservation efforts directed at polar bears. Their voluntary conservation efforts have been vital to getting the polar bear population to its current healthy status.

4. The Service’s designation of 187,157 square miles of critical habitat will disproportionately harm Alaska Natives and other North Slope Borough residents, the people who share habitat with polar bears and whose livelihood depends on those lands. As the Service has acknowledged, the listing of polar bears as a “threatened” species and the resulting critical habitat designation are both driven entirely by impacts associated with climate change. Alaska Natives and Borough residents did not cause and cannot halt the climate change at issue. The imposition of added government regulation pursuant to this critical habitat designation will not address the primary threat to polar bears, the loss of sea ice due to climate change.

5. Alaska Natives living on the North Slope are heavily dependent on their natural resources for survival. In particular, Alaska Native Regional and Village corporations in the area are employers, landowners, lessors of subsurface rights, and business partners with oil and gas companies and others working in the region. As a result of the critical habitat designation, the consultation requirements under Section 7 are expected to impair the ability of Alaska Natives to benefit from their natural resources, leading to a loss of jobs, income, tax revenues, royalties, and dividends for Native shareholders. Even relatively modest economic impacts from a designation could force Alaska Natives to abandon their ancestral villages in search of work.

Fort Erie (Ontario) Qualifiedly Approves Subdivision Expansion Into 5 Pre-Contact Aboriginal Archaelogical Sites

Fort Erie, Ontario, has recently approved a subdivision expansion into land that contains 5 recognized pre-contact archaeological sites.  However, that approval is contingent upon 47 requirements, of which #36 is…

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Prepared Statements in Yesterday’s SCIA Oversight Hearing on “Stolen Identities”

Here is the witness list, with links directly to their prepared statements:

The Honorable Tex Hall
Chairman
Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, and Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association, New Town, ND

Testimony here

Ms. Suzan Shown Harjo
President
The Morning Star Institute, Washington, DC

Testimony here

Ms. Charlene Teters
Professor
Studio Arts, Institute of American Indian Arts Santa Fe, NM

Testimony here

Panel #  2

Ms. Stephanie Fryberg
Associate Professor of Psychology
University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

Testimony here

Mr. Chaske Spencer
Actor/ Producer, and Partner
Urban Dream Productions, New York, NY

Testimony here

Mr. Jim Warne
President
Warrior Society Development, San Diego, CA

Testimony here

Durfeld v. Kurkiniemi: It’s Going to Cost Us A Lot Of Money To Build Over That Aboriginal Archaeological Site

In a property dispute between three tenants-in-common families (Durfelds, Sowdens, and Kurkiniemis) who were in the process of partitioning a 12 acre lot on Williams Lake in British Columbia, one of the families (Sowdens) contested the placement of a public access road.  Why?  Because the placement of the road in the proposed area would result in their property beginning 20 meters to the east, forcing them to spend a lot of money to allow them to build over “quiggly holes,”  aboriginal, archaeological underground houses.

Here’s an interesting site describing quiggly holes.

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