GTB Chair to Attend World Education Expo

Article here.

An excerpt:

 Representing a five-county region of Northwest Michigan, Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians Tribal Chairman Derek Bailey will participate in the 2011 World Forum on Early Care and Education.

The event will be held May 3 through May 6 in Honolulu, Hawaii.

During the World Forum, Bailey will meet with 40-50 Global Leaders to exchange knowledge and experiences about programs that directly improve and enhance care and education of young children.

Bailey was asked to represent the five-county region that includes Antrim, Benzie, Grand Traverse, Kalkaska, and Leelanau counties, and to participate in the Global Forum, by a group of organizations that include the Traverse Bay Area Intermediate School District (TBA-ISD), Rotary Charities, the NorthSky Nonprofit Network, and Mother Goose Time.  The five-county region is the region served by the TBA-ISD.

Although Bailey is the Tribal Chairman of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa & Chippewa Indians, he says he will participate in the World Forum as a representative of the five-county community.

Arizona Senate Bill 1610 — Makes the Colt .45 the State’s Official Firearm — Used to Kill Navajo People

Here’s the article on the approval of the bill.

Here is the Arizona Dems Press Release from a few days ago:

STATE CAPITOL, PHOENIX – House Minority Whip Anna Tovar released the following statement today on making the Colt Action Army Revolver the official state firearm (SB 1610), which passed the House and will be sent to the governor:

“Another day, another waste of taxpayers’ time and money at the state capitol. My family owns guns, and I’m embarrassed that state government chose to spend hours on a state gun — even brought it back on reconsideration after it was defeated — instead of changing one word in statute to ensure 20,000 Arizonans’ jobless aid isn’t cut off during tough times. This is absolutely ridiculous and offensive, and it’s even more humiliating that the weapon they chose isn’t even manufactured in Arizona . It’s time for a change.”

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Navajo Chamber of Commerce Formed

Here is the article from the Navajo Times.

H/T to V.H.

HuffPo Article on Catholic Church Sex Abuse on South Dakota Reservations

Here is the article.

Excerpts:

The letters are casual, even chatty, from officials of St. Francis Mission, on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation, in South Dakota, to Catholic Church superiors. The mission ran one of many boarding schools to which Native American parents were required to send their children from the late 1800s until the 1970s, when most of the institutions were closed down or transferred to tribal control.

“All goes along quietly out here,” one priest wrote in 1968, with “good religious and lay faculty” at the mission. There are troublesome staffers, though, including “Chappy,” who is “fooling around with little girls — he had them down the basement of our building in the dark, where we found a pair of panties torn.” Later that year, Brother Francis Chapman was still abusing children, though by 1970, he was “a new man,” the reports say. In 1973, Chappy again “has difficulty with little girls.”

Some documents are more discreet than explicit. In 1967, two nuns at St. Paul’s Indian Mission, on the Yankton Sioux Reservation, also in South Dakota, had excessive “interest in” and “dealings with” older male students, says a report to Church higher-ups. (St. Paul’s, pictured below, was renamed Marty Indian School when the tribe took it over in 1975; 2008 graduation tipis are shown in the foreground.) Another nun has “too close a circle of friends, especially two boys.”

What ex-students describe as rampant sexual abuse in South Dakota’s half-dozen boarding schools occurred against a backdrop of extreme violence. “I’ll never forget my sister’s screams as the nuns beat her with a shovel after a pair of scissors went missing,” said Mary Jane Wanna Drum, 64, who attended a Catholic institution in Sisseton, South Dakota, for the children of her tribe, Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate.

Izzy Zephier, 62, a Yankton Sioux tribal member, recalled a Sunday-evening ritual at St. Paul’s Indian Mission. “Those who’d tried to run away were stripped, lined up, and given 40 lashes each with a thick rubber strap,” he said.

News Coverage & Legal Pleadings in Grand Canyon Skywalk Dispute

Here are the initial pleadings in Grand Canyon Skywalk Development LLC v. Vaughn (D. Ariz.):

GCSD Complaint

GCSD Motion for TRO

And here is the article.

An excerpt:

Both sides have hired former U.S. attorneys: Paul Charlton, once the top federal prosecutor in Arizona, represents the Hualapais. Troy Eid, who held a similar position in Colorado, represents Skywalk Development.

According to the lawsuit, Jin negotiated a 25-year contract with a tribally owned company to build and operate the attraction for half of the proceeds. Jin claims to have received no revenue since the first year.

Jin previously had worked with Hualapai leaders to finance and establish helicopter, rafting and other tours on the reservation, where outside developers cannot operate without tribal permission.

Sarah Krakoff, a law professor and former director of the American Indian Law Clinic at the University of Colorado, said she is not familiar with the case but foresees political and economic damage if a tribe uses sovereign power to nullify a contract with an outside investor.

“There are risks for folks trying to do business in Indian country,” Krakoff said, “and if it is perceived that those risks are heightening, that could spell a concern.”

Robert Anderson, director of the University of Washington’s Native American Law Center, said Indian nations have broad authority over reservation activities and may be insulated from federal jurisdiction by sovereignty. Because of that, he said, tribes doing business with outsiders sometimes waive sovereign immunity for business purposes.

Anderson noted that the Hualapai Tribe will have to pay “just compensation” if it tears up Jin’s contract and risks being shunned by other investors.

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Chief Justice Roberts Misspells Coeur d’Alene Tribe … a few times

From How Appealing:

Even the Chief Justice of the United States misspells a case name every now and then: As though further proof that everyone’s human were needed, a reader emails to note that in his dissenting opinion issued today, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. has misspelled the “Coeur” in the case name Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho as “Couer” some three times. So, the next time you happen to misspell a case name, remember that you’re in good company.

The Bitter End of “Fighting Sioux” Hockey? Michigan Stuns UND

Go Blue!!!!

Here is the Michigan Daily coverage.

NYTs Coverage of SCT Oral Argument “Sparring”

Here is the article.

An excerpt:

At other times, Chief Justice Roberts must play the role of air traffic controller, trying to make sure his colleagues’ questions land one at a time without crashing into one another.

In November, at an argument over prison crowding in California, Justice Sotomayor jumped in while Justice Ginsburg was in the middle of a question.

“I’m sorry,” Chief Justice Roberts told the perplexed lawyer. “Could you answer Justice Ginsburg’s question first?”

Something similar happened at an argument over state secrets in January.

“Did the contract — ” Justice Kennedy started, just as Justice Sotomayor entered the fray.

“Counsel, you can’t ever give — ” she said.

Chief Justice Roberts made the call. “Justice Kennedy,” he said. After that exchange was complete, he said, “And now Justice Sotomayor.”

Something important is being lost in these rapid-fire exchanges, Mr. Wermiel said.

“A lawyer arguing a case may be only a few words into answering a multipart question from one justice before another justice interrupts to take the argument in a different direction entirely,” he said. “Some arguments now more closely resemble a Ping-Pong match than a dialogue or conversation.”

 

NYTs/Greenwire Coverage of Wilgus Decision

Here is the article.

 

Detroit News Coverage of Bay Mills Casino Shutdown

What we don’t understand is why the State of Michigan is taking credit for this one, given that the heavy lifting in opposing the Vanderbilt casino was done by Little Traverse.

Here is the article. And a map from the article:

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