Ninth Circuit Rules in Favor of Tribe in Pit River v. BLM III

Here is the opinion in Pit River Tribe v. Bureau of Land Management.

Briefs:

blm-opening-brief.pdf

pit-river-answer-brief.pdf

blm-reply.pdf

Pit River II materials here. Pit River I materials here.

Seminar: Federal Indian Law Past and Present

Elk River Law Office, P.L.L.P. is hosting a two-day Federal Indian Law Past and Present Seminar on October 23-24, 2019 in Las Vegas, N.V. CLE credits are pending. For more details click here.

South Dakota “Riot Boosting” Law Enjoined

Here are the materials in Dakota Rural Action v. Noem (D.S.D.):

9-motion-for-preliminary-injunction.pdf

24-motion-to-dismiss-sheriff-thom.pdf

28-motion-for-judgment-on-pleadings.pdf

36-response-to-24.pdf

38-reply-in-support-of-9.pdf

39-reply-in-support-of-24.pdf

40-reply-in-support-of-28.pdf

43-1-surreply.pdf

dkt-49-order-dismissing-sheriff-thom.pdf

dkt-50-order-granting-preliminary-injunction.pdf

Complaint posted here.

National Indian Law Library Bulletin (9/18/2019)

Here:

The National Indian Law Library added new content to the Indian Law Bulletins on 9/18/19.

U.S. Supreme Court Bulletin 
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/sct/2019-2020update.html
Petition for certiorari was filed in this case on 9/11/19: 
Sequoia Capital Operations v. Gingras (Tribal Sovereign Immunity)

Federal Courts Bulletin
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/federal/2019.html
Oertwich v. Traditional Village of Togiak (Banishment; Tribal Sovereign Immunity) 
Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation v. Newsom  (Tribal-State Compacts) 

U.S. Legislation – 116th Congress Bulletin 
https://narf.org/nill/bulletins/legislation/116_uslegislation.html
The following bill was recently proposed in the House: 
H.R.4289 – Bridging Agency Data Gaps and Ensuring Safety for Native Communities Act 

News Bulletin
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/news/currentnews.html 
This week, in brief:

  • Indian Programs Advanced Appropriations Act up for first hearing on Capitol Hill
  • ‘The Duwamish people are still here’: Tribe hindered by lack of recognition
  • New Mexico tribe loses claim to national preserve
  • Patawomeck artist challenges state laws and tribal leaders to define ‘Indian art’
  • Eastern Shoshone Tribe and Northern Arapaho Tribe expand partnerships with university
  • Groundbreaking set for National Native American Veterans Memorial

Bill C-92, An Act Respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis Children, Youth and Families

Government Bill (House of Commons) C-92 (42-1) – Royal Assent – An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families – Parliament of Canada

Somehow the final passage (“royal assent”) of this bill in Canada slipped our attention back in June. Initially, we saw it referred to as a “Canadian ICWA”, but it seems fair to say that it doesn’t quite achieve that level of protection for Native children and families. If nothing else, it illustrates just how differently the Canadian government engages with the tribal nations within its borders compared to the U.S.. We want to add a large caveat, which is that none of us are experts on Canadian law or child welfare.

However, those that are put together a really helpful publication which is available here, and is well worth your read (it made us think about if ICWA would get passing grades):

does-bill-c-92-make-the-grade_-full-report

From the Jurisdiction section of the report:

Why We Give the Bill a ‘D’ on this:

IN A HISTORIC FIRST FOR CANADA, the Bill purports to recognize Indigenous peoples’ inherent jurisdiction. For example, section 8(a) of the Bill affirms “the rights and jurisdiction of Indigenous peoples in relation to child and family services”. This positively worded language is also noted in the Bill’s introduction and summary. Similarly, section 18(1) states that the “inherent right of self-government recognized and affirmed by section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 includes jurisdiction in relation to child and family services, including legislative authority in relation to those services and authority to administer and enforce laws made under that legislative authority.” Section 18(2) affirms that this right includes the right to “provide for dispute resolution mechanisms.”

As there are no section 35 cases that recognize an inherent right of self-government for Indigenous Peoples or that have recognized an Aboriginal or Treaty right over child and family services law-making, this is a significant step forward.

This is not, however, a recognition of jurisdiction that removes all federal or provincial oversight, power or intervention. By recognizing jurisdiction over child and family services as a section 35 right, the federal government immediately re-asserts its power to unilaterally infringe or limit that right, a power upheld by court cases such as Sparrow. The legislation sets legal limits in terms of Indigenous laws being subject to Charter and Canadian Human Rights Act and the BIOC. It also sets practical limits in terms of the virtual necessity of negotiating coordination agreements with the federal and provincial governments, and in the glaring absence of any provisions for funding. At best, this could be interpreted as an acknowledgment of concurrent (or shared) jurisdiction, a matter on which Bill C-92 should be more clear.

***

Further, section 23 states Indigenous laws only authoritative if they can be applied in a way that “is not contrary to the best interests of the child.” As previously stated, Indigenous laws have upheld the best interests of Indigenous children for thousands of years. The concern about this limit is how the BIOC doctrine has been interpreted and applied by courts, non-Indigenous governments and decisions makers to apprehend Indigenous children and separate them from their families, communities and territories for the past 50 plus years.

Dry Creek Child Advocacy Skills Training

October 23-25, 2019

Healdsburg, CA

Dry Creek Child Advocacy Skills Training Save The Date PDF.

 

Dry Creek Child Advocacy Skills Training Save The Date.png

 

1819 Treaty Commemoration at MSU

Read more here from the MSU American Indian and Indigneous Studies/College of Arts and Letters and the MSU Native American Institute/College of Agricultural and Natural Sciences.

They Edweying Naabing//Looking at the Past and Present Symposium will be hosted at the MSU College of Law September 20-21, alongside Native Family Day at the Broad Art Museum September 21. Registration for the events is now closed because we have met capacity, but you can learn more about it on the event page.

Fond du Lac Ojibwe Sues EPA over Mine, “Existential Threat” to Tribe

Here is the complaint in Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa v. Stepp (D. Minn.):

1-complaint-3.pdf

Sequoia Capital Operations LLC v. Gingras Cert Petition [Chippewa-Cree Sovereign Lending]

Here:

petitionforwritofcertiorari-3.pdf

Question presented:

Where an arbitration agreement contains a separate “delegation provision” that reserves for an arbitrator the authority to decide any disputes concerning arbitrability, does Section 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act require a court to decide any challenge to that provision’s validity before the court may proceed to address whether the parties’ underlying dispute is arbitrable?

Lower court materials here.

Update:

BIO: BriefInOpposition

Tribal Water Law

8th Annual Tribal Water Law Conference

September 26-27, 2019

Hilton Resort & Villas, Scottsdale, AZ

Get some CLE’s and listen to Matthew Fletcher on Maintaining a Tribal Homeland in the Modern Era. More information here.