Book Announcement: Charles Wilkinson’s History of the Siletz Tribe

The People Are Dancing Again

The History of the Siletz Tribe of Western Oregon

CHARLES WILKINSON

To be published in November by the University of Washington Press!

Book website here. Book trailer here.

Here’s the blurb:

The history of the Siletz is in many ways the history of many Indian tribes: a story of heartache, perseverance, survival, and revival. The history of the Siletz people began in a resource-rich homeland thousands of years ago. Today, the tribe is a vibrant, modern community with a deeply held commitment to tradition.

The Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians-twenty-seven tribes speaking at least ten languages-were brought together on the Oregon Coast through treaties with the federal government in 1853-55. For decades after, the Siletz people lost many traditional practices, saw their languages almost wiped out, and experienced poverty, ill health, and humiliation. Again and again, the federal government took great chunks of the magnificent, timber-rich tribal homeland, reducing their reservation from the original allotment of 1.1 million acres-which reached a full 100 miles north to south on the Oregon Coast-to what is today several hundred acres of land near Siletz and 9,000 acres of forest. By 1956, the tribe had been “terminated” under the Western Oregon Indian Termination Act, selling off the remaining land, cutting off federal health and education benefits, and denying tribal status. Poverty worsened, and the sense of cultural loss deepened.

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Best News of the Day: Saginaw Chippewa Close to Settling Reservation Boundaries Case

From Indianz:

The Saginaw Chippewa Tribe has reportedly reached a deal over the boundaries of its reservation in Michigan.

The tribe sued the state to clarify the Indian Country status of the Isabella Reservation. The Department of Justice sided with the tribe and a tentative agreement could end the case, The Mt. Pleasant Morning Sun reported.

“All parties to this case have now reached tentative agreement regarding the terms of a global settlement of all disputes between them in this case,” according to a court filing, the paper reported.

The deal would include the state, Isabella County and the city of Mount Pleasant.

Get the Story:

Tentative deal reached in Tribal suit (The Mt. Pleasant Morning Sun 9/17)

More News Coverage of Seneca Tax Case

2010 09 14 Article re SNOI v Paterson Hearing

2010 09 14 Buffalo Business First Article – Senecas, NYS resu

News Analysis of Seneca Tax Case

An excerpt from the Buffalo News, via Pechanga:

WASHINGTON — Gov. David A. Paterson warned of possible “violence and death” if the State of New York actually tries collecting taxes on cigarettes sold from Seneca Nation of Indians territory, but lawyers in the know think that “appeals and amicus briefs” are more likely.

Rather than a rage of tire-burning along the Thruway, years of litigation are the more likely result of the state’s latest attempt to collect taxes on cigarettes sold on reservations to non-Indians, legal experts say.

The litigating has already begun in the Buffalo courtroom of U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara, and it is likely to continue for years, even though the U.S. Supreme Court in 1994 said that New York could collect such sales taxes. The legal fight continues because the high court did not give the state carte blanche to collect those levies any which way.

In fact, the 16-year-old decision in New York v. Attea left the Senecas plenty of legal room for courts to explore in later cases. For example, that case did not address the argument that the Senecas love to make publicly but that they have been reluctant to use in court: that the state’s effort to collect cigarette taxes on reservations is a violation of their treaty rights.

That’s just one of the open questions that could keep the Senecas’ tobacco business in court and on life support for a long time — even though the Senecas are likely to lose in the end. After all, in five cases from five states, the high court has approved efforts to tax sales to non-Indians on Indian land.

Despite those decisions, “the court specifically left a lot for later” in the 1994 case involving tobacco sales on New York reservations, said Joseph E. Zdarsky, the Buffalo lawyer who represented tobacco wholesaler Milhelm Attea in that Supreme Court case. Much of what the high court left undecided could be decided in the case the tribe filed before Arcara that takes issue with the state’s tax plan.

The tribe also filed a separate lawsuit challenging the PACT Act, the recently enacted federal law that bans the mailing of cigarettes. But given that the federal courts rarely overturn an act of Congress, legal experts dismissed that lawsuit as one with no future.

Similarly, they said the case the Senecas filed in state court against the state’s tax plan is not as significant as the tax case the tribe brought before Arcara — which, like other similar Indian tax cases, could be in the federal court system for years.

“These cases tend to go all the way,” Zdarsky said — that is, all the way to the Supreme Court. That’s because the federal courts have tended to decide Indian taxation cases narrowly, based on the particulars of each case, rather than issuing sweeping pronouncements.

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Update in Seneca v. Paterson Tax Case

As Indianz reported, the TRO has been extended to September 14, on which day there will be an evidentiary hearing (Pre-Hearing Order).

In addition to Cayuga, which intervened in the Seneca suit, and St. Regis Mohawk, Oneida (Oneida Nation complaint in NDNY) and Unkechauge (COMPLAINT – Unkechauge Indian Nation 08 27 10) have filed their own separate complaints alleging substantially the same claims as Seneca.

GTB Moves to Intervene in Asian Carp Suit

From Indianz:

The Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians filed a motion to join a lawsuit over Asian carp, an invasive species.

Five states are suing the federal government and the city of Chicago over efforts to limit the impact of the carp. The tribe wants to ensure that its treaty rights are protected throughout the litigation.

“Historically, fishing played a central role in the spiritual and cultural framework of Native American life,” the tribe said in the brief, the Associated Press reported. “Not only are the Great Lakes fish culturally important to the tribes, these communities depend upon fisheries resources for their livelihoods.”

A hearing in the case is set for September 7.

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Yakama Indian Nation Wins Preliminary Injunction against USDA in Hawaiian Dumping Case

Here are the updated materials in Yakama Indian Nation v. USDA (E.D. Wash.):

US Opposition to Motion for TRO and Preliminary Injunction

Yakama Reply in Support of Motion for TRO and Preliminary Inj

Bech Dec

Second Declaration of Rebecca Bech

Yakama Preliminary Injunction Order

Earlier materials on the TRO are here.

St. Regis Mohawk Tribe v. Paterson — Indian Taxation Complaint

Filed around the same time as the Seneca case, but in the Northern District of New York:

St. Regis Mohawk Complaint

Seneca Nation v. Paterson Update

Many more pleadings:

Memorandum in Opposition to Motion for Preliminary Injunction

Affirmation of Peter J Kiernan

Affirmation of Daniel Smirlock

Affirmation of Jamie Woodward

Cayuga Motion to Intervene

Cayuga Nation Motion for PI and TRO

Red Earth Memorandum in Support of Motion to Appear as Amicus

Prior materials here and here.

Update on Asian Carp Suit

From the CSM:

A judge on Monday scheduled hearings in an Asian carp case for September – a decision that will allow five Midwestern states to call on expert testimony. The five states are seeking to close two Chicago canals in a bid to stop Asian carp from entering the Great Lakes. A federal judge has set Sept. 7, 2010 as the next hearing in a multistate lawsuit demanding tougher action to prevent Asian carp from overrunning the Great Lakes. The five Midwestern states suing to keep Asian carp – the behemoths that gorge on plankton and leap 10 feet in the air – out of the Great Lakes claimed to score a legal victory Monday.

On Monday, a federal judge held an initial hearing and scheduled more hearings for expert testimony in early September. The Michigan attorney general’s office heralded the decision, since it will be the first time the case is heard on its merits. The Supreme Court earlier this year declined to take up the case.

The goal of the lawsuit is to force Chicago to shut down two locks except in cases of emergency, preventing Asian carp from using the canals to reach the Great Lakes. That plan has met with with fierce resistance from barge and tour boat operators.

But with carp DNA showing up near Lake Michigan and a bighead carp found in June just six miles from the lake – and beyond the electronic barrier that is supposed to keep it out – a number of groups are calling for drastic action before the fish can infiltrate the Great Lakes with potentially dire consequences.

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