Here are the materials in State of Texas v. Astorga (Tex. Ct. App. El Paso):

October – December 2021 | Virtual Event // MCLE Credits Pending
ALL SESSIONS VIRTUAL. ZOOM LINKS SENT DIRECTLY TO REGISTERED ATTENDEES. 7.0 MCLE
CREDITS (CA) WILL BE SOUGHT.


12:00 PM – 1:00 PM PST – 1.0 MCLE Credit
ETHICS PANEL – SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Attorneys should be aware of the professional obligations that could be adversely affected by
issues associated with substance abuse. Panelists will discuss how to recognize substance
abuse, behaviors that indicate it may be time to seek help, and the potential impacts of
untreated substance abuse on an attorney’s legal and professional responsibilities.
Virginia Hedrick, California Consortium for Urban Indian Health
Lauren van Schilfgaarde, UCLA School of Law
FOLLOWING EACH PANEL, JOIN CILA FOR THE OPPORTUNITY TO NETWORK AND
SOCIALIZE WITH YOUR COLLEGUES AND A CHANCE TO WIN A GIVEAWAY!
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM PST – 1.0 MCLE Credit
TAXATION: HOT TOPICS
Join our expert panelists for a lively discussion surrounding taxation in Indian Country. This panel will provide an overview of current tax legislation affecting Tribal communities in the State of California
Michelle LaPena, Rosette, LLP
Maria Brosterhous, Franchise Tax Board
James Dahlen, California Department of
Tax and Fee Administration
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM PST – 1.0 MCLE Credit
INDIGENOUS LANDBACK
Indigenous landback experts will share
updates on the federal fee-to-trust
process and the California Public Utilities
Commission’s recently-adopted policy
addressing land repatriation from
investor-owned utilities
Commissioner Darcie L. Houck,
California Public Utilities Commission
Charles W. Galbraith, Jenner & Block
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM PST – 1.0 MCLE Credit
INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS
Physical and cultural infrastructure form the foundation for sovereignty and self-determination. Panelists discuss recent developments in federal funding opportunities that build on existing infrastructure trends.
Dawn Sturdevant Baum, Yurok Tribe
Sorhna Li (Jordan), Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians
FOLLOWING EACH PANEL, JOIN CILA FOR THE OPPORTUNITY TO NETWORK AND
SOCIALIZE WITH YOUR COLLEGUES AND A CHANCE TO WIN A GIVEAWAY!
CILA WILL SEEK RETROACTIVE APPROVAL FROM THE CALIFORNIA STATE BAR FOR MCLE CREDIT FOR EACH PAENL. WE WILL SEND CERTIFICATES TO QUALIFYING PARTICIPANTS UPON APPROVAL BY THE STATE BAR. CILA CANNOT GUARANTEE THAT APPROVAL FROM THE CALIFORNIA STATE BAR FOR MCLE CREDIT WILL OCCUR BEFORE THE FEB. 1, 2022 REPORTING DEADLINE.
Here is the opinion in Trenton Indian Housing Authority v. Poitra (N.D. Dist. Ct.):
Here is the decision in United States v. Washington, subproceeding 20-01 (W.D. Wash.):
Briefs are here.

Chinook fishing on Skagit River, NWIFC

November 5th, 2021 | 9:00am-10:15am ET | 1.25 CLE
Self governance is an exercise of tribal sovereignty and self-determination. Tribal self governance is, at its core, a framework for tribal progress because it empowers tribes. This panel will explore the history and key milestones of the tribal self governance movement, with an emphasis on recent developments and upcoming challenges for the expansion of self governance in agencies outside of the BIA and IHS.
Rob Roy Smith: Managing Partner, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP
Geoff Strommer: Partner, Hobbs, Straus, Dean & Walker, LLP
Debrah Gee: Navajo Nation and Muscogee (Creek) Nation, Chief Counsel for the Chickasaw Nation Office of Tribal Justice Administration
Moderator – Valerie Shuette: Student, Michigan State University College of Law

Warrior Lawyers: Defenders of Sacred Justice (2021) is a one-hour PBS documentary that is particularly timely and relevant given our country’s current reckoning with racial inequity and structural racism. The program focuses on the stories of Native American Lawyers, Tribal Judges and their colleagues who work with Native Nations and their citizens to achieve Sacred Justice. These unseen role models strive daily to address and resolve unique and complicated historical, governmental, legal, judicial and social welfare issues, which are most often rooted in discrimination, historical trauma and cultural destruction. Come take a journey into past and present-day Indian Country to learn of untold stories that shine a light on Native Americans rising up to create a new path for today and for the next Seven Generations.
This will be a free event, and no registration required. Please remember to bring your mask.
Links:
Here is the unpublished opinion in Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians v. Caballero.
Briefs:

Detroit News: First lady Jill Biden visits Saginaw Chippewa center to discuss youth mental health
Arizona Capitol Times: Ducey gives tribe $30M for water rights
NYTs: Can This Tribe of ‘Salmon People’ Pull Off One More Win?
WaPo (April article): Canada’s Supreme Court says some Native Americans who are not Canadian citizens can hunt in British Columbia
Grist: EPA finally has an action plan to improve water infrastructure and sanitation for US tribes
AP: Oklahoma court adds Quapaw Nation to those covered by McGirt ruling
Curbed: A Lenape Tribe Finally Wrests Its Sacred Site Back from Developers
AZ Central: Indigenous peoples seek greater voice and more influence at COP26 climate conference
NYTs: How Is ‘Dune’ So Prescient About Climate Change? Thank This Native American Tribe.
KTAR: Apaches ask appeals court to oppose transfer of Arizona land
The Hill: Human rights panel will hear case claiming US regulators violated Navajo tribe’s rights: report
Tulsa World: Tulsa, Owasso join state in seeking to overturn McGirt ruling
Great Lakes Now: Enbridge temporarily stops Michigan pipeline due to protests
NYTs: Film Club: ‘A Conversation With Native Americans on Race’
Salt Lake Tribune: Survivors see a link between Indigenous boarding schools’ harsh discipline and later domestic violence
Briefs are here.
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