IBIA Stays Nooksack IHS Appeal Pending Federal Court Litigation; IHS Withholds $89K From Tribe Pending Appeal

Here are the materials in Nooksack Indian Tribe v. Director, Portland Area, Indian Health Service (IBIA):

3-28-17 Nooksack v. IHS (IBIA) Motion of 271 Nooksack Members to Intervene

4-3-17 Nooksack v. IHS (IBIA) IHS Statement of Non-Opposition to Motion of 271 Nooksack Members to Intervene

4-19-17 Nooksack v. IHS (IBIA) Nooksack’s Response in Opposition to Motion to Intervene

4-28-17 Nooksack v. IHS (IBIA) Joint Stay of Proceedings

4-28-17 Nooksack v. IHS (IBIA) Order

Nooksack Crisis Update: IHS Reassumes Health Care Duties; NAICJA Acts against Tribal Judge; HUS Stops Evictions of Disenrollees

Here is “Federal government to take over health care from Nooksack Tribe.” And:

03-27-17 IHS Reasssumption Letter to Robert Kellly Jr

NAICJA has requested that the Nooksack judge relinquish his membership from that organization:

03-27-17 NAICJA Letter to Raymond Dodge

HUD informed the tribe to stop evicting disenrollees:

04-04-17 HUD Letter to Robert Kellly Jr

Rosebud Sioux Breach of Trust Claim against IHS to Proceed

Here are the materials in Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. United States (D.S.D.):

18 Motion to Dismiss

24 Opposition

35 Reply

36 DCT Order

An excerpt:

The above affirmations of a health care trust responsibility are tempered by Supreme Court rulings on the subject of the general trust responsibility, as noted above, and specifically on American Indian health care. The Government argues that because of the lack of a trust corpus, “the sole question is whether the IHS owes any trust duty in relation to its annual appropriations.” Doc. 18 at 18. Where money is appropriated to fulfill a treaty obligation, a trust responsibility attaches; where money is a “gratuitous appropriation,” no trust responsibility is created. See Quick Bear v. Leupp, 210 U.S. 50, 80 (1908). The Supreme Court dealt specifically with an issue regarding appropriations to IHS in Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182 (1993). In Lincoln, the Court held that lump-sum amounts appropriated to IHS were committed to agency discretion, so long as it allocated funds “to meet permissible statutory objectives.” 508 U.S. at 193. At issue in Lincoln was the decision by IHS to discontinue a program assisting handicapped American Indian children in the Southwest and to move that funding to a nationwide program for handicapped American Indian children. Id. at 184. Lincoln focused specifically on whether IHS’s decision to terminate the program could be reviewed under the APA, and whether it should have abided by the APA’s notice-and-comment rulemaking provisions; it did not opine on a general trust responsibility held by IHS for the care of handicapped American Indian children. Id. at 190, 196.

The Eighth Circuit has recognized, in a limited fashion, the trust responsibility of the United States to provide health care to American Indians. See White v. Califano, 581 F.2d 697 (8th Cir. 1978) (per curiam). In White, the Eighth Circuit in a two-page decision required the federal government, rather than the state of South Dakota, to provide and pay for the involuntary commitment of an indigent mentally ill woman enrolled in the Oglala Sioux Tribe on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Id. The Eighth Circuit quoted from the district court’s opinion and explained that “[i]n affirming, we adopt the district court’s statement of facts and its reasoning as applied to the conclusions quoted above.” Id. at 698. Specifically, the Eighth Circuit quoted from Judge Bogue’s opinion:

We think that Congress has unambiguously declared that the federal government has a legal responsibility to provide health care to Indians. This stems from the ‘unique relationship’ between Indians and the federal government, a relationship that is reflected in hundreds of cases and is further made obvious by the fact that one bulging volume of the U. S. Code pertains only to Indians.

Id. (quoting White v. Califano, 437 F. Supp. 543, 555 (D.S.D. 1977)). Although the White decisions pre-date the Mitchell line of trust responsibility cases, nothing in those cases overrules or otherwise negates White, especially because White involved a request for specific equitable relief, while the Mitchell line of cases dealt with monetary damages claims made possible under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, and the Indian Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1505. Relatedly, in Blue Legs v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, 668 F. Supp. 1329, 1330 (D.S.D. 1987)—a case seeking declaratory and injunctive relief based on the trust responsibility outside of the health care context—Judge Battey summarized White, explaining that “the law was clear that the trust responsibility of the federal government in relation to Indian tribes in the area of health services was explicitly mandated by the Indian Health Care Improvement Act . . . and the law then in existence.” Id. at 1340. On appeal, the Eighth Circuit affirmed that the specific agency responsibilities towards the Oglala Lakota Sioux Tribe in cleaning up waste dumps was “buttressed by the existence of the general trust relationship between these agencies [the BIA and IHS] and the Tribe.” Blue Legs, 867 F.2d at 1100. The Eighth Circuit explained that “[t]he existence of a trust duty between the United States and an Indian or Indian tribe can be inferred from the provisions of a statute, treaty or other agreement, ‘reinforced by the undisputed existence of a general trust relationship between the United States and the Indian people.'” Id. (quoting Mitchell, 463 U.S. at 225).

We posted the complaint here.

Indian Health Service Partners with Bureau of Indian Affairs and Bureau of Indian Education to Increase Access to Behavioral Health Services for Native Youth

Download(PDF): IHS-Indian Affairs joint news release

Excerpt:

“In keeping with President Obama’s Generation Indigenous initiative to improve opportunities for Native youth and the BIA’s Tiwahe initiative to strengthen Native families, this interagency agreement will enable the BIA and BIE to work collaboratively with IHS to bring much-needed behavioral health resources to Native youth,” said Lawrence S. “Larry” Roberts, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs in the U.S. Department of the Interior.

IHS Instructs Nooksack to Serve All; Does Not Recognize Disenrollment Actions

Here is the letter:

Letter IHS Regional Director Dean Seyler to Nooksack Chairman Robert Kelly Jr

Navajo Sage Hospital Prevails on IHS Medicare/Medicaid Allocation and Duplication Issues

Here are the materials in Navajo Health Foundation – Sage Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Burwell (D. N.M.):

199-sage-motion-for-summary-j-allocation-issue

200-sage-motion-for-summary-j-duplication-issue

222-response-on-duplication-issue

235-reply-in-support-of-199

236-reply-in-support-of-200

253-dct-order

Prior post here.

Navajo Nation Seeks Proposals to Assist with Claims for Unpaid Contract Support Costs

Here:

The Navajo Nation Department of Justice seeks outside counsel assistance in pursuing the Navajo Nation’s claims for unpaid contract support costs from P.L. 93-638 contracts entered into with the Indian Health Service (IHS).  This would include developing claims for unpaid contract support costs, entering into settlement negotiations with IHS and, if necessary, making recommendations to the Attorney General for litigation of those claims if a negotiated settlement cannot be reached.  Qualifications include experience in and knowledge of Federal Indian law, especially the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (ISDEAA), P.L. 93-638, as amended, and experience filing claims for payment of contract support costs pursuant to the ISDEAA. 

Proposals must be received by email by the Navajo Nation Department of Justice by no later than 5:00 PM MT on September 16, 2016.  NO LATE PROPOSALS WILL BE ACCEPTED.

2016-08-29 – IHS CSC Counsel_Final RFP

Rosebud Sioux Tribe Files Complaint Against IHS

Download complaint here.

Federal Court Orders IHS to Negotiate Clinic Rental Funds

Here are the materials in Maniilaq Assn. v. Burwell (D.D.C.):

10 Maniilaq Assn Motion for Summary J

15 Opposition

17 Maniilaq Response

23 US Reply

22 DCT Order

Office of General Counsel Vacancies

Download job summary and instructions here.

The Office of the General Counsel for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (OGC) is seeking applications for several general attorney positions in its San Francisco Regional Office.  The San Francisco Office of OGC provides legal services to four administrative areas of the Indian Health Service (IHS), which delivers health care to American Indians/Alaska Natives.  Persons selected for some or all of these positions will  have responsibility for providing legal advice and support to the IHS.  More information about the positions and the nature of our work is in the attached vacancy announcement.