State of Washington City and Tribal Leaders Form Coalition Against Coal Trains

AP Story here.

Early this month, the Sierra Club and other conservation groups sent a 60-day notice of intent to sue to coal companies. The groups intend to file in federal court against the companies for violating the Clean Water Act. Stories on the notice are here and here.

The most recent previous post on this subject is here.

Washington Supreme Court Video of State v. Clark Oral Argument

Here.

Materials here.

Washington SCt Briefs in State v. Clark — Authority of State Law Enforcement on Indian Trust Land

Here are the briefs in State v. Clark:

Lower court materials here.

Tulalip Tribes Job Posting for Associate Judge

Here (updated):

2012 Associate Judge Tulalip Job Announcement updated

Update in State of Washington v. Clark — Tribal Amicus Filings

Here:

Colville Amicus Brief in Support of Petition for Review

Tulalip Amicus Brief in Support of Petition for Review

The parties’ briefs at the COA are here.

Wash. v. Garrison: Off-Rez Breath Test Administered by Tribal Officer an Unauthorized Search

Here is the opinion in State v. Garrison (Shohomish Co. Dist. Ct.):

State v Garrison

Included in the file as an appendix is the cross-dep agreement between Tulalip Tribes and Snohomish County.

Tulalip Domestic Violence Prosecutor Job Opening

Here:

Job Announcement – TUL Prosecutor

State of Washington Legislature Considers Retrocession Bill

AP Story in the Seattle Times

News Article about Rising Tribal Enrollment Numbers (Excluding the Disenrollment Tribes, of course)

Here, via Pechanga.

Good news:

The swelling membership of the Tulalip Tribes, based near Everett, Washington, for example, is a point of pride for tribal member and state representative John McCoy, who believes improved health care and an above-average birth rate are at play.

“We’re living longer. Our babies are surviving birth,” says McCoy, adding that more jobs on reservations, led by tribal gaming, is another reason for the growth. “So we have our peoples coming back from other states. They’re coming home because there is an economy.”

At Tulalip, that adds up to a 22 percent growth rate over the past decade. Other tribes around the country have grown even faster.

And not so good:

At the other end of the spectrum are tribes whose enrollments are stagnating, including for example the Colville Confederated Tribes in northeast Washington.

Tribal councilmember Ricky Gabriel has proposed a referendum to relax the blood requirement in the tribal constitution so more children of mixed marriages can enroll.

“I’ve had a lot of very positive [reactions],” he says. “The elders are extremely happy about this. They’re pushing hard. They’re seeing their grandchildren not be able to be enrolled.”

Enrollment in the tribe currently requires a minimum of one-quarter Colville blood. But when you have intermarriage, that bloodline is diluted. It takes just a couple of generations of intermarriage to put the children at risk of being disqualified from membership.

Then the tribal population withers. The proposed referendum would change the rules to count any Indian blood toward the minimum.

Updated Version of Tulalip Justice System Study

We previously posted the study here.

Here is the updated study:

Justice in Indian Country- A Case Study of the Tulalip Tribes