Category Archives: criminal justice system

Opinion | This 19th-Century Law Helps Shape Criminal Justice in Indian Country

By 

from The New York Times

And that’s a problem — especially for Native American women, and especially in rape cases.

Source: Opinion | This 19th-Century Law Helps Shape Criminal Justice in Indian Country

A Native American tribe plans to build an opioid treatment center, but neighbors have vowed to block it

from The Washington Post

Tribe Chairman Ron Allen, standing at the site of the proposed opioid treatment center in Sequim, wants to be “part of the solution” to the opioid epidemic in his community. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post)

A classic ‘not in my backyard’ fight has erupted in the Pacific Northwest over a recovery center for an area hit hard by addiction and overdose deaths.

Source: A Native American tribe plans to build an opioid treatment center, but neighbors have vowed to block it

The Assault on Tribal Sovereignty 2020, Continued

 

South Dakota bars IDs and ‘disenfranchises’ tribal citizens

Tribal communities report some of the lowest voter turnout figures in South Dakota yet make up 9 percent of the population

Stephen Groves

Associated Press

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — South Dakota Democrats called foul on Friday after the Republican-dominated House shot down their efforts to allow Native Americans use their tribal IDs to register to vote.

https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/news/south-dakota-bars-ids-and-disenfranchises-tribal-citizens-w1AVDYGwqEK-eubn–8qrA?fbclid=IwAR2b6tohfRRwbxdojgB7sd4MGKfTjDwzWl1ezudNiak8Xz3piSpdI83S1nY

Wet’suwet’en Raids: Canada Chooses Colonialism Again

A future of reconciliation is now squandered along with our billions propping up LNG.

Andrew Nikiforuk 6 Feb 2020 | TheTyee.caAndrew Nikiforuk is an award-winning journalist who has been writing about the energy industry for two decades and is a contributing editor to The Tyee. Find his previous stories here.

https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2020/02/06/Wetsuweten-Raids-Canada-Chooses-Colonialism-Again/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=020520-7&utm_campaign=editorial-0220&fbclid=IwAR3IL1lA0bRVsCtFVqzDHzorhMFOSEVWFnUitelKGVikSe6PAmvODYiGZq4

 

 

Shutdown in Indian Country

As the President and Congress spar over funding for a border wall as a condition for re-opening the Federal Government, Native citizens across Indian Country are experiencing major disruptions to their daily lives.

Indian Country Today reports, “Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minnesota, said on MSNBC this morning that the chairman of the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa told her that tribal police are not being paid because of the shutdown. Funding for tribal law enforcement contracts are on hold during the shutdown.”

It is a similar story for those Native communities who rely on the Indian Health Service (IHS), a federal entity whose services are often guaranteed by treaty. A recent report in the New York Times estimates that for one tribe of the Chippewa in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, the shutdown is costing “about $100,000, every day,  . . . federal money that does not arrive to keep health clinics staffed, food pantry shelves full and employees paid.” Some 1.9 million Native people are being affected.

The same is true of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Writing to officials in Washington D.C., Colville Business Council Chair Rodney Cawston, in recent article in the Tribal Tribune of Nespelem, WA, argues that the shutdown has had “a disproportionate impact to tribes’ related to land management, health services and other social service programs.” Cawston believes “the impact to the tribal timber industry alone is resulting in a tribal loss of approximately $400,000 weekly and the impact to federal direct and indirect support costs is resulting in a loss of $1.5 million weekly.”

“The trust responsibility that underlies the functions that the IHS and BIA serve makes them much different from National parks and traditional land management functions of the Department of Interior.”

Rodney Cawston

A visit to the IHS website this week displays the stark reality of the shutdown for indigenous communities.

“Dear Tribal Leader,” the message reads, “there will be no funding available from the HIS until such time as appropriations are enacted and available for such purposes. We acknowledge that this circumstance may result in insufficient funds to carry out the terms of the agreement (the Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act) and that the program may cease to operate.”

Coming on the heels of a year-long assault on Native land by the Department of Interior and the Trump administration, the shutdown of the federal government is yet another blow to tribal sovereignty and yet another example of promises unkept.

As Kevin Washburn, who served as the assistant secretary for Indian Affairs under President Barack Obama, explained to a reporter from the New York Times, during a shutdown, “Indian Country stops moving forward . . . and starts moving backward.”

It is time this administration started honoring its trust obligations to Native people.

Further Reading

http://www.tribaltribune.com/news/article_92a5690a-12b6-11e9-aafc-57f1d70299a4.html

https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/news/president-to-make-case-for-border-wall-on-national-tv-tonight-2KDXu9vWn0KmPXohJq9nWQ/?fbclid=IwAR3y9l7pPbM19ZeZAhXlnKQ_iE2b1r5Rl8–0iheGbqgD9TTtJYuYyX45Zs