Gale Courey Toensing The White Mountain Apache dancers performed at a special reception on the opening night of the National Congress of American Indians’ 65th annual convention and during the trade show at the Phoenix Convention Center in October. The dancers represent elemental spirits. NCAI passes record number of resolutionsSeventy-two motions address recognition, litigation, health care, other issues
By
Gale Courey Toensing
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Garcia: ‘We’ve got our marching orders’
Joe Garcia, president of the National Congress of American Indians, was energized on the last day of NCAI’s 65th annual conference, which took place at the Phoenix Convention Center Oct. 19 – 24. He stopped on his way out to chat with Indian Country Today. Indian Country Today: What is your assessment of the 65th annual conference? Joe Garcia: I thought it was an awesome setting. I thought it was energizing and that people were engaged. We did a lot of work. At least 72 resolutions were passed and all of them high priority. We’ve got our marching orders. Highlights would be the engagement of our youth commission and that they’re more fully engaged in becoming part of our process, and that’s good. We’ve set our priorities. We’ve got all of our efforts for the transition for the new administration lined up. It’s a matter now of once the resolutions are worked on then we move forward. The passage of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act is still in the works right now, so if the lame duck session can tackle that, we’re going to be right on it to keep pushing it. But there’s so many [issues] to name – education, homeland security, our boundary protection, violence against women, the National Indian Child Welfare Act and encouraging our people to be part of that, suicide prevention, meth prevention, law enforcement, tribal courts. Everything we’ve been working on for years and years has been part of this session and it just tells us that those things still have a lot of needs and we’re going to find resolutions for them. ICT: What actually happens to the NCAI resolutions? Do you send them on to Congress? Garcia: A number of things. The resolution is just a product. And the product is then worked hard. Those are our marching orders, so with 72 resolutions we’re better assured that they go to the next level and the next level. They’ve got to go to the tribes that presented them, number one. Number two, they go to the entities that the resolution is about. For instance, does it go to the Department of Energy, does it go to the BIA, to the Department of Homeland Security, or whoever. Then they’ll be distributed to staffers and to key congressional people who are identified with any particular resolutions and then distributed to all the tribes. The resolutions will also be included on our Web site so anybody has access to them. They are now our marching orders, so we can be sure when we do see our congressional people that our tribal leaders have those things in hand and can say, “Look, this is what this is all about, these are the specific things, and we do have support from the National Congress, which is representative of the members tribes across Indian land.” That’s an important piece. Before, we didn’t have all of that lined up. We’d get resolutions, but we didn’t know where they went; but now it’s identified, it’s clear, the process is laid out. ICT: I noticed that issues in Alaska have come into prominence during this session. Garcia: They’ve always been there, but part of it has to do with how do we resolve those issues, because they are somewhat different in how you proceed to address those issues. In the past we’ve been kind of floundering on, OK, it’s the same issue as an issue in the lower states, but you handle it differently. Number one, Alaska is a Public Law 280 state. They’ve got different land issues. They don’t have trust land, but most people don’t know these things, and I think in the past we all didn’t know these things either, so it’s trying to work out something without knowing the specifics. They don’t own the land. It’s not like being on trust land, so that’s a big difference and the relationship between the Alaska tribes and the state government is completely different. So all of these are critical and crucial positions that we have to know about and we can address them. The engagement is there and we’re in full-force support of our Alaska brothers and sisters. ICT: Do you think there’s a resurgence of Native power happening? Garcia: I sense that. I’m a pusher of that, of change and initiative, but it isn’t happening with just one person. It’s all the delegates, all the camaraderie and the teamwork that we have. I think it’s our job to continue to promote that and not just talk about it, but actually do it, and we’ve been doing it. The results are obvious. It’s happening and I’m feeling really good. We’re ready to meet the challenges with the new administrations and we’re going to go for it. |
• A resolution urging the reversal of President Bush’s interpretation of “continuing resolution” for funding programs through March 6, 2009.
Congress failed to pass a budget for fiscal year 2009 before Oct. 1, and instead passed a “continuing resolution” instead that is supposed to fund government operations until March 6, 2009, at the same level as 2008. But Bush determined that he could actually slash funding from 2008 levels. The resolution asks that Bush’s interpretation be reversed and that programs be funded at the same level as last year.
• A call to reauthorize the Indian Health Care Improvement Act during the post-election lame duck session of the 110th Congress.
The litigation and governance committee passed almost two dozen resolutions that were presented by committee Chair John Echohawk, the executive director of Native American Rights Fund. The resolutions included:
• A request to the Justice Department to release “meaningful declination statistics” on the prosecution of crimes reported from Indian country.
This resolution asks Justice to release as soon as possible to Congress and tribal leaders statistics for the past five years that break down the declinations into general categories and compare the declinations of cases in Indian country with declination statistics for other cases provided to U.S. attorneys to prosecute.
• Approval of the NCAI Transition Plan for the presidential transition effort following the November election.
The plan provides a broad policy agenda, including issues that need to be addressed by the incoming administration. It also outlines the process for selecting qualified people to fill key positions in the new administration that affect Indian country and tribal citizens.
NCAI is calling for qualified tribal citizens who are interested in serving in positions from department secretary to staff to send their resumes to NCAI for review.
• A resolution concerning Public Law 280.
This resolution encourages Congress to hold field hearings on P.L. 280, the 1950s-era law that imposed state criminal jurisdiction over certain crimes in Indian country, and supports legislation with appropriate funding that will enable Indian nations to retrocede, or withdraw, from all or part of P.L. 280.
Other resolutions from the litigation and governance committee include support for the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, with enhancements to strengthen the sovereignty and safety of American Indian and Alaska Native women. Others support efforts for a “fair and equitable settlement” of the Cobell and Nez Perce tribal class action litigation, and for the fair and equitable settlement of other individual tribal litigation.
The other committees passed resolutions that:
• Require the Defense Department, Veterans Administration and other federal agencies to do more to provide for the health care needs of Native veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, and improve accessibility and availability of veterans’ health care services in Indian country.
• Support legislation that would require truth-in-labeling for wild rice sold in or exported from the U.S.
• Call on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to fulfill its government-to-government consultation obligations regarding activities affecting bald eagles and golden eagles and their habitats.
• Support a change in the Social Security age of eligibility from 63 to 55, as the life expectancy for American Indians averages 48 years.
• Reaffirm and strengthen the Indian education provisions in the reauthorization of No Child Left Behind legislation.
• Support the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and call on the U.S. government to endorse the declaration.
The full set of resolutions will be posted to NCAI’s Web site at www.ncai.org.
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Saturday, Nov 22 at 9:07 AM wanmn wrote ...
I Totally agree Native Americans living in the city, ought to get help from the Tribe. not that i need it but it would be nice too have some help . and yes they do really need to audit what is being spent ! on personal needs in the jobs thease people hold. and not too mention all thease law suits and resouloutions they sit in washington waitng on decsions that should be made,,asap there are people who need the money. not yrs later and then maybe get $98.00 check in the mail. :)
12665349 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Thursday, Nov 20 at 11:59 AM orrin.allen@nezpercesystems.com wrote ...
i have read the list and find that, the indians who live off the tribal land and in cities do not get help in paying for their health care costs,
12587799 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Thursday, Nov 6 at 7:34 PM Mel wrote ...
I agree with Ira Strickers comment. We see tribal leaders using vast amounts of tribal funds for rediculous "soverience" pays..AKA ..money for their own personal use...its rediculous...there should be an audit done on a national level and made available to the tribes. More accountability needs to be made as this embezzelment issue becomes more prevelant!!!!
11994793 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Monday, Nov 3 at 7:48 PM Ira Stricker wrote ...
One resolution that I would like to see passed is a yearly audit done and made public to tribal citizens by all tribal nations and tribal organizations. Out of all this money tribes get from treaty obligations and casinos, what do we have to show for it. How much money is lost because of stupid tribal clowns pretending to be leaders and of course, embezzlement? It is time for urban Indians to start holding tribal governments accountable. Supposingly, 60% of Indians live off the rez.
11804244 Inappropriate? Alert Us!Add a comment
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