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Tribal leaders hope to counteract Bush budget cuts
Tuesday, April 13, 2004
Tribal leaders are meeting in the Washington, D.C., area this week
to finalize their response to the Bush administration's plans
to scale back the Bureau of Indian Affairs budget.
The BIA's tribal budget advisory council hopes to reverse the
2.4 percent cut in store for fiscal year 2006. The reduction, announced
last month,
comes on top of a 2.3 percent cut in 2005.
"We had a slight chance to grow with the FY 2005 budget," said
Lawrence T. Morgan, speaker of the Navajo Nation council,
"now it seems our work for the FY 2006 budget will be extensive."
The ink was barely dry on the 2005 budget when new assistant
secretary Dave Anderson shocked tribal leaders by announcing a
$55.3 million cut for the following year.
Once inflation and salary increases are taken into account, a BIA budget aide
said the impact would come to 3.6 percent, or nearly $80 million.
At the March meeting of the advisory council,
tribal leaders were expecting to see some sort of growth
amid complaints of cuts to a number of reservation-level
programs.
"There's people behind those cuts -- education, human services, social
services, the Indian Child Welfare Act, law enforcement --
the list just goes on," said Tex Hall, president of the National
Congress of American Indians and co-chair of the advisory council.
Although Anderson has promised to advocate for a more optimistic
budget, tribal leaders have appealed to President Bush directly.
In addition to a letter signed by two dozen tribes,
Navajo Nation vice president Frank Dayish Jr. raised the issue
at a Republican fundraiser in Washington, D.C. on April 1.
"I feel that the BIA budget cuts are one of the most important obstacles
facing our nation and all other Indian nations," Dayish told the president.
According to Dayish, Bush replied, "I will look into the matter."
For the coming year, the BIA's budget will be reduced overall by
$52 million. Education programs, including school construction
and repair, scholarships, early childhood development and
tribal colleges, are taking the largest hit.
Those cuts came even as the budget for the Office of
Special Trustee has increased by
54 percent and 44 percent in the past two years. Tribal leaders
say the numbers are solid proof that the Bush administration is
funding trust reform at the expense of programs that directly
serve tribes and tribal members.
The outlook for 2006 was contained in a March 12 memo from
Lynn Scarlett, the Department of Interior's assistant
secretary for policy, management and budget. She directed
agency heads, including Anderson, to prepare a budget based
on a department-wide cut of $259 million.
"Budgeting within these constrained funding levels will be even more challenging
than in 2005," Scarlett wrote.
According to the document's figures, which are not final, the BIA would
absorb 22 percent of that cut. OST would only be cut by $8 million.
Anderson's response to the projections is due May 14. Tribal leaders
are meeting today and tomorrow to work on their alternative proposal.
They also plan on approaching members of Congress, many of whom
have expressed disappointment with funding levels for Indian Country.
"My district is home to the largest concentration of Native Americans in the
nation, I could not bring myself to vote for a budget that did not fully address
their uniquely severe situation," said Rep. Rick Renzi (R-Ariz.) late last month
as he explained why he voted against the $2.4 trillion budget resolution for
fiscal year 2005.
Relevant Documents:
Lynn Scarlett
Memo (March 12, 2004) | Tribal Leaders
Letter to President Bush (March 23, 2004)
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clears House vote (03/26)
Tribal leaders denounce
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BIA education programs taking $79 million hit
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Indian educators meet for
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Cuts run deep for tribal programs at BIA
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Senate panel shares criticism of
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Tribal leaders
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BIA programs barely survive White House
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Fate of Indian
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BIA budget staying the same under Bush request
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