Indianz.Com. In Print.
URL: http://www.indianz.com/News/archives/002407.asp
Tribes ride fine line on Interior budget bill
Thursday, November 6, 2003
Reading the Department of Interior's $20 billion budget bill is like opening a box of chocolates. You never know what you might get.
Well that's not entirely accurate. A provision to delay a court-ordered
accounting of the Indian trust was the subject of a contentious and
well-publicized debate. Rep. Richard Pombo (R-Calif.) called it
a "midnight rider" and tried, unsuccessfully, to have it removed.
Other riders aren't as dark and benefited quite a few Indian
interests. Among other things, the 169-page bill
approved a land swap for the Eastern Band of Cherokees,
shielded a few select tribes from the Bureau of Indian Affairs
reorganization and funded the Quapaw Tribe's
land consolidation program with $1 million.
There are plenty of provisions to grumble about too.
Besides the language on the trust fund, lawmakers cut funds
for federal recognition, expressed disapproval of
"reservation shopping" and authorized higher fees
for gaming tribes.
In almost every case, there was controversy guiding
the effort. Some of the items weren't ever formally
debated before either chamber, while others only
saw action by one chamber.
The Eastern Cherokee land swap was one of them. Conservation groups hoped to stop the National Park Service from cutting a slice out of the Great Smoky National Park in North Carolina for use as a tribal school.
But they had little chance at preventing lawmakers who finalized the budget bill in private from approving the exchange, which passed the House as a stand-alone bill but never
received a hearing in the Senate. The rider also circumvented the administrative process -- NPS was taking public comments on the proposed swap.
There was never a formal hearing on the Tribal Trust Reform Demonstration
Project either, although tribal leaders spoke favorably about it
at a House hearing and it was mentioned briefly before a Senate hearing.
The provision prevents the Bush administration from imposing
its trust reform initiatives on a small group of tribes who
manage trust assets through compacts.
The original version of the rider could be found only in the Senate's
version of the Interior bill and it would have benefited a large
group of tribes.
But it was scaled back by House and Senate negotiators, who
were urged by Pombo to adopt the program.
The language on off-reservation casinos saw even less debate.
States, non-Indian gaming interests and even other tribes
lobbied the Republican leadership in the House to send
a message on an increasingly controversial area of
Indian gaming.
The provision doesn't actually do anything but indicates that tribes
seeking to assert rights on ancestral territory or in other
locations will be met with resistance.
It singles out the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma for
trying to open a bingo hall on ancestral land in New York
and the Jena Band of Choctaws for trying to
"take land into trust for gaming purposes in an area of Louisiana
that is outside their traditional service area."
Both tribes have a plausible argument for bypassing lengthy
and costly reviews of off-reservation gaming projects. The Seneca-Cayuga
Tribe's land claim in New York has been affirmed by a federal judge
and tribes who only recently received federal recognition, like the Jenas, are
given some leeway for seeking trust lands. But the language in the bill suggest a shift in policy
on these fronts.
"Trust status for gaming purposes on non-contiguous lands requires that
a tribe engage in a rigorous approval process requiring approval by the Governor
of an affected State as well as input and support from the
local community," the conference report accompanying the bill states.
Once included in an appropriations bill, riders become law even if they
amend existing laws.
They are often included in future bills without further question.
The Interior bill was sent to President Bush for his signature
yesterday. He is expected to sign it into law.
DOI Budget Bill:
H.R.2691
DOI Conference Committee Report:
House
Report. 108-330 | PDF Version
Related Stories:
Congress clears Indian funding in budget
bill (11/4)
House approves trust fund
rider in DOI bill (10/31)
Campbell
pushes action on trust fund suit (10/30)
Battle brews in House over DOI budget bill
(10/30)
Cobell rallies support for
trust fund case (10/28)
DOI bill
halts Indian trust fund case (10/24)
Bill targets Indian trust fund suit (10/22)
House chairman supports self-governance
rider (10/14)
Self-governance tribes
fear impact of reorganization (10/09)
Tally
for private attorney fees in Cobell case rises (07/24)
Congress hacks Bush's accounting
funds (7/16)
Swimmer partly
right on trust fund rider (7/14)
<On trust, lawmakers take Bush
officials at face value (06/25)
Private attorneys reap benefits on
Cobell case (06/24)
Norton
offered settlement funds for IIM trust (6/20)
Lamberth criticizes interference
with trust fund case (05/22)
Bush administration turns to Congress on
trust (04/04)
Copyright © 2000-2003 Indianz.Com