From the largest tribe in the United States to largest tribal housing
coalition, Indian Country is reacting negatively to the Bush
administration's latest budget.
Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley said the request, which cuts
funds for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and some Navajo-specific
projects, would have a negative impact.
"How are we expected to develop our nation with our funding
drastically being cut?" he asked. "My people continue to be left out."
Russell Sossamon, chairman of the National American Indian Housing
Council, said the Bush budget slights Indian Country. He
cited a $7.1 million cut to Indian housing programs, a $4.3 million
cut to Indian home loans and a reduction of $21 million for other
tribal loan guarantees.
"For the fourth year in a row the Bush administration has
forgotten Native Americans," said Sossamon, who runs housing programs
for the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.
Sossamon is one of several Indian leaders who will testify
about the fiscal year 2005 budget today. The Senate Committee
on Indian Affairs has been holding regular hearings in recent
years, taking views from tribes and government officials.
In addition to Sossamon, the committee will hear from
Tex Hall, president of the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI),
the largest inter-tribal organization.
NCAI is calling for dramatic increases in all areas of
the budget, particularly law enforcement, education and health care.
Also testifying today are Sally Smith, chair of the National Indian Health Board;
Don Kashevaroff, president of the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium;
Cindy LaMarr, president of the National Indian Education Association; and
Gary Edwards, head of the National Native American Law Enforcement Association.
The witnesses will touch on just about every area of the budget.
And in just about every case, funding for Indian programs is
going flat or being cut.
Within the Department of Education, the Office of Indian Education
request is $120.9 million, the same as 2004 and a slight cut from 2003.
The office, which was elevated by the Bush administration, oversees
programs for 500,000 Indian children who attend public schools.
Standardized tests show they are falling behind the rest of the nation.
Law enforcement on reservations will see cuts for tribal courts
and the Community Oriented Policy Services (COPS) program. The
Bureau of Indian Affairs budget, however, includes an
increase of $7.8 million to staff eight detention centers.
But tribes still can't tap directly into the billion-dollar
pot of homeland security funds. Tribes are forced to seek
money through states and local governments, leaving them
out of critical Bush administration initiatives.
About the only program seeing an increase is the Indian Health
Service (IHS). The agency emerged with a 1.6 percent increase
to $3 billion. No programs are being cut, except for a $62 million
slash for construction of new hospitals, clinics and facilities.
FY 2005 Budget Documents:
OMB |
DOI
| HHS |
USDA | HUD | Education
Relevant Links:
National Congress of American Indians -
http://www.ncai.org
National Indian Health Board -
http://www.nihb.org
National Indian Education Association -
http://www.niea.org
National American Indian Housing Council -
http://naihc.net
National Native American Law Enforcement Association -
http://www.nnalea.org
Tribal leaders pressing Congress on funding
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
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