When White House aide Jennifer Farley spoke to tribal leaders recently,
she sought to address a common complaint about the Bureau of Indian
Affairs budget.
"BIA was not cut to fund Indian trust reform," Farley said.
The message wasn't received well, and not just because Farley was
suffering from laryngitis that day. A review of the BIA's 2005
funding request shows numerous cuts to Indian programs on the reservation
level to make up for a significant boost in trust reform.
"I am healthy and very passionate," Ed Thomas, president of
the Tlingit-Haida Tribe of Alaska would tell new BIA head
Dave Anderson later that day. "But I am not happy."
Anderson met with tribal leaders in Phoenix, Arizona,
last week as part of an ongoing dialogue over future BIA budgets.
But the concerns raised could have applied to the situation today.
"We can't talk rhetoric, but we need follow through from the
BIA and the Department of Interior," Navajo Nation president
Joe Shirley Jr. said at the meeting.
"There are billions of dollars going off the United States.
When is there going to be funding to meet Navajoland?"
Copies of the BIA's "green book" were distributed last week
to tribal leaders.
The document details, for the first time since the budget
was announced last month, the reductions in
the BIA's social service, education, welfare, tribal and other programs.
Overall, the budget seeks $2.25 billion for the BIA, a reduction of
$52.0 million, or 2.3 percent. This is the first time since
the mid-1980s that the agency serving more than 550 tribes
and more than 1 million American Indians and Alaska Natives
is seeing a cut.
Some of the more significant reductions occur in
the tribal priority allocation (TPA) account. TPA funds
are particularly important because they are used by
tribes to carry out day-to-day government functions.
Under the TPA item, there is a $278,000 cut in human
services, a $394,000 cut in education, a $334,000 cut
in contract support costs, a $498,000 cut in
forestry services, and a $748,000 cut
in trust services. And while the overall TPA request
is $4.9 million above the current level, it is offset
by a nearly $11 million transfer to the Office of
Special Trustee (OST) for appraisal services.
The slash in the human services account affects three major
reservation-level programs: the Indian Child Welfare Act
(ICWA), welfare
assistance and the housing improvement program (HIP).
The green book contains no justification of why these
programs are being cut.
The education cut is achieved by slashing scholarships
for Indian students at post-secondary institutions.
The reduction means tribes will only able to award
1,100 scholarships, down from 1,250 for the current
year. The Bush administration has been reducing this
item since taking office in 2001.
Despite receiving an "adequate" rating by the White
House, one of the better ratings for the BIA,
forestry services is the only natural resource
program seeing a reduction in funds.
The BIA, however, still says it will meet its goal
of helping tribes harvest timber, manage forests
and develop management plans.
The largest cut, though, comes to the
construction account. In 2005, replacement of
BIA schools, which are the worst in the nation,
will be reduced by $61.0 million. Repair and
improvement of other facilities will be cut by
nearly $9 million.
Officials justify the drop
by saying all the projects on the BIA's priority
list have been funded through 2004. Anderson recently
added 14 new schools to the list.
The BIA's losses contrast with the gains at OST,
which Congress created in 1994 to oversee trust
reform. But tribal leaders say OST is
going beyond Congress' intent by implementing reform.
Based on OST's green book, the agency will receive
$322.7 million next year, an increase of $113.7 million,
or 54 percent. Other appropriations raise OST's budget
to nearly $724 million, according to the justification.
In meetings with tribal leaders, administration officials
say they understand the needs of Indian Country.
But tribal leaders say the message isn't getting to
the source.
"The president's budget is really where the rubber hits
the road," said Thomas.
DOI FY2005 Budget:
Fiscal
Year 2005 Budget in Brief | Unified
Trust Budget | Serving
Tribal Communities | BIA
Highlights | Departmental
Offices [for Office of Special Trustee]
Cuts run deep for tribal programs at BIA
Tuesday, March 9, 2004
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