"We've come a long way since the days when my father hunted game on the rolling North Dakota prairie or walked the breaks of the Badlands. I knew it was a new day for hunting when I listened to the conflict between the tribe and the North Dakota Game and Fish Department officials. Many years ago, there were no reservation licenses and nonmembers probably didn't consider hunting the reservations.
But today, Game and Fish wants to claim a right of jurisdiction over nontribal members who buy hunting licenses on reservations.
The state's proposal to overstep reservation boundaries seems heavy-handed to me. State officials say tribal hunting upsets the balance because the state doesn't have regulatory power over the nonmember reservation hunters. But would this balance also mean that the tribe has regulatory power over tribal members who hunt on state land?"
Get the Story:
DORREEN YELLOW BIRD COLUMN: Leave tribal hunting rules alone
(The Grand Forks Herald 1/15)
More Dorreen Yellow Bird:
Yellow Bird: Gaming only a temporary fix for
tribes (1/10)
Yellow Bird: New
Year brings out unusual traditions (1/7)
Yellow Bird: Bridges tell history of North Dakota
tribe (12/07)
Yellow Bird: Watch out for
dirt in your sausage (11/30)
Yellow
Bird: Elders still maintain influence (11/29)
Yellow Bird: Worst fry bread served during NMAI
(11/23)
Yellow Bird: Boarding schools
forced assimilation (11/22)
Yellow Bird:
The most terrifying snowstorm ever (11/16)
Yellow Bird: Feeling guilty about your new car
(11/15)
Yellow Bird: Remembering my
brother, a Vietnam vet (11/9)
Yellow
Bird: Native voters make a difference (11/8)
Yellow Bird: Are the Pequots really a tribe?
(11/2)
Yellow Bird: A story for Halloween
night (11/1)
Yellow Bird: Cell phones
now a part of rez life (10/25)
Yellow
Bird: Tribal college leaders overlooked (10/19)
Yellow Bird: Let's settle dispute over Sakakawea
(10/12)
Yellow Bird: Discovering the
ancestral spirits (10/11)
Yellow Bird:
Riding the rails across the country (10/4)
Yellow Bird: First visit to NMAI proves exciting
(9/28)
Yellow Bird: Support the troops,
but not the war (09/14)
Yellow Bird:
Singing to myself about a new highway (9/13)
Yellow Bird: A Sasquatch story from the Nez Perce
(9/7)
Yellow Bird: A worthwhile visit to
Nez Perce relatives (9/6)
Yellow Bird:
Students breathe life into community (8/30)
Yellow Bird: Family-run restaurants real jewels
(8/25)
Yellow Bird: Indian athletes
should strive for gold (8/23)
Yellow
Bird: Not all Native people are conservative (8/23)
Yellow Bird: John Kerry's hands tell different
story (8/16)
Yellow Bird: Indians
becoming a force at the polls (08/03)
Yellow Bird: Ceremony provided needed respite
(8/2)
Yellow Bird: A newbies guide to
North Dakota Indians (07/12)
Yellow
Bird: Are mourning doves on the Atkins diet? (7/6)
Yellow Bird: Off-reservation casino deserves chance
(6/29)
Yellow Bird: Tribes should be
models of government (6/28)
Yellow Bird:
Rosalynn Carter a down-to-earth woman (6/22)
Yellow Bird: Program brings students to nature
(6/21)
Yellow Bird: How low should those
jeans go??? (6/15)
Yellow Bird: A world
away at tribal pow-wow (6/14)
Yellow
Bird: Reflecting on Civil Rights Act of 1964 (6/8)
Yellow Bird: Diversity, women welcome in government
(6/7)
Yellow Bird: Bush made 'poor
decisions' on Iraq war (06/02)
Yellow
Bird: No outlet for North Dakota holy water (5/24)
Yellow Bird: First Lakota finishes UND nursing
(5/18)
Yellow Bird: A goodbye to
Friends and Frasier! (5/17)
Yellow
Bird: Prisoner abuse recalls Indian massacre (5/11)
Yellow Bird: Mothers' distant memories still
strong (5/10)
Yellow Bird: Foreigners
more interested in Indians (5/4)
Yellow Bird: Tribes and media must work together
(5/3)
Yellow Bird: Native people lost
advocate in Elbers (4/27)
Yellow
Bird: Think about Earth Day every day (4/26)
Yellow Bird: Strong flower like spirit of Native
people (04/13)
Yellow Bird: Drum
policy excluded local tribes (04/12)
Yellow Bird: The phenomenon of the 'hobby
Indians' (04/06)
Yellow Bird: A
tribute to the warrior women (4/5)
Yellow Bird: Indians the most misunderstood
(3/31)
Yellow Bird: Keeping our
ceremonies sacred (3/29)
Yellow Bird:
Awakening for Native and Christian (3/23)
Yellow Bird: Saying goodbye, the Native way
(3/16)
Yellow Bird: Human rights in
North Dakota (3/15)
Yellow Bird: Hard
to find Indian like Martha Stewart (3/9)
Yellow Bird: Is Big Foot wandering reservation?
(3/8)
Yellow Bird: Sound of birds
heralds arrival of spring (3/2)
Yellow Bird: Big market for 'isms' in the media
(3/1)
Yellow Bird: Tribal justice
program to bring good (2/24)
Yellow
Bird: Indian perspective on Lewis & Clark (2/23)
Yellow Bird: In large family, sisters are
special (2/18)
Yellow Bird: Atkins
diet worked for Indian friends (2/16)
Yellow Bird: Big-city ballet in a Northern
Plains town (2/10)
Yellow Bird:
'Fighting Sioux' is poor sportsmanship (2/9)
Yellow Bird: Lake outlet a tough sell for many
(2/3)
Yellow Bird: The magic of the
Spirit of the North (2/2)
Yellow
Bird: Providing Indian education to public (1/26)
Yellow Bird: Long hair can be hazardous
sometimes (1/20)
Yellow Bird:
Remembering Grandmother Philomene (1/19)
Yellow Bird: Wild animals have a right to exist
too (01/13)
Yellow Bird: Tribe has
made incredible journey (1/12)
Yellow Bird: 'DreamKeepers' breaks
stereotypes (01/07)
Yellow Bird: North Dakota shouldn't step on tribes
Monday, January 17, 2005
Trending in News
1 Tribes rush to respond to new coronavirus emergency created by Trump administration
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'