Sen. Pete Domenici (R-New Mexico), a member of the Senate Appropriations and Indian Affairs committees, is calling for a change in the distribution of tribal priority allocation (TPA) funds.
Domenici said wealthy tribes with casinos shouldn't receive as much money as poorer tribes.
"I think it's time to look at perhaps a new formula that gives those who don't have the benefit of casinos a larger share of the government's assistance," Domenici said at a mark-up on the fiscal year 2006 Interior appropriations bill, The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.
TPA funds are distributed to every tribe based on an old formula, he noted. The Bush administration wants to change the formula but hasn't started the consultation process.
TPA funds are used by tribes to carry out their daily functions. Some wealthy tribes, like the Oneida Nation of New York and the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, return their distribution to the Bureau of Indian Affairs so that other tribes can benefit.
The Bush administration has cut parts of the overall TPA request but the House and the Senate are restoring it in their respective budget bills.
Get the Story:
Senator: Tribes with casinos should get less U.S. funding
(The Las Vegas Review-Journal 6/8)
2006 Interior Appropriations Bill:
H.R.2361
| House
Report 109-080
FY 2006 Funding Levels:
Subcommittee
Reports FY06 Interior Appropriations Bill (May 4, 2005) |
Appropriations Subcommittee Reports
FY 2006 Interior Spending Bill
(June 7, 2005)
Senate Indian Affairs Committee Letter:
FY 2006 Views and
Estimates (February 28, 2005)
Budget Documents:
DOI Budget
in Brief | Trust
Responsibilities | Tribal
Communities | Bureau of
Indian Affairs | Departmental
Offices [includes Office of Special Trustee] | DOI
[from White House]
Related Stories:
Bill calls for tribal consultation on BIA
budget (05/31)
Interior budget bill
orders land-into-trust study (5/27)
House panel acts to restore Bush budget cuts
(05/05)
Editorial: Cuts in BIA budget
'unacceptable' (04/06)
Editorial: Burns
has chance to restore Indian funds (03/31)
Budget blueprints leave Bush's Indian cuts
intact (03/28)
Chief Gray: Very little
tribes can do on BIA budget (3/25)
Bush
budget test inconsistent on Indian programs (3/16)
Panel rejects President Bush's budget priorities
(3/8)
McCain lays out Indian agenda for
109th Congress (3/7)
Senator angles for
better 'defense' on Bush budget (02/24)
Senators blast budget cuts to Indian programs
(2/17)
School construction fared poorly
on White House test (02/14)
Indian
education funds reduced by Bush budget (2/10)
Official cites 'tight' budget for Indian housing
(2/9)
BIA budget cut by $110M for fiscal
year 2006 (2/8)
IHS escapes Bush
administration's chopping block (2/8)
New Bush administration budget slashes programs
(2/7)
Bush administration rolls out
fiscal year 2006 budget (2/7)
State of
Indian Nations address lays out broad agenda (2/4)
Bush to shift housing grant programs to Commerce
(2/4)
Congress kicks into gear for 109th
session (1/25)
Johnson expects tough
times for Indian initiatives (01/18)
Bush administration to cut major HUD program
(01/14)
Study shows impact of gaming in
Indian Country (01/10)
Pombo cites
achievements in 108th Congress (12/16)
Big changes in store for 109th Congress (12/14)
Indian advocates urge cooperation in
Washington DC (11/05)
Data shows little
change in economic status under Bush (08/27)
Bush says housing program he's cutting is
'working' (08/12)
Indian housing
funds face cuts in Bush budget (04/14)
Tribes tackle budget woes under Bush
administration (4/14)
Budget
resolution barely clears House vote (03/26)
Tribal leaders denounce BIA budget plans as
reckless (03/24)
BIA education
programs taking $79 million hit (3/23)
Cuts run deep for tribal programs at BIA
(03/09)
Senate panel shares criticism of
Bush budget (02/12)
Tribal leaders
pressing Congress on funding (02/11)
BIA programs barely survive White House
test (02/10)
BIA budget staying the
same under Bush request (2/3)
Domenici calls for change in tribal priority allocations
Thursday, June 9, 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'